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Your backstage pass to Northeast Ohio's independent music scene.

As Music Venues Sit Silent, Workers are Forced to Forge a New Path

Auricle
Joshua Brewer
The Auricle in downtown Canton has been closed since March 2020. The venue plans to reopen, but some staff members have moved on to find other means of employment.

Live music venues in Ohio were some of the and last to reopen as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

It鈥檚 been a little more than a year since concert clubs shut their doors as required by statewide mandates and regulations that were put in place March 2020.

Venue owners have been fighting to get enough funding to keep their businesses open.

Their employees, including bartenders, security officers and sound engineers, have had to search for other means of earning a living as their workplaces have been closed indefinitely.

Temporarily closing a Canton music destination

, a live music venue in downtown Canton, has been temporarily closed since March 16, 2020.

This April marks the club鈥檚 10-year anniversary, but owner Joshua Brewer said there are no set plans to celebrate the milestone or resume normal operations until it is safe to do so.

鈥淚 definitely saw this being at least six months and that was me being cheery about it,鈥 Brewer said. 鈥淭hen, obviously, now this has gone on for quite some time.鈥

The Auricle has hosted concerts by local and touring bands like , and .

On March 5, 2020, and performed a large show for a local audience at the venue, and The Auricle鈥檚 last show was and on March 12 of last year.

Brewer is a musician and opened The Auricle on Cleveland Avenue in Canton in 2011.

In 2018, he moved the business four blocks down the same street to its current location, a former Burger King restaurant with ample space for crowds.

The Auricle houses a full bar but primarily operates as a venue for concerts and events.

It has been a popular stop during Canton鈥檚 monthly events, which offer the public the chance to enjoy live music, art and shopping in the .

The Auricle owner Joshua Brewer
MD Photography
Joshua Brewer opened Canton bar and venue The Auricle in 2011. In 2018, he moved the business to a new location on Cleveland Avenue.

鈥淚鈥檝e always jokingly said if you love music and money, don鈥檛 open a music venue. It鈥檚 not necessarily a profitable business,鈥 Brewer said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 something you do because you love it, and you love the art and the music and the people that truly come out and love and enjoy it.鈥

Brewer said he was keeping an eye on the news about the outbreak and spread of COVID-19 prior to the statewide shutdown.

He got his employees signed up for unemployment benefits as soon as possible but said it was difficult to navigate with the high volume of layoffs because of COVID-19.

Brewer hasn鈥檛 been earning a stable income during the shutdown and has been applying for grants and loans to keep The Auricle afloat.

He said he cares more about the health of people and not contributing to the spread of COVID than reopening before he can safely do so.

鈥淚 just don鈥檛 need to make money that bad to have someone鈥檚 health on my conscience,鈥 Brewer said.

Shifting identities in the workforce

Courtney Hunt, 29, worked as a bartender at The Auricle prior to the shutdown.

Hunt grew up in Canton and moved back to the area after college. The Auricle was a big part of his life and helped him make new friends in his community.

It opened a year before he moved back home, and he said it seemed to be where everyone was hanging out. Going to First Friday events and seeing an actual 鈥渟cene鈥 in Canton was exciting, Hunt said.

鈥淚t was the first place I hung out at because downtown [Canton] used to be like a Scooby-Doo ghost town,鈥 he said.

He met Brewer the first day he stepped foot in the music venue, and a few years later, Hunt became part of the staff.

鈥淚 fit right in,鈥 Hunt said.

Courtney Hunt
Courtney Hunt
Courtney Hunt worked at The Auricle to feel part of the downtown Canton community. He shifted to working a day job from home when the music venue was forced to temporarily shut its doors as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

When Brewer told his staff The Auricle would be temporarily closing due to pandemic restrictions, Hunt initially felt a sense of relief.

鈥淚t was tough because everyone is kind of scattered to the wind now,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut it was also sort of a relief in a way. I live like one block away from The Auricle, so I can almost see it from my bedroom window. Because I鈥檝e been in the scene so long, sometimes you just need a break.鈥

He said he felt like a public figure as a bartender at the venue, and the lockdown allowed him to just be himself for a minute.

鈥淏efore when I was working at the bar, I had a day job, so sometimes I鈥檇 be working 16-hour days,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o I never had much time to just spend by myself. So I thought, now I have the time, can鈥檛 really do anything else, so I鈥檒l pick up the guitar and see where that goes.鈥

Hunt said once the pandemic hit and everyone went into lockdown, Canton looked like it went back in time 10 years; there was no life, no First Friday events, and nobody mingling and connecting.

