Kenmore Neighborhood Alliance launches Winter Break Music Festival showcasing Boulevard businesses

By Jennifer Conn Spectrum News

Published November 23, 2021

Tina Boyes and Corey Jenkins of Kenmore Neighborhood Alliance are working to promote businesses on Kenmore Boulevard. (Spectrum News/Jennifer Conn)

AKRON, Ohio — Move over Highland Square Porch Rokr, there’s a new music festival in town.

The first Kenmore Winter Break Music Festival, set for Dec. 17 and 18 at the Rialto Theatre on Kenmore Boulevard, is designed not only to break up the monotony of a dreary Ohio winter, it’s also part of a strategy by the Kenmore Neighborhood Alliance (KNA) to shine a light on Akron’s “Music Row.”

With five recording studios specializing in singer-songwriters to hip-hop, an historic guitar repair store, an instrument shop and a live music venue with multiple stages, the music industry has deep roots in Kenmore, said KNA Executive Director Tina Boyes.

“We’re finally listening to our musicians and music businesses and saying, ‘What do you need?’” Boyes said. “I don’t know that anyone’s really done that in a concerted way. That’s what we’re trying to do. We already have the music businesses here.”

Since Boyes took the helm of the newly created community development corporation in 2016, KNA has focused on revitalizing the businesses still standing on the Boulevard, Kenmore’s sole business district.

KNA began by spearheading a Better Block festival in 2017, which is designed to show what’s possible in a community, while featuring what’s already great.

That three-day event morphed into Kenmore First Fridays in the summers, which brought food, vendors and music to the Boulevard, drawing thousands of Akron residents over the past few years.

Boyes also applied for, and was awarded, an historic designation for the Boulevard, whose listing on the National Register of Historic Places offers benefits to small business owners looking to make building improvements.

During the long months of the pandemic, 10 new, small businesses opened their doors on the Boulevard, filling in shop fronts and bringing more vitality to the neighborhood.

Now, with a strong foundation under the business district, and the pandemic easing enough for people to come out again, KNA is fine-tuning its focus to help the individual music businesses market themselves — a move that sparked the Winter Break Music Fest idea.

“The businesses need marketing help yesterday, everything from somebody to take a picture, and put it on Facebook to an advertisement,” said Corey Jenkins, KNA’s promoter and experience manager, and the mastermind behind the music fest. “Overall, most don’t know how to do any of that.”

But Jenkins does, having experience both as a musician with the band “Big Pop,” and in corporate marketing.

The Kenmore Winter Break Music Festival is set for December 17 & 18 at the Rialto Theatre on Kenmore Boulevard. (Courtesy of Kenmore Neighborhood Alliance)

KNA plans to begin promoting the core music businesses first, and expand to others on the Boulevard as she and Jenkins flesh out the best approach with the means they have to work with, Boyes said.

“There are people living within a block of these businesses that have not known for 15 to 20 years what these businesses even are,” she said. “That’s our job as the CDC here for this district is to make sure people know that this district is great. Magnify that visually, you know, marketing-wise [with signage] and branding. We want to make this affordable and accessible, but it cannot be free.”

The idea for a music fest was sparked when Jenkins began planning promotions with Rialto Theatre owners Seth and Nate Vaill for a relaunch of the theatre. The brothers bought the theater in 2010, and opened a performance venue, an event space and Just A Dream Recording Studios in 2015.

While working on a relaunch plan to showcase the theater’s newly created Living Room Stage for acoustic sets, Jenkins suggested a music festival.

“By December, people are missing the summer music festivals,” he said. “With the COVID stuff, there hasn’t been the opportunity for a lot of that, so I was like, ‘Let’s do something big.’”

The Vaills liked the idea so Jenkins contacted 91.3 The Summit FM, Akron’s original-music station, which agreed to participate. The Summit already refers to the Boulevard as Akron’s Music Row in ads, Jenkins said.

Once the other Boulevard’s music businesses agreed to sponsor the event the festival was on.

“It’s about giving Kenmore and the Rialto a signature music event that is unique and they can own,” Jenkins said.

Promoting the Boulevard as Akron’s Music Row makes sense, said Seth Vaill.

“To be honest, there’s a rich history here,” he said. “I think we start with the musicians and then the people come. I think that’s the key, getting the musicians to come down and play you know, and then people will follow once there’s a community of musicians that are here.”

Big Pop is scheduled to perform at Kenmore Winter Break Music Festival in December.

The Rialto is in good company on the Boulevard.

  • Lay’s Guitar Shop was opened by Virgil Lay in 1968, serving the likes of Jack Bruce, Phil Keaggy and Joe Walsh. Lay also founded SIT Strings (stay in tune), which is now located about two miles from the Boulevard.
  • Lay’s is now owned by Dan Shinn, who opened the Loft at Lay’s upstairs from the repair shop, and sells hand-made and custom instruments, vintage guitars, amplifiers and more. Shinn’s brother, Joel Shinn, runs a guitar refinish and restoration business and is working on launching Lay’s brand guitars.
  • The Guitar Department, a Boulevard staple since 2009, is a new and used consignment shop catering to players of every skill level and budget, and offering music lessons.
  • Among the recording studios is Thom Tadsen Live Album Recording Studio, in the former Cook Hardware. Tadsen operates a 24-track live and 128-playback music studio specializing in punk, metal, rock and rockabilly.

Boyes likens the services KNA could offer Boulevard businesses to agency work, where offerings would be on a project or retainer basis.

“We’re saying, ‘There’s a whole new group of people out there that could be paying attention to you, that want to pay attention to you, and we can reach them,’” she said. “Let us help you.”

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