10 Things Going on in Cleveland this Weekend (March 21 – 23)

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The guys in the self-described "rag n roll" band Woody Pines travel light. The group's bluegrass/country swing music doesn't need any amplification and they can easily set up and play street corner and backyards. They manage to play some 200 shows a year. Led by singer Woody Pines, the group mixes it up and veers from Dylan-inspired folk ("Like I Do") to old-time swing ("Harlem"). It performs tonight at 7 at Mechanic Street House Concerts in Ohio City. Tickets are $15. Once you purchase your ticket online, you'll receive an email with the exact location of the Ohio City house where the concert will be held. (Niesel)
Photo via YouTube
The guys in the self-described "rag n roll" band Woody Pines travel light. The group's bluegrass/country swing music doesn't need any amplification and they can easily set up and play street corner and backyards. They manage to play some 200 shows a year. Led by singer Woody Pines, the group mixes it up and veers from Dylan-inspired folk ("Like I Do") to old-time swing ("Harlem"). It performs tonight at 7 at Mechanic Street House Concerts in Ohio City. Tickets are $15. Once you purchase your ticket online, you'll receive an email with the exact location of the Ohio City house where the concert will be held. (Niesel)
Lil Rel likes to talk about a lot of things: marriage, cable bills, a creepy old gym teacher he once had, his mother’s cigarette smoking. He claims he’d often get confused as to which parent was calling to him from other room: was that his Black Panther dad or his gruff, chainsmoking mom? Don’t you confuse his name, though. Lil Rel is a manly man and he makes sure you know it. Don’t ever violate his “Man Laws” and ask him his astrological sign or wait to make sure he gets in his door when you drop him off. He’s been on Last Comic Standing and is slated to appear on the new reboot of In Living Color. He performs tonight at 7:30 at the Improv and has shows scheduled through Sunday. Tickets are $22. (Trenholme)
Photo via Facebook
Lil Rel likes to talk about a lot of things: marriage, cable bills, a creepy old gym teacher he once had, his mother’s cigarette smoking. He claims he’d often get confused as to which parent was calling to him from other room: was that his Black Panther dad or his gruff, chainsmoking mom? Don’t you confuse his name, though. Lil Rel is a manly man and he makes sure you know it. Don’t ever violate his “Man Laws” and ask him his astrological sign or wait to make sure he gets in his door when you drop him off. He’s been on Last Comic Standing and is slated to appear on the new reboot of In Living Color. He performs tonight at 7:30 at the Improv and has shows scheduled through Sunday. Tickets are $22. (Trenholme)
Before she formed the riot grrrl act Bikini Girl in 1990, singer Kathleen Hanna was just another private school student trying to find herself. Contrary to popular opinion, the teachers at trendy Evergreen College in Olympia, Wa. didn't take kindly to her literary experiments so she refrained from letting her emotions go. But then she met underground writer Kathy Acker and realized she didn't need to hold back. Acker helped her channel her more extreme impulses, and it wasn't long before Hanna was fronting the abrasive and openly feminist Bikini Kill. Hanna's history is well documented in the The Punk Singer, a terrific documentary that shows just how off putting the band's music (and politics) could be. The movie screens at 7:30 tonight and at 9:10 tomorrow night at the Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque. Tickets are $9. (Niesel)
Photo via Cleveland Scene Archives
Before she formed the riot grrrl act Bikini Girl in 1990, singer Kathleen Hanna was just another private school student trying to find herself. Contrary to popular opinion, the teachers at trendy Evergreen College in Olympia, Wa. didn't take kindly to her literary experiments so she refrained from letting her emotions go. But then she met underground writer Kathy Acker and realized she didn't need to hold back. Acker helped her channel her more extreme impulses, and it wasn't long before Hanna was fronting the abrasive and openly feminist Bikini Kill. Hanna's history is well documented in the The Punk Singer, a terrific documentary that shows just how off putting the band's music (and politics) could be. The movie screens at 7:30 tonight and at 9:10 tomorrow night at the Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque. Tickets are $9. (Niesel)