Hunt started practicing guitar every day and has also spent the past year learning Japanese and coding.

He is employed by Radiology Partners, whose office transitioned to working from home. This has allowed Hunt to slow down and spend more time enjoying the space he lives in.

"It was the weirdest form of exhaustion and relief because all I鈥檝e known since I was 14 was work,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o, I just never had a time where I could just live and not just [be] a utility for someone鈥檚 business."

Hunt said he currently feels 鈥渁nonymous鈥 while working from home, which allows others to value his work for what it is.

"I live like one block away from The Auricle, so I can almost see it from my bedroom window. Because I鈥檝e been in the scene so long, sometimes you just need a break.鈥
Courtney Hunt

鈥淚 don鈥檛 have to deal with being a Black person at work, being a male at work. I don鈥檛 have to worry about it at all because I have an androgynous name,鈥 Hunt said. 鈥淧eople don鈥檛 assume one thing about me or the other. They just see 鈥楥ourtney Hunt.鈥欌

While the pandemic was rejuvenating at first, Hunt said he has struggled financially.

"Bills that I have to pay and just having one income and just living alone, and it鈥檚 been hard. I鈥檓 just kind of barely getting by at times," he said.

He was able to receive assistance to help cover lost wages from the sudden lack of tips and earnings from his night job at The Auricle.

"I went online, and there was all these COVID resources for retail workers, essential workers [and the] service industry. So, I looked on there, and United Way had some rental assistance, so I hit them up and eventually they helped me out, which I really needed at the time," Hunt said.

Hunt said he wants to return to The Auricle to bartend when doors open.

鈥淔irst Fridays are great. I miss working the brunches. I get to make mimosas. There鈥檚 food. I miss making cocktails, talking to people, just knowing all the people around here. I miss the friends that I worked with,鈥 he said.

Moving across the country for a fresh start

While venue staffers have been able to receive financial assistance or begin remote employment, for some, the pandemic presented an opportunity to find a new beginning.

Michael Bastas, 32, is from Northeast Ohio and began working as a bartender at The Auricle in 2018.

Last year, he decided to pack up and move to California.

鈥淚鈥檝e always wanted to make it happen, but I never really had the means. And when the pandemic hit, all of the sudden, I found myself with the means and above all else, the time. So it was kind of like, well, if I鈥檓 ever going to do it, now is the time to do it,鈥 Bastas said.

Michael Bastas
Jacob Milligan
Michael Bastas worked as a bartender at The Auricle before the venue stopped having live music events in 2020. Bastas moved to California during the pandemic to pursue a career in sound and music.

Bastas said the initial weeks of the shutdown were strange. Brewer worked to make sure his workers were receiving financial aid, but Bastas said some of his coworkers faced challenges applying for and collecting unemployment.

鈥淲hen all of this very first started going down, and all of us were scrambling to get on [unemployment], Josh was calling all of us weekly,鈥 Bastas said. 鈥淲e were all just doing weekly meetings to catch up and see how everybody鈥檚 doing and everybody is getting their money. A lot of us 鈥 didn鈥檛 receive anything for months and months.鈥

Bastas was collecting unemployment in California after moving then he got an email that there was an error with his unemployment benefits in Ohio. He had to send back $1,200.

鈥淚 know I鈥檓 probably not the only one. There are probably a lot of other people that got confused or filed something wrong,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut at this point, I feel this is where the compassion disconnect exists 鈥 you couldn鈥檛 just let people keep that in this strange time of crisis?鈥

Bastas is currently working two retail jobs. He plans to pursue a career as a studio musician and get into sound design for movies once there is some sense of normalcy, he said.

He said he does not plan to move back to Ohio, but he鈥檒l apply to bartending jobs in his current location when things start opening back up.

鈥淚 know a lot of people in Canton had a very hard time adjusting because, of course, when you鈥檙e a bartender, there鈥檚 regulars. When people get into a routine, and all the sudden that routine is ripped out from under you, that is a jarring experience,鈥 he said.

Bastas is a musician and plays with He has been remotely collaborating with his bandmate from Ohio during the pandemic, and they plan to release a new album this year.

"When people get into a routine, and all the sudden that routine is ripped out from under you, that is a jarring experience."
Michael Bastas

He said he chose to work at The Auricle because it 鈥渉as always been the bar for people who don鈥檛 like going to bars.鈥 It鈥檚 a laid-back atmosphere with a high-quality sound system, which is a draw for musicians, he said.

