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A Million-Dollar View,
and Free Music, Too!
by Jean Scherwenka, photo by Nik Kovac
At the new Kadish Park on the curve
of East North Avenue music lovers,
children, and friendly dogs turned out
three Tuesday evenings in July to enjoy
local groups Christopher’s Project, The
Misfits, and Berkeley Fudge perform free
music that wants to be heard. Their drums,
keyboards, guitars, horns, and vocals
streamed music up and downhill from the
Park’s amphitheater.
With three more Tuesday concerts to
come – Organica (featuring members of De
La Buena and King Solomon) on July 31,
One Drum on August 7, and Duchie Rogers
and the Black Earth Band on August 14 –
you need to mark your
calendars and get out
to the Park. This is
special stuff!
Skyline Music it’s
called – and if you look
south over the river,
you’ll know why. This
is the “million dollar
view” from Riverwest
across the Milwaukee
skyline – the kind of
thing that reminds
us why we live in the
city.
The events are
sponsored by the
Harley-Davidson
Foundation with
support from Riverwest,
Beerline, Brewers
Hill and Harambee
Neighborhood
Associations, and
Riverworks. Local
Attorney Allen
Silverstein chaired
the Planning Committee. COA Youth &
Family Centers present the events.
COA Executive Director Tom
Schneider describes Skyline Music as a
melting pot of musical styles ranging
from R&B, Jazz, Reggae, and Classic Soul,
in a city where “too many cultural events
are segregated.” Schneider sees Kadish
Park “as the center of a diversity wheel:
Riverwest, Harambee, the surrounding
Hispanic population, Brewers Hill, and
the new condos along the river all circle
Kadish Park, the hub.” Schneider and
the other event planners want Skyline’s
music, artists, and audience to celebrate
Milwaukee’s diversity.
Alice Bertschy Kadish Park, named
after a Milwaukee Public School teacher
who dedicated her life to children, art,
and philanthropy, represents a stunning
reclamation of green space risen from a
piece of city land leased to COA to operate
as a public park. COA and residents from
surrounding neighborhoods gathered
their visions, clean-up crews, earthmovers,
landscapers, and artists to miraculously
transform the “dump” site for used needles,
remnants of safe sex in the dark, and empty
beer, liquor, and food containers, into the
safe and beautiful urban park it is today.
Kadish Park provides picnic areas,
sports fields, and Milwaukee’s best view of
the city skyline. Nestled in one of the park’s
hills overlooking the Milwaukee River
you’ll find a mini-amphitheater facing
semi-circles of concrete benches where
spectators can enjoy their music up close
and intimate. Riverwest artist Marina Lee
(Beginning Dreams Forever) created the
sculpture alongside the music stage.
Bench seating is limited, but grassy
hillside space is abundant for folding chairs
or stretching out on your own blanket. All
seating guarantees perfect acoustics and
that awesome skyline view.
Tuesdays’ concerts run from 5-8 pm,
perfect timing for picnic suppers and home
before dark. Bring your own food and
drinks or purchase grilled hamburgers,
hot dogs, and veggie burgers at the park,
along with snacks, cookies, soda and
bottled water.
COA provides childcare for children
whose parents need some free time with
adult friends and neighbors or some pure,
uninterrupted music appreciation. COA
also provides the wonderful teens who
clean up the park after the event.
“We hope that the lure of great free
music, picnics, a great view, and a relaxed
atmosphere will bring people together,”
says Karen Thompson-Sprewer, COA’s
Associate Executive Director. What more
could you want on a warm and lazy
summer evening?
If You Go:
Concerts staged on the slope between
North Avenue and Commerce Street next
to COA, 909 E. North Ave.
Tuesdays July 31, August 7 & 14, 5-8 pm
Riverwest Currents online edition - August, 2007
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