
There have been bars built around live music. Many others have been constructed as temples to craft beer and cocktails. And there certainly is no shortage of those that cater to sports and the people who live (and die) by them. But when Jukebox, a City Tavern opens early next year in Ohio City, it might be the first that places prime importance on that electronic apparatus in the corner of the room that plays recorded music.
Alex Budin, a self-described music snob, describes his music-focused bar as “a place where people can expect to hear and learn about music of multiple genres, all of which is concentrated in a constantly evolving jukebox.”
Located in the Striebinger Block building of the newly coined Hingetown neighborhood, Jukebox aims to be the missing piece of the puzzle for that percolating corner of Ohio City. When Hingetown developers Graham Veysey and Marika Shioiri-Clark met Budin and heard about his concept, which he’d been developing for months, they knew immediately it was the perfect fit.
“We have been very deliberate in how we wanted to program the entire building,” Veysey explains. “Rising Star [Coffee] opens at 6:30 a.m., and all these other shops will bring people here throughout the day, but what are you doing to carry the evening and night hours? That’s a void that Alex will fill.”
For the past four years, Budin, who grew up in Chagrin Falls, was managing a popular bar and restaurant in Chicago. In college, he hosted an album-oriented radio show, where history and commentary were a large part of the equation. Jukebox, like that radio program, will do more than entertain guests with music; it will educate them about music.
“We hope that the jukebox will be interactive and educational,” explains Budin, 29, who is in the process of moving to Ohio City. “Interactive in the sense that people not only can play the selections, but also have a voice in what gets added to it. I look at the jukebox as the city’s iPod.”
The 100-CD jukebox will feature the music of various Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducted musicians, beginning in the ’50s and running clear through modern indie rock and hip-hop. “Anything from Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On to Neutral Milk Hotel’s In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, and everything that falls in between,” he explains. “Things that I like and think my customers will like.”
The monthly selections will be described at length in a document — a music menu, of sorts — that guests can read to learn more about the groups and albums, complete with recommended tracks. Budin envisions regular new-music nights, when a new record is played in its entirety alongside a complementary old record. Local music venues like the Grog Shop or Beachland might appropriate sections within the jukebox to highlight the music of bands coming to town. A fresh crop of albums might coincide with the opening of a new Rock Hall exhibit.
Following a full-scale build-out that will include a bar, small kitchen, bathrooms and expansive rear patio, the space at 1404 W. 29th Street will open in the first quarter of 2014. The 1,350-square-foot double storefront, formerly Ohio City Café and a portion of the Tool Shed, will seat approximately 65, with room for more on the front sidewalk and rear patio.
In order of importance, Budin places food in the rear, behind the music and the drinks. He’ll offer a few flatbreads, but says that guests are more than welcome to bring food with them or order in. When it comes to the liquid assets, guests can look forward to local craft beer, cocktails and a small list of white and red wines. “This is not the place for people to get a cheap PBR,” he says, adding that the target demo is neighborhood folks in the 25-to-40 bracket.
“I look at Jukebox as two distinct models,” he says. “In one sense, it’s a music-themed bar. In another, it’s a neighborhood tavern. The venues on W. 25th Street are a destination for the whole city. I’m hoping that this becomes a destination for Ohio City residents.”
For Veysey, who already has flushed out Hingetown with a coffee roaster, tea café, hair salon, juice bar, fitness studio and doggie boutique, Jukebox is one more way to activate a previously underutilized area of the city — one that just so happens to link Ohio City’s Market District with Detroit Shoreway’s Gordon Square.
“Right now, Cleveland’s this giant sandbox,” says Veysey. “And when you get to jump in the sandbox with like-minded folks who are doing cool shit, it’s really exciting. We’re doing it in one pocket of the city, but it’s happening in other pockets, too. What’s important is that we’re connecting those elements and making sure that as a city we’re continuing that momentum.”
This article appears in Oct 9-15, 2013.

Will the jukebox have mushroomhead songs? Clevelanders love mushroomhead.
Nobody over the age of 24 has ever wanted to order a cheap PBR….
I second the mushroomhead. maybe some MGK, as well.
Booooo!! There are few venues for local bands every day….
who the hell decided that Ohio City was called “hingetown”? and wtf does that even mean, anyway? It’s OHIO CITY, okay?
“I look at the jukebox as the city’s iPod” ?? ha.
Pretentious about rock and roll and pretentious about beer.
i dont know if i agree about the cheap PBR thing… local clevelanders are super spoiled and will not make a spot their regular local hangout without lots of hookups. i think this kid will learn this quickly… or hopefully his overhead is not too high!
Its Ohio City or the Near West Side – I refuse to even use that other name. Bar sounds fun though.
Hingetown is a stupid name made up by marketing people to try to fill space owned by people like Veysey and Clark. I think the concept sounds interesting but I don’t think it will work.
Budin is pretentious about beer, pretentious about music, dismissive of the local movement for great bar food and from an elite upper-class suburb. Here comes an outsider to teach all of us knuckle-dragging, PBR swilling, Michael Stanley loving Clevelanders about music. Daddy should have saved his money.
I couldn’t disagree more with Tired’s comments. Budin possesses initiative and quality experience in the industry which is refreshing to a budding city like Cleveland . Coming from an upper-class suburb has nothing to do with the drive for excellence he appears to have. I, for one, am excited to see Budin and Jukebox thrive in a historic neighborhood that is on the up and up…AND learn some new music along the way. Way to go, Budin…looking forward to the opening!
That’s fine if they want to serve nice drinks. Just please, don’t be that pretentious place that looks down on you if you do, in fact, order I PBR.
I ordered a PBR at a Cleveland bar in Ohio City and got an incredibly snarky response from the bartender. I was on a budget, you pretentious hipster snob.
Im a lifelonge Detroit Shoreway /Ohio city border person.While I love all the exciting things finally realizing the fruition of what I always knew our area could be,I dont like the snobbiness that we get from the newbies to our area when we go to some of these establishments now.Clevelanders are warm,friendly welcoming people. So we LIFELONGERS here should get the same warm friendliness that we dish out just living here.Kudos to the new establishment but keep in mind to be a welcoming force.:)
I think this is a great idea. The guy has passion for good music and he has a plan. This will work. I live in the area and you will definitely catch me on the patio in the summer drinking a craft brew. Don’t listen to these TROLLS Alex. Haters are always going to hate.
Another pretentious place for pretentious 33-year-old newbie transplant snobs and entremanures to drink their expensive designer brewskis…and listen to crap tunes. You won’t see any older folks or retirees on fixed incomes…obviously not wanted there, as his snarky tone conveys. No PBRs, no Rolling Rocks, just the local swill with silly names like Old Horse’s Ass.
Hey, it’s already six months past their projected opening date and they are still working on the joint, last I saw…so they must be running low on rich-Daddy money. Fuck ’em.
And Hingetown is indeed a stupid name…one of the stupidest. Just another marketing concept or branding ploy that Clevelanders will never use…
Hey, try to think of the last time you said “Hope Memorial Bridge” or “Veterans Memorial Bridge”…same thing with this moniker.
Folks will still call it Ohio City or Near West Side or just West 29th and Detroit…even when Spaces opens up across the street.
Good night…and good luck…
Chuckles the Clown