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Justin Moore in Cleveland

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Justin Moore
Blossom Music Center — Cuyahoga Falls, OH

Justin Moore is a country artist from Arkansas who got his start in the mid-2010s with a sound that leans into country rock and southern influences. He built a following through steady touring and radio play rather than viral moments, which tracks with his unpretentious approach to songwriting. His songs tend toward the reflective side of things—dealing with relationships, regret, and that particular rural American melancholy without getting too precious about it. Moore's had decent rotation on country radio and has played enough festivals and honky-tonks to develop a real fanbase. He's the kind of artist who probably sounds better live than on the radio, mainly because his songs are structured around straightforward stories rather than production tricks. He's not trying to reinvent country music or make some grand statement. He just writes songs about things that happen to people and lets them stand on their own.

Moore plays tight shows where people actually listen instead of just drinking. Crowds are a mix of die-hard country fans and people who wandered in. He's got a conversational stage presence—not overly charismatic, just genuine. The band locks in well, and his deeper cuts get real quiet.

Known for Somebody Else Will, With My Eyes Closed, Lettin' It Go, Late Night Conversation, Backbone

Justin Moore rolled through Cleveland in late February 2020, hitting the Wolstein Center with a setlist that leaned hard into his catalog's deeper cuts. He opened with 'Why We Drink' and 'Kinda Don't Care' before settling into the slower, more reflective stuff—'The Ones That Didn't Make It Back Home' and 'If Heaven Wasn't So Far Away' got real quiet. The crowd ate up the medley run through 'My Kind of Woman' and 'Beer Time,' and he closed the night with 'Seminole Wind,' which felt like the right way to send people out. It was the kind of show where he wasn't trying to dazzle anyone, just showing up with songs that actually meant something.

Cleveland's got a complicated relationship with country music—it's not Nashville or Austin, but there's a solid working-class core here that gets what Moore's singing about. The city's always been more about rock and soul, but the country artists who make it here are the ones who don't feel like they're performing for a theme park. Moore fits that bill. He's not slick, not polished, just genuinely from somewhere real, which plays.

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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