Showing posts with label Things to Do. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Things to Do. Show all posts

Saturday, November 21, 2009

In Which a Tone Deaf Rock Fan Takes in the Worlds Best Orchestra


The offer came in this week -- get comp tickets to a Cleveland Orchestra performance and "blog about the experience." When our schedule cleared up for Friday night, I accepted the offer and took Kid Z along. I assume the offer came to me because I participated in a similar outreach by Opera Cleveland last summer, which in turn happened as a result of knowing that organizations communications director through her blog. These things can happen when you blog.

Despite being mostly a rock fan, I've seen quite a bit of the Cleveland Orchestra. In fact before we became parents Prof. W and I had a Severance Hall subscription. Not to say I can tell you why the orchestra is generally acknowledges as among the three or four best in the world. I just know they are and that they sound great.

Let's think a bit about Cleveland being home to one of the best orchestras in the world. Face it, one reason we are collectively gripping about the possibility of LeBron James leaving town is what it says about Northeast Ohio. He grew up here following the team and has been embraced as a hometown hero, and the team will be able to match whatever another team will pay him. And yet he might leave. If he does we are left with yet another bit of evidence that this is just not a place where people of excellence wish to live.

We're concerned that if he leave, the team will suck; we're really scared that if he leaves, it means we suck.

But we do have our pockets of excellence, and few if any are more excellent that the orchestra. It seems almost impossible that lowly, perennial joke-butt Cleveland could have anything, much less a highbrow cultural institution that ranks so highly.

Of course once you go you are reminded where you are. We have a world class cultural institution, a jewel of a venue in Severance, and perfectly abysmal parking. So the first part of the experience was getting there just in time, which meant that everything was parked up and we would be late.

Very Cleveland.

So we followed winding roads to, I think, Parma, laid in provisions for the trek back to Severance and set out. As a result we got there midway through the first movement of Dvořák's Cello Concerto in B Minor. Watching from the wings was nonetheless impressive. Again I know tiny bits about string playing (mostly from watching my kids take lessons) but soloist Alisa Weilerstein gets truly impressive sounds out of her instrument.

Once that piece was over, we were seated. The Orchestra apparently likes bloggers as they gave us seats on the floor three or four rows back. Viewing and listening from this distance is a whole new experience. First off you see things. Like everyone dresses in all black, but up close you see that some men wear tuxedo pants, some where regular dress slacks and one of the first violins wore ratty black cargoes. Who knew?

But more than that, the sound is stunning. Premium seats at the orchestra won't set you back much more than nosebleed seats at an aging rocker's Retirement Villa Tour at Quicken. But instead of muddy sound and dubiously tuned instruments you can hear what precision playing sounds like. I still listen to mostly rock and jazz at home, but increasingly classical is what I want to see live.

From that vantage we listened to Strauss's "Also Sprach Zarathustra." You know the first section better as:


The piece starts with basses rumbling so low they set up vibrations in your diaphram before you hear them. And of course the piece has far more to it than the now-cliche opening.

After the orchestra's performance internationally renouned percussionist Jamey Haddad set up shop in the lobby with a band of his students from Cleveland Institute of Music and Oberlin Conservatory, playing polyrhythmic jazz pieces deep into the night. The real treat of that portion was Ms. Wallerstein sitting in.

Like everyone else, the orchestra is hurting economically. And as noted, it is a can't miss gig. They never show up half in the bag and play half a set. And they won't turn free agent at the end of the season. Check them out. And if you can get away tonight, they are playing the Dvořák, which you really want to see.

Linkage:

The orchestra has a blog with tons of pics from last night. The PeeDee's review of the concert is up.

(Image from the Cleveland Orchestra)

Wednesday, November 04, 2009

Brunner in Town Tomorrow


Secretary of State and U.S. Senate candidate Jennifer Brunner will make her case to Akron tomorrow, with a series of events. Tomorrow morning she is appearing on the Ray Horner Show on WAKR at 8:30.

Then at 11:45 she appears at the Akron Press Club. I am scheduled to introduce her because the usual guy is out of town. Spaces are still available. Check the website for the reservations email.

Immediately after, at 1:30, she meets with Students for Brunner at the University of Akron Student Union, 303 Carroll Street.

I'll try to get some thoughts up, though I still have stuff from the Ganley and Portman events in the queue.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Tom Ganley Leads Off APC Senate Candidate Programs

The Akron Press Club will host all four major candidates for Ohio's U.S. Senate seat this fall. This Thursday, Oct. 1st auto dealer and candidate Tom Ganley will speak. Details and reservation info here.

