Rock ’n’ roll icon Mitch Ryder to perform in Wooster, fulfilling 57-year-old promise

Detroit legend brings his “With Love” tour to Wooster High School Oct. 25, with proceeds supporting local arts and the Lyric Theater renovation

Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels will finally perform in Wooster on Oct. 25, 57 years after a promised high school concert was abruptly canceled, with a show at Wooster High’s Performing Arts Center and a meet-and-greet at the Lyric Theater.
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A rock 'n' roll legend is coming to Wooster “With Love” — his latest album — to fulfill a promise made 57 years ago.

Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels will drive in from the Motor City to perform at Wooster High School’s Performing Arts Center on Saturday, Oct. 25 from 8-9:30 p.m.

Rock legend Mitch Ryder, now 80, will fulfill a 57-year-old promise by performing in Wooster on Oct. 25, with a concert and meet-and-greet benefiting local arts and the Lyric Theater renovation.

Ryder also will appear at a meet-and-greet gathering before the concert at the Lyric Theater in downtown Wooster from 5-6 p.m., where he will be presented with a seat named in his honor.

“Didn’t know you cared that much,” Ryder said. “It's a good personality trait about never giving up, and the longevity of that quest to get me back, it's truly amazing.”

In spring 1968 the Future Nurses Club at Wooster High School entered a fundraising contest held by a Cleveland radio station. Whichever high school in the listening area raised the most money for the American Heart Association would win a concert in their hometown starring Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels, who were currently riding the top of the pop charts with hit singles like “Jenny Take a Ride” and “Devil with a Blue Dress.”

Wooster High School students rose to the challenge. “Have a Heart, I Did” signs popped up everywhere. Donation jars placed around the school began to overflow. The buzz to contribute grew more frantic every day.

And then came the announcement — Wooster won. The thrill of beating all the Cleveland high schools was heightened even more by the excitement of Ryder coming to play in town.

Days before the big concert came another announcement. It was canceled. No one knew why.

“I don't know what happened at the booking agency where they had to pull us from our gig with you guys,” Ryder said. “But I know we did perform that day somewhere else, so obviously something occurred somewhere, and you guys got screwed. So, you know, I'm coming back to make up for it. It's the best I can do, and thank God I'm still alive to do it.”

 A couple of bands no one remembers filled the bill instead, although this didn’t do anything much to soothe hurt feelings.

As seen in an article that appeared in the Wooster High School newspaper at the time, Wooster residents were deeply disappointed in 1968 when, after winning a contest to bring Mitch Ryder to town, his concert was abruptly canceled and replaced by little-remembered bands.

But many years later, another successful fundraising drive became the motivation behind the upcoming concert. In 2023 the Wooster High School Class of ’71 wanted to find a way to support the Lyric Theater renovation with a group effort.

Once again, a challenge went out. If classmates contributed enough money to name a booth, maybe Ryder would finally come to Wooster to make good on that long-ago promise.

As it turned out, the answers were yes and yes.

“When you're young as y'all were and you have that pride — I had it in my school — and you make this effort and you do succeed and then you have somebody snatch it away from you, that's gotta rub you really the wrong way," Ryder said. "Disappointment is difficult to deal with, but you just got to keep going, and obviously for 57 years, nothing has deterred you. I'm just sorry it took so long.”

Ryder turned 80 this year, during the same week in February his 21st studio album, “With Love,” was released.

“It debuted in the Billboard charts in America at No. 3, and another version debuted at No. 1,” he said. “I've been back into the Billboard charts a few times, which is for me remarkable.”

His voice remains a powerhouse, even after decades of performing chart-topping hits at high intensity. Ryder spent two months last winter on the road, playing gigs across Europe and especially in Germany, something he’s done regularly since the late ‘70s.

The demands of touring and a rock 'n' roll lifestyle have taken a toll. The wild onstage antics of earlier hits have evolved into heartfelt and soulful renditions of new and famous tunes including an obscure blues song called “Devil with a Blue Dress” that Ryder updated and rocketed into music history in 1966.

But the passage of time hasn’t lessened his drive to keep making music and connecting with fans everywhere.

Before his Oct. 25 concert, Mitch Ryder will be honored with a seat named after him at the Lyric Theater during a meet-and-greet in downtown Wooster.

“You know I don't get this kind of weight from other gigs," Ryder said. "It's just another gig, but this one has a lot of heart and soul to it, and it's an interesting story. I hope it goes further than just Wooster and shows Cleveland what's up. Who do they think they are? I want to complete the story for sure. I don't like stories that aren’t finished. It’s like writing a book with a missing chapter.”

Tickets are $30 for the concert and $75 for the meet-and-greet, which includes a premium seat at the high school performance. Both events are benefits to raise funds for the Lyric Theater, Summer Stage Wooster and other local arts organizations. They’re available for purchase at www.summerstagewooster.org.

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