B2k in Cleveland
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Never miss another B2k show near Cleveland.
About B2k
B2K was the late-90s/early-2000s R&B boy band that actually had staying power beyond the usual manufactured run. Formed in 1998, the group—Omarion, Fizz, J-Boog, and Raz-B—hit their stride with their second album, which spawned "Bump, Bump, Bump," a track that became unavoidable for like three years straight. That song alone defined a specific moment in pop radio, but they weren't just a one-hit situation. They made solid R&B records with actual songs underneath the hits, toured relentlessly, and built a fanbase that actually stayed invested. Their catalog holds up better than you'd expect from a boy band product, partly because they could sing and partly because they caught a wave where throwback-leaning R&B actually dominated mainstream radio. They've reunited periodically since their initial breakup in 2004, which tells you something about how they're remembered.
Known for Bump, Bump, Bump, Girlfriend, Why I Love You, Uh Huh, Cradle 2 The Grave
B2k in Cleveland News
- B2K Cleveland Jewish News · Feb 26, 2026
- B2K To Reunite in 2026 For “Boys 4 Life” Tour Co-Headlined by Bow Wow + Plan To Release New Album YouKnowIGotSoul.com · Nov 20, 2025
- Jeremih, Waka Flocka, Amerie, Yung Joc, Crime Mob, Dem Franchize Boyz and Special Guests, Pretty Ricky Join the Ultimate Celebration PR Newswire · Nov 18, 2025
- B2K Announce ‘Boys 4 Life’ Tour with Bow Wow & Special Guests That Grape Juice.net · Nov 18, 2025
- B2K and Bow Wow Announce 2026 ‘Boys 4 Life Tour’ Dates - Rated R&B Rated R&B · Nov 18, 2025
Live Music in Cleveland
Cleveland's got roots in rock and soul, but the city's also always had an ear for the pop and R&B moments that defined the 2000s. It's a place that respects musicianship and doesn't shy away from the theatrical. B2K's synchronized choreography and teen pop sensibility should find something to grab onto here, even if it's not the city's usual lane.
Cleveland road trip to see B2k?
Stay in Ohio City, where Victorian brownstones meet serious coffee shops and galleries. Dinner at Fairmount, where chef Jonathon Sawyer sources locally and cooks with real technique—expect seasonal American food that doesn't announce itself. Spend an afternoon at the Cleveland Museum of Art, which is free and genuinely excellent. Walk through the West Side Market before the show, grab something you don't need, and feel the bones of the city. The whole neighborhood has that working-class dignity that makes Cleveland distinct.
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