Bastas learned how to bartend from the ground up when he was employed at The Auricle. He said the downtown Canton community is tight-knit, and being a bartender felt like part of his identity.

鈥淧eople knew me downtown slightly before, but once I was a bartender, there was like, 鈥極h, I know that guy,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淚t was crazy because people that I never expected to meet, interact with, talk with, even become friends with, it had deepened the community relationship.鈥

Bastas performed additional tasks at the venue, like making sure the green room was clean, money was distributed, and guests were happy on show nights.

He said he had a strong bond with other members of The Auricle staff while working there.

鈥淲e all feel very much connected and very much like a family. You know, we look out for each other. And especially when you鈥檙e a bartender, that鈥檚 tenfold,鈥 Bastas said. 鈥淲e always have to be there to have each others' backs and make sure nobody鈥檚 taking any bull crap from anybody.鈥

Getting funding to keep a venue afloat

The Auricle hosted an outdoor show in July 2020 as a way to bring live music back to the area after months of silence.

Brewer said he worked with a promoter and the city of Canton to get a portable stage, shut down the street for one night and bring Chicago cover band on to perform 鈥90s pop songs for an outdoor audience.

While he plans to try outdoor shows again this summer, he is being cautious.

鈥淚t was in that awkward place where people still didn鈥檛 feel like going out. And it was in that awkward place for me, too, because I didn鈥檛 want to let anyone in the building,鈥 Brewer said.

Brewer said The Auricle had its best year yet in 2019.

Brewer drained himself financially to put a down payment on the venue鈥檚 new building and renovate it.

He was finally in a position to recoup the money in 2020, then he had to close the venue down during the state-ordered mandate.

鈥淭hings just kept getting better and better, then to just shut down, it was just heartbreaking,鈥 he said.

concert at The Auricle in Canton
Joshua Brewer
The last concert held inside The Auricle took place March 12, 2020. The venue plans to reopen and host live shows this year.

To sustain his business, he originally applied for a (EIDL) that would be paid back over 30 years at a very low interest rate.

The loan provides funding for small businesses and nonprofit organizations that have experienced a temporary loss in revenue because of the pandemic.

He was denied this loan initially. At the end of 2020, he was out $60,000 just keeping the building open.

Brewer didn鈥檛 want to ask for donations or fundraising if there was no guarantee the venue would reopen or recover financially from lost revenue during the shutdown.

鈥淚f the venue were to close due to the pandemic, it would take a pandemic to do it,鈥 Brewer said. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 anything I did. It wasn鈥檛 foolishness on my part. It literally took the world shutting down if it got to that point. And it almost did.鈥

He finally did get monetary assistance.

Last November, seven months into the pandemic, he was approved for the EIDL loan. He was also awarded an grant of $7,000 and two grants from the city of Canton.

鈥淚 had to spend all of my savings, all of the bar savings, but there was a point, especially when I got that EIDL, and this not a joke, I had $500 in the bank account for the bar,鈥 Brewer said.

The Auricle had seven employees on its payroll at the start of 2020. Brewer said he has been in touch with his sound engineers and bartenders. Some are ready to return to the venue, while others have moved on in their careers.

鈥淚鈥檝e told them since day one, you guys do what鈥檚 best for you. There would absolutely be no hard feelings at all, I want you guys to be in a good place,鈥 Brewer said. 鈥淪o whether you have to get a new job or what have you, I鈥檓 all for it, and I support you and I will give you nothing but a good recommendation.鈥

Brewer said he started out at the venue as a bartender and would get behind the bar again.

Bringing new employees in is a daunting thought, he said. He鈥檚 excited to bring back his former staff if they鈥檙e interested.

鈥淲e鈥檙e almost like a family. I love all of my employees. I don鈥檛 just pick anybody. We don鈥檛 have a high turnover rate. Usually when you work for me, you work for me for years, and you鈥檒l come back if I need you to even cover something. I consider them almost like children,鈥 Brewer said.

He has no set reopening date for The Auricle. It would take COVID-19 case numbers going down, herd immunity building, more people getting vaccines, restrictions lifted, warm weather and having the ability to do outdoor events to fully reopen, he said.

鈥淭hings just kept getting better and better, then to just shut down, it was just heartbreaking."
Joshua Brewer

In the meantime, Brewer has been doing some work on the venue and redesigning The Auricle鈥檚 website.

鈥淎fter being cooped up after a year, I鈥檓 not gonna argue when I can go out and see my friends and patrons and people who have supported us over the years on a regular basis,鈥 he said.