Picking up where A Raisin In The Sun left off, Clybourne Park offers a comical look into the issue of race and real estate. The Pulitzer Prize- and Tony- winning play takes place in two acts set 50 years apart. In 1959, the community attempts to stop purchase of the home to a black family. In 2009, the now largely African-American community fights against gentrification. Dealing with common race issues of any suburb of a major metropolitan area, the comedic play offers a blunt perspective into the American — or, in this case, African-American — dream. The play opens tonight at 7:30 in the Allen Theatre. It runs through April 13. Tickets are $45 to $72. (Stoops)
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Picking up where A Raisin In The Sun left off, Clybourne Park offers a comical look into the issue of race and real estate. The Pulitzer Prize- and Tony- winning play takes place in two acts set 50 years apart. In 1959, the community attempts to stop purchase of the home to a black family. In 2009, the now largely African-American community fights against gentrification. Dealing with common race issues of any suburb of a major metropolitan area, the comedic play offers a blunt perspective into the American — or, in this case, African-American — dream. The play opens tonight at 7:30 in the Allen Theatre. It runs through April 13. Tickets are $45 to $72. (Stoops)
Past rap/rock crossovers left much to be desired. The talent and ability required to blend two radically different genres is often eschewed for trashy neck tattoos. In light of this, Post Vinyl avoids genre mashing’s standard pitfalls. In both rock and rap categories, the guys are incredibly talented. "Gringo," a track off their latest album Platinum BBQ, utilizes the 1892 Isaac Albeniz classical piece "Asturias" with incredibly successful results. A dark and ominous Spanish sound mixes with a tight flow on the mic. By the end of the track, there's a great sense of completion; tying the loose ends of its failed predecessors. Expect to hear this tune and more like it when the band plays tonight at Now That’s Class. (Patrick Stoops)
Photo via Facebook
Past rap/rock crossovers left much to be desired. The talent and ability required to blend two radically different genres is often eschewed for trashy neck tattoos. In light of this, Post Vinyl avoids genre mashing’s standard pitfalls. In both rock and rap categories, the guys are incredibly talented. "Gringo," a track off their latest album Platinum BBQ, utilizes the 1892 Isaac Albeniz classical piece "Asturias" with incredibly successful results. A dark and ominous Spanish sound mixes with a tight flow on the mic. By the end of the track, there's a great sense of completion; tying the loose ends of its failed predecessors. Expect to hear this tune and more like it when the band plays tonight at Now That’s Class. (Patrick Stoops)
In conjunction with the Cleveland International Film Festival, Playhouse Square is showing several films today at the Hanna Theatre. For fans of short-form storytelling and those with limited attention spans, the Hollywood Shorts program showcases seven short films at 2:30 p.m. Five Dances, which tells the story of a young dancer attempting to choreograph his tumultuous life, shows at 4:30 p.m. Utilizing hands instead of full-bodied actors, the 6:30 p.m. showing of Handy is a comedic adventure of a disembodied hand that falls in love and accidentally sparks a revolution. Wrapping up the evening at 8:45 p.m., The Sax Man is a locally made documentary about the saxophonist we've all seen playing downtown. His surprising and storied past is full of interesting details. Tickets can be purchased online. (Stoops) clevelandfilm.org, 877-304-FILM.
Photo via Cleveland Scene Archives
In conjunction with the Cleveland International Film Festival, Playhouse Square is showing several films today at the Hanna Theatre. For fans of short-form storytelling and those with limited attention spans, the Hollywood Shorts program showcases seven short films at 2:30 p.m. Five Dances, which tells the story of a young dancer attempting to choreograph his tumultuous life, shows at 4:30 p.m. Utilizing hands instead of full-bodied actors, the 6:30 p.m. showing of Handy is a comedic adventure of a disembodied hand that falls in love and accidentally sparks a revolution. Wrapping up the evening at 8:45 p.m., The Sax Man is a locally made documentary about the saxophonist we've all seen playing downtown. His surprising and storied past is full of interesting details. Tickets can be purchased online. (Stoops) clevelandfilm.org, 877-304-FILM.