OK, some may argue about whether Ganley is a major candidate. But hey, Bay Buchanan has endorsed him. So now he has that going for him. Which is nice.

The rest of the fall schedule goes as follows:

Oct. 29, Ambassador Rob Portman
Nov. 5, Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner
Dec. 8, Lt. Gov. Lee Fisher

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Akron Press Club: The State of Ohio's Newspapers Panel

The next program at the Akron Press Club will be a panel discussion featuring the Editors of three major Ohio newspapers. While they will discuss the state of the news business generally, one item high on the agenda will be the Ohio News Organization, a collaboration through which major papers buy stories from one another.

The panelists will be Bruce Winges from the Akron Beacon Journal, Susan Goldberg from the Plain Dealer and Jeff Gauer from the Canton Repository.

I had a hand in putting this one together and am pretty excited about it. Info and contact for reservations here.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Inaugeration Day

For those of you still in Akron and out of the Dem loop, the hot ticket today is a watch party co-sponsored by Reps Betty Sutton and Tim Ryan at the Akron Civic. Details here.

My teaching schedule neatly coincides with the event, so no tweets or liveblogs around here. I have it on DVR, so maybe some reaction later.

Enjoy.

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Ralph Regula (R-Canton) Coming to Akron Press Club

Congressman Ralph Regula, the outgoing and longtime representative of Ohio's 16 district, will speak at the Akron Press Club this Friday, Dec. 12. Lunch begins at 11:45. Details here.

Monday, October 06, 2008

Q: Are We Not Dems? A: Devo to Play Benefit for Obama

Word comes this afternoon confirming a rumor that Akron area natives Devo will play a show to benefit the local Democratic party. Details from the presser:

    DEVO TO THEIR NATIVE OHIO
    YOUR DUTY NOW FOR THE FUTURE IS TO VOTE FOR OBAMA!

    DEVO is making an urgent trip to their native Akron , Ohio to rally for Democratic Presidential Candidate Barack Obama!

    DEVO will be holding a concert on Friday, October 17th at 8pm at the Civic in Akron .

    Tickets go on sale TOMORROW at 11:00am (Tuesday, October 7th) at the Akron Civic Theatre Box Office (330.253.2488 or akroncivic.com) and Ticketmaster (330.945.9400, 216.241.5555 or ticketmaster.com). Reserved seats are available for $50, $35, and $25. A limited number of VIP tickets, which include a post show reception with the band, are available for $150.

    All proceeds will benefit the Summit County Democratic Party!
So come on, all you spud boys. Grab the girl u want and exercise your freedom of choice. Devo benefiting local Dems? That's good.

Image from the band's MySpace page.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Akron Press Club Presents "Buckeye Battlefield"

There is still time to reserve a spot for the Akron Press Club "Buckeye Battlefield" program this Thursday. The panelists will be:

  • John C. Green, Director, Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics, The University of Akron
  • Jason Johnson, Assistant Professor, Communication and Political Science, Hiram College
  • Connie Schultz, Columnist, Cleveland Plain Dealer
Check here for reservation info.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

APC Presents Jennifer Brunner. Ohio 16 Debate

Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner will speak before the Akron Press Club (and yr. humble blogger is on the programming committee, but did not arrange this one.) Secretary Brunner will speak Thursday, Sept. 4 at the Martin Center on the University campus. Lunch begins at 11:45.

Details and info on reserving tickets here.

In addition, APC's contribution to the Ohio 16th contest is nearly settled. PolitickerOhio reports that candidates John Boccieri and Kirk Shuring have agreed to three debates, on of which will be co-sponsored by APC and the Bliss Institute. Still a few details to be ironed out.

The Brunner program is up now on the Upcoming badge and subsequent Press Club programs will be added as things get posted on the website.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Ted in Town Today

Governor Strickland's Conversations on Education road show comes to Akron today. It looks like I'm going, though plans can change quickly here at the House of Pho.

The event itself is invite-only. People interested are invited to stream it on the web or attend a watch party. As to the latter, the ones being held for this session are in Stark County and Coventry. For live streaming, the Gov's site offers this FAQ. The meeting will be broadcast at 10 on Time Warner, though it's not clear if on Channel 16 or 23.

For my part, I'll take notes and write a post. I'm not going to try to lug in the laptop to liveblog and have given up mobile blogging to Blogger. But I'm on Twitter now and will probably tweet a couple things. You can check that out here.

