by Alice Koeninger

Blossom’s second year brought performances by such artists as Alicia de Larrocha, Victor Borge, José Feliciano, Duke Ellington, Maria Alba, Hank Thompson, Dionne Warwick, André Kostelanetz with Marian Anderson, and Peter Nero. The first Fourth of July concert also took place in 1969, conducted by Meredith Willson, composer of The Music Man. That same year saw the official record for the largest crowd ever at Blossom: 24,364 people came out to hear Blood, Sweat & Tears. That record was “unofficially” broken in 1973 when Pink Floyd attracted an estimated 32,000 people to Blossom’s green slopes.
Leonard Bernstein conducted Mahler’s Second Symphony –– his only appearance with The Cleveland Orchestra –– in 1970. While governor of Georgia, Jimmy Carter visited Blossom in 1974 as the guest of Ohio governor John Gilligan. In 1984, Big Bird made a guest appearance, and in 1985, Christoph von Dohnányi presented a fully-staged production of The Magic Flute. Other Blossom standouts have included Ella Fitzgerald, Itzhak Perlman, Leonard Rose, Roberta Peters, Van Cliburn, and pianist Leonard Pennario, in his debut with The Orchestra.



The Beach Boys, Bob Dylan, Billy Squier, Billy Idol, Cher, Chicago, Depeche Mode, Donna Summer, Earth Wind and Fire, Eric Clapton, Elton John, The Four Tops, James Taylor, Kool & the Gang, Neil Diamond, Pat Benatar, Paul Simon, Ravi Shankar, Chance the Rapper, Alice Cooper, Janis Joplin (below) Toby Keith, Aretha Franklin, Jimmy Buffett, and Radiohead have all played at Blossom. The list goes on and on –– find it here.

Now if only they could fix the traffic problem.
Special thanks to Cleveland Orchestra archivist Andria Hoy for her help and guidance during the research for this series.
Third, fourth, and fifth photos courtesy of The Cleveland Orchestra Archives.
Published on ClevelandClassical.com July 31, 2018.
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