Brewer plans to announce dates for summer outdoor shows. He said if things continue to go well, he could potentially see the venue reopening in May, but there is no rush.

鈥淭he bar is wonderful, and I love what it offers Stark County and Northeast Ohio,鈥 Brewer said. 鈥淚鈥檓 just grateful that we鈥檙e still here a year down the line and still healthy a year down the line. I can鈥檛 complain about anything else.鈥

Struggling as music spaces fight for assistance

The Auricle is part of the (NIVA), which has been working since 2020 to fight for economic relief, government support and longevity of live music spaces across the country.

in Akron, and are also members of NIVA.

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.

For some venue workers, their places of employment feel tied to their identities; it鈥檚 where they make friends and become part of the local community. Amy Jarvis, lead bartender at Jilly鈥檚, said she is a 鈥渃areer waitress and bartender鈥 and has worked in the service industry since she was 15 or 16 years old.

Finding other work in a different industry hasn鈥檛 been easy. Jarvis said she has collected unemployment since Jilly鈥檚 has not reopened at full capacity for live concerts.

鈥淵ou know, in the beginning, everyone was instructed to file for unemployment right away,鈥 Jarvis said. 鈥淚 didn't have, you know, a lot of complications with that, and I heard a lot of other people did, so I'm thankful for that. And now I'm just ready for us to be able to open Jill鈥檚 back up and get back to hearing wonderful live music and making good memories.鈥

Shari Lee Foertch is a server and bartender at Jilly鈥檚 and has been furloughed since March 13, 2020.

鈥淎s far as I'm aware, Jill is still intending to open back up,鈥 Foertch said. 鈥淪o I've just been kind of sitting back and waiting. I really like my job there, so I'd like to go back to that.鈥

Foertch said she has a strong support network, which has helped her get by financially over the past year. She doesn鈥檛 plan to get back into serving and bartending until businesses are operating safely at full capacity.

The Kent Stage
Brittany Nader
/
WKSU
The Kent Stage is one of many venues across Northeast Ohio that have joined the National Independent Venue Association to keep at-risk concert spaces from permanently going under.

鈥淏ecause of people not wanting to come out, and then also the restrictions as far as like how many people you're allowed to have in the bars and what hours you're allowed to operate, it doesn't really sound like it would be an especially good situation for me to get myself into right now,鈥 Foertch said.

Unemployment funds are only a fraction of what Jarvis would make at Jilly鈥檚 on a normal night, she said.

Bill Lowery, lead sound technician at Westside Bowl, said the last year has been rough for everyone in the entertainment industry with layoffs and lost wages.

鈥淵ou know, I was making a pretty good living working in the entertainment industry, and we get by, but it's definitely been a real struggle,鈥 Lowery said. 鈥淲e do what we have to do to make ends meet. But it's not been easy, that's for sure.鈥

Lowery said he received 鈥済ig workers unemployment鈥 through the .

Kyle White, lighting technician at The Kent Stage, said the money he had in savings has helped him during the last year, but these funds won鈥檛 sustain him forever.

鈥淚'm watching my bank account slowly disappear,鈥 White said. 鈥淚 live in an apartment like downtown, so 鈥 I got some bills to pay.鈥

White was initially reluctant to file for unemployment but is now receiving this assistance. Above all, he misses working.

"We do what we have to do to make ends meet. But it's not been easy, that's for sure."
Bill Lowery

鈥淚t's terrible. I very much miss my job. I missed the concerts. I miss the people smiling and, you know, dancing and having fun,鈥 White said.

How to get emergency assistance this spring

Music venue owners can apply for the (SBA) beginning April 8.

Grants equal to 45 percent of a venue鈥檚 gross earned revenue are available to eligible applicants. Venues could get up to $10 million in funding.

There has been $2 billion set aside for venues that employ up to 50 full-time staff members. Funding is allocated for rent and utility payments, employee and independent contractor payments, building maintenance costs and more.

Live performing arts organization operators, venue operators or promoters and talent representatives in operation since at least Feb. 29, 2020, are among those eligible to apply for a grant.

Application details are available on the . The SBA will host a with more information about the grants at 2:30 p.m. March 30.

Expertise: Audio storytelling, journalism and production
Brittany Nader is the producer of "Shuffle" on 海角破解版. She joins "All Things Considered" host Amanda Rabinowitz on Thursdays to chat about Northeast Ohio鈥檚 vibrant music scene.
Jay Shah was an associate producer for the 鈥淪ound of Ideas鈥 until May 2024.