Back in 2006, then-Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum CEO Terry Stewart asked the Hesitations, a terrific old Cleveland soul group, to reunite for a gig at the museum. The band’s been playing steadily ever since and sounds as sharp as ever. The Hesitations' roots go back to the mid-'60s, when they recorded R&B hits like "Soul Superman," "Born Free," and "Climb Every Mountain." In their heyday, they mixed up R&B, gospel and soul and still take that approach. They don't play out much anymore so catching this show at the Beachland should be a real treat. (Niesel)
Photo via Facebook
Back in 2006, then-Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum CEO Terry Stewart asked the Hesitations, a terrific old Cleveland soul group, to reunite for a gig at the museum. The band’s been playing steadily ever since and sounds as sharp as ever. The Hesitations' roots go back to the mid-'60s, when they recorded R&B hits like "Soul Superman," "Born Free," and "Climb Every Mountain." In their heyday, they mixed up R&B, gospel and soul and still take that approach. They don't play out much anymore so catching this show at the Beachland should be a real treat. (Niesel)
Apex Panda’s hyperactive beats and growling synthesizers are intense to say the least. On Quantum Entanglement, Panda employs an army of hard-hitting bass tracks and thumping beats strong enough to revitalize a stopped heart. Amongst the host of dope samples and killer production, Panda knows when to build up and then drop the bass. Called Alice In Kandyland, the live show features a host of electronic artists and they're encouraging the audience to get wild. If Quantum is any indication, tonight’s electro house set is going to be massive and get you dancing. (Stoops)
Photo via Yelp User H.S.
Apex Panda’s hyperactive beats and growling synthesizers are intense to say the least. On Quantum Entanglement, Panda employs an army of hard-hitting bass tracks and thumping beats strong enough to revitalize a stopped heart. Amongst the host of dope samples and killer production, Panda knows when to build up and then drop the bass. Called Alice In Kandyland, the live show features a host of electronic artists and they're encouraging the audience to get wild. If Quantum is any indication, tonight’s electro house set is going to be massive and get you dancing. (Stoops)
What was it like to be a dinosaur? Find out through virtual technology in this innovative exhibition. Take the controls in a state-of-the-art simulator to experience life as a Tyrannosaurus rex or Triceratops. This interactive exhibition fuses fossil displays with computer simulation to let visitors experience how these dinosaurs survived in their prehistoric world.
Photo via Wikimedia Commons
What was it like to be a dinosaur? Find out through virtual technology in this innovative exhibition. Take the controls in a state-of-the-art simulator to experience life as a Tyrannosaurus rex or Triceratops. This interactive exhibition fuses fossil displays with computer simulation to let visitors experience how these dinosaurs survived in their prehistoric world.
We remember when the moody indie rock act the National used to play the Beachland. Those days are gone as the band has now graduated to bigger venues. But you can relive those halcyon days today as the Cleveland International Film Festival presents a screening of Mistaken for Strangers, a documentary about the band. The film screens at 6 p.m. It's followed by a screening of The Ballad of Shovels & Rope, a documentary about the nerdy twang-core duo (and those guys till play the Beachland). It screens at 8 p.m. Tickets are $14 and each film requires a separate ticket. (Niesel)
Photo via IMDB
We remember when the moody indie rock act the National used to play the Beachland. Those days are gone as the band has now graduated to bigger venues. But you can relive those halcyon days today as the Cleveland International Film Festival presents a screening of Mistaken for Strangers, a documentary about the band. The film screens at 6 p.m. It's followed by a screening of The Ballad of Shovels & Rope, a documentary about the nerdy twang-core duo (and those guys till play the Beachland). It screens at 8 p.m. Tickets are $14 and each film requires a separate ticket. (Niesel)