Archive for the tag "ohio"

High Five Bar and Grill (Columbus, OH)

poster by Clinton RenoWith The Zincs and Tiara

At the High Five Bar
1227 N. High St, Columbus OH 43201
(614) 565-ROCK

My band: Nathaniel Braddock (guitar); Ryan Hembrey (bass); Jason Toth (drums)

Poster by Clinton Reno at GalaxyReno.com… it’s based on a dream I had.


The Grog Shop (Cleveland, OH)

With the Zincs and Good Morning Valentine

At the Grog Shop
2785 Euclid Heights Blvd., Cleveland OH 44106
(216) 321-5588

My band: Nathaniel Braddock (guitar); Ryan Hembrey (bass); Jason Toth (drums)

Ryan Hembrey in Cleveland

photo by Edith Frost


The farmer falconer

poster by Clinton RenoI dreamed I was a farmer’s wife, and the farmer had a gorgeous pet falcon.  He decided over the course of time that he was going to fly away with the falcon.  I loved them both so much and I wanted them to stay.  So I stood out in the field and waved my arms and threw out corn or something to attract the falcon and make it come over to me.  It did, and eventually the farmer followed it over to me and I flung my arms around him, sobbing and begging him "please don’t leave me!  I love you, you can’t go away!" Then as I was embracing him I realized that under the overalls, the farmer was made out of balloons.  So he was already gone, he was no longer flesh and blood like me.  :-(

Poster by Clinton Reno at GalaxyReno.com… it’s for a show I’m playing in Columbus.


Cleveland Free Times interview

An interview by Anastasia Pantsios that appeared in the October 1-7, 1997 issue of the Cleveland Free Times (Cleveland, OH)…

An Early Frost

Edith Frost approaches roots music in a conscious, educated way. Though such an approach can sometimes lead to stagy, patronizing disasters, Frost resembles fellow country/folk troubadour Gillian Welch in coming at her late-found love with an affection so open and humble that it precludes condescension. And even though Frost’s self-released EP of last year1 and her full-length album Calling Over Time were released on Chicago’s ultra-hip indie label Drag City, she seems embarrassed by the notion of being part of some "hip" scene. She’s just a 33-year old working gal in Chicago, thrilled to get her first $3000 royalty check from Drag City and trying to figure out how to buy a vehicle so she can go on the road more. "Last May was the first time I played in a town I didn’t live in," she explains.

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