Brittany Nader
Brittany Nader joins Morning Edition host Amanda Rabinowitz on Thursdays to chat about Northeast Ohio’s vibrant music scene.
Brittany earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communication, with a concentration in magazine journalism, from Kent State University in 2013. She has regularly contributed feature articles to local publications including The Devil Strip, Cleveland.com, Buzzbin Magazine and Akron Beacon Journal’s Savor Ohio magazine.
She works full-time as the marketing director for ABC Packaging Direct, based in Westlake, Ohio. In her downtime, she enjoys reading, cooking, playing with her cats and immersing herself in Akron’s music scene.
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Dave Grohl Alley is a roadside attraction dedicated to the two-time Rock Hall inductee that has come to mean so much more to a committed group of Warren residents.
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Absorbing New Sounds and Writing Nonstop, Jazz Bandleader Nathan-Paul Davis Evolves Into Prolific LoRecognized in the Northeast Ohio music scene as the animated alto-sax player in soul groups Wesley Bright and The Honeytones and Nathan-Paul and The Admirables, the jazz musician is releasing his own lo-fi songs as a solo artist.
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It’s been nearly one year since the coronavirus pandemic shut down the live music scene. We listen back to a compilation album that an Akron record company produced during Ohio’s lockdown last spring.
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How the artist is using this time during the pandemic to continue to share music from Northeast Ohio throughout the world.
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Her new book “Peter and the Wolves” focuses on her time with the late Peter Laughner of the band Pere Ubu.
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A Cleveland artist described as a one-woman choir is out with a new album that combines experimental music, guided meditation and breathing exercises. Christa Ebert, who performs as Uno Lady, says she hopes “GROUNDED” will help listeners find peace amid the stresses and anxieties of the pandemic.
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Three Northeast Ohio musicians about how the year has transformed their ambitions and what it will take to make it when things return to normal.
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A group of Northeast Ohio independent music venues has spent the past five months planning how to reopen safely amid the coronavirus pandemic. Now the venues have shifted to just trying to survive these winter months so they can reopen at all.
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Cleveland trumpeter Theresa May talks about the challenges of navigating a career in classical music for Black women, and her work with the popular band Mourning [A] BLKstar.
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Backline Cleveland is continuing to help launch the careers of undiscovered musicians in the Midwest by handing out $20,000 grants to four winners of its music accelerator program.