The reviews on Strickland's education agenda, to the extent we know what it is, have been decidedly mixed. I expect this will be a cagey affair, but hopefully we will have a little more clue where he is going by the end.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Metro Burger is Up and Running

By the time we got back from vacation, the advertised (and previously blogged) Metro Burger was open in Highland Square. Apparently they offered a soft opening over the weekend, and started doing business in earnest Monday. It is, as people noted in comments, a free-standing restaurant owned by the group that owns the Market Street Cafe, a successful sandwich shop in Wallhaven.

Metro serves food for the masses, taken a rung or two up from holes it the wall like Ido's. If they are influenced by a cuisine other than generic burger, it's Southern -- fried dill pickles and sweet potato fries are available as sides. The decor is plain but lively. Walls are painted in bright oranges and yellows. Tables are plain, with plenty of seating indoors and a nice patio buffered from street traffic by the interlacing concrete walls around the main new building.

While the food includes higher-end ingredients, the service is strictly burger. As you walk toward the order window you pass a shelf full of clipboards full of one-page menu/order forms. You can pick from five specialty burgers (including chicken and veggie) or design your own. The child's menu offers but two choices -- grilled cheese or two sliders, both with a choice of fries or homemade tri-color chips.

Like most burger joints with higher aspirations (e.g. the woeful Red Robin), Metro focuses on toppings rather than the meat. When designing your burger you can choose among three buns and eight kinds of cheese. You then get up to four "toppings" with the option of adding extras or going for "premium toppings" for an extra charge. The toppings include the usual fare, and such things as jalepenoes and green onions. Finally you can choose from among fourteen sauces, which really embody the gourmet-ish hopes for the place -- lemon garlic dill aioli, sundried tomato pesto and cucumber wasabi appear alongside the more traditional barbecue and honey mustard.

The patty itself bats about three hundred. Unlike the gray lifeless discs that McDonalds et al have pelted us with for generations, Metro Burgers are nicely seared on the outside. Unfortunately, the burgers are only cooked well done. My one-third pound burger had nary a hint of pink inside. Also, the patties are not seasoned, even on the grill. A burger salted at the table just doesn't compare to one with salt in the meat.

Metro overall seems to suffer from a fear of seasoning. They cook their hand-cut fries to a perfectly golden brown, but again serve them unseasoned, leaving the diner to sprinkle on standard table salt, watch it inevitably fall off and mourn the fry that could have been. The creamy A-1 peppercorn sauce for my burger (served on the side which is a nice touch) had an agreeable, but faint flavor, lacking both salt and acidic bite.

In all, Metro is an asset to the Square. The restaurant serves simple food at a good price, and offers more than the local drive-through. At the same time, the recipes could use a little tweaking.

You can go online to view a pdf of the menu, (link here) though the rest of the site is under construction.

Some friends and I have talked -- but to this point only talked -- about doing some semi-regular restaurant reviews. In hopes that will happen, I open a new label for all things foodie.

Friday, June 13, 2008

New Business Coming to Highland Square

For a couple of weeks, trades people have been filing in and out of the retail spot on the west end of the big building (the opposite end from Chipotle). A day or two before we left, a sign appeared:


Based on empty Google searches, it does not appear to be a chain. A free-standing burger joint in the Square would be pretty awesome. Not only can we carnivores get our burger on, it may well prompt some enterprising soul to open a veggie place, which would be far more keeping with the H Square vibe.

So far no chatter on the HSNA website (which suggests they haven't found much to complain about, though the site as a whole has been slow lately.) The front page includes notice that someone (not clear who) will do put a tangram-based mural on "The wall beside Chipotle." I assume this means one of the raw concrete walls. Because it's only on the HSNA front page, the story may disappear from the link over time.

Meanwhile, I'm hearing rumors of a yet another venture opening up across the street. Stay tuned.

(Yes, I'm still in Colorado, but had this ready to go for when some time opened up, which it has. Briefly.)

Friday, June 06, 2008

Susan Tave Zelman at City Club Now

Outgoing State Schools Superintendent Susan Tave Zelman is speaking at this time at the Cleveland City Club. You can catch it now on WCPN, or listen to the podcast on the City Club Website.

Monday, June 02, 2008

Endgame: Obama Akron Watch Party Tomorrow Night.

Default Dem hangout Bricco is the place to be. RSVP with Obama's campaign here.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Town Hall With Rep. Vernon Sykes Tomorrow

State Representative Vernon Sykes (D-Akron) will hold what looks like a broad-ranging and informative town hall meeting tomorrow:

    You are invited to a Town Hall Meeting with 44th District State Representative Vernon Sykes!

    Join us as we discuss electric re-regulation, the economic stimulus package, education restructuring, and minority business assistance.

    WHEN: Thursday, April 24, 7-9 PM

    WHERE: Alpha Phi Alpha Homes, 662 Wolf Ledges Parkway, Akron, OH 44311

    Click here to RSVP

    Presenters include:

    Marco Sommerville, City Council president

    Philip Young, Independent Police Auditor

    Megan Zemke, from the office of Governor Strickland's Energy Advisor

    Sharon Smith, Ohio Department of Development

    Michael David, MCAP Director

    Vernon Sykes, 44th District State Representative

Good stuff from Rep. Sykes, though I wonder if he is biting off too much. Unfortunately Kid Z has a violin concert so I am unable to attend. If I find any good accounts (or anyone wants to send me impressions) I will link/report.

Monday, April 21, 2008

APC Veterans Panel May 1.

The Akron Press Club will present a panel on veterans health care next week. We've got a great line-up:

    Moderator: Eric Mansfield of WKYC

    Panel Members:

      George Baker, Executive Director, Summit County Veterans Service Commission

      Patricia Hall, Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom Program Manager, ouis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center

      Jason L. Huff, Regional Public Affairs Director, Ohio Attorney General’s Office (And a veteran in his own right)


    Details:

      Date: Thursday, May 1

      Buffet Lunch: 11:45 a.m.

      Program: Noon

      Location: Martin University Cente, 105 Fir Hill, on the University of Akron campus.

      Cost: $10 for Akron Press Club members; $15 for non-members.

      The program will start immediately following the luncheon, both of which are open to the public.

    Reserve a spot: Reservations are requested. Contact Abe Zaidan. Contact info here.

And if you are wandering by the blog for the first time, I sit on the Press Club Board of Trustees and the programming committee, though I didn't put this panel together.

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

The Next Press Club Program Includes Someone You Know

Monday, April 14 the Akron Press Club will present a panel discussion of the Roberts Supreme Court. Panelists will include law professors Jonathan Adler from Case and Will Huhn from Akron and political scientist Christopher Banks from Kent.

The moderator will be an underemployed slacker sponging off his wife attorney, writer and university lecturer named Scott Piepho.

Seriously, this is the first program I've helped put together as a Board Member. The program is called "From Guns to Guantanamo: A Guide to Life in the Roberts Court Era"

Details and reservation info here.

Now I have to get back to prepping.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Jennifer Brunner in Town Tonight

Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner brings her town hall tour to Akron tonight. According to the email, she is "utilizing a series of town hall meetings to hear directly from Ohio voters regarding the status of Ohio's elections systems." Details:

Wednesday -- Feb. 27, 2008
7:00 p.m.
Akron-Summit County Public Library
Auditorium
60 South High St.
Akron, Ohio 44326

I'm doing my best to able to attend tonight and post a report.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Akron Press Club Panel on Electricity Pricing

The Akron Press Club (I'm now a member of the Board, blah blah) presents "Electricity Restructuring in Ohio," a panel discussion regarding energy regulation and deregulation.

Details

Moderator:

Michael Douglas
Editorial Page Editor
Akron Beacon Journal

Panelists:

Janine L. Migden-Ostrander
Consumers’ Counsel
Office of the Ohio Consumers’ Counsel

Mark R. Shanahan
Energy Adviser, Office of Governor Strickland
& Executive Director
Ohio Air Quality Development Authority

William A. Spratley
Executive Director
Green Energy Ohio

Leila L. Vespoli
Senior Vice President & General Counsel
FirstEnergy Corporation

Date: Friday, Jan. 25
Buffet Lunch: 11:45 a.m.
Program: Noon
Location: Martin University Center, 105 Fir Hill, on the University of Akron campus.

Click through to the Press Club website for information on making your reservations.

For a little more background, here's Dennis Willard in Sunday's ABJ on the proposals in the legislature, participants FirstEnergy and the Consumer's Council disagreeing here and here. Should be a lively discussion.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Marc Dann Coming to Akron

Since Marc Dann is the hot topic today, it's as good a time as any to publicize his upcoming appearance at the Akron Press Club. He will be here Friday, November 14 at the usual 11:45. Details.

He will speak on "Looking Back, Looking Ahead," which for no other political figure in Ohio would sound so loaded.

C'mon down, Jerid and see your big bear. Holla!