Best places to park for Levitt Pavilion Dayton
These are the five closest imported downtown parking locations to Levitt Pavilion at 134 S. Main St.. Reibold Garage is first and is also highlighted by Levitt for event parking.
Date and time
Aug 22, 2026
7:00 PM - 9:30 PM
Location
Dayton
Price
Free
RSVPs
0 going
Live public interest signal
These are the five closest imported downtown parking locations to Levitt Pavilion at 134 S. Main St.. Reibold Garage is first and is also highlighted by Levitt for event parking.
Second-generation Dayton funk stars The Original Slave formed in Ohio in 1976 around a nucleus of guitarist Mark Hicks, singer and brass man Floyd Miller, bassist Mark Adams, guitarist and singer Danny Webster, and trumpeter Steve Washington, the nephew of pioneering Ohio Players trumpeter Ralph “Pee Wee” Middlebrooks. Early on, Floyd came to a band meeting wearing a t-shirt with the word “Slave” on one side and “Master” on the other. Washington, whose family had direct ties to Frederick Douglass and the abolitionist movement, embraced a concept that transformed the term into a message of responsibility and purpose: that everyone carries a responsibility to help make the world a better place. The band’s contribution would be to uplift people through music with healing, meaning, and connection. They called their higher-plane sound not simply funk, but “Fungk” with a “g,” alluding to a spiritual, God-inspired element. The Original Slave exploded onto the scene with its 1977 debut single, “Slide,” making overnight sensations of guitarist Mark “Drac” Hicks, who earned his nickname through vocal improvisations on the track, and bassist “Mr. Mark” Adams. Both were still teenagers, yet already demonstrating extraordinary musical talent. By the group’s third album, the ever-evolving collective had added two powerful new voices: vocalist Starleana Young, just 16 years old at the time, and Steve Arrington. Arrington began as a percussionist but quickly emerged as one of the defining voices of Slave, bringing an organic vocal style influenced as much by jazz saxophonist John Coltrane and blues-rock guitarist Jimi Hendrix as by traditional singers. Today, The Original Slave Ft. Thomas Lockett and Floyd Miller continues to celebrate and perform the timeless music that made Slave one of the most influential funk bands to emerge from Dayton’s rich musical legacy. Audiences can expect the classic grooves, infectious energy, and enduring hits that helped define an era of funk music
Let us know if you are going. Public RSVPs help people see what is drawing interest.

Entrance: W. Fifth Street
Street parking may also work nearby, especially after 6 PM and on weekends.
Parking guideThese five downtown stops are in the DORA district and are ordered by the recommended pre-show plan. Confirm current DORA rules and boundaries before carrying a drink outside.

#1 · 0.20 mi from Levitt
123 E. Third St.
Games, drinks, axe throwing, arcade energy, and an easy walk to Levitt.
Top pick before the show. Bonus move: grab a sandwich nearby and bring it with you.

#2 · 0.11 mi from Levitt
10 S. Jefferson St.
A downtown cocktail and bourbon stop that fits a slower pre-concert drink.

#3 · 0.36 mi from Levitt
430 E. Fifth St.
Oregon District bar and music room with food, drinks, and a casual pre-show feel.

#4 · 0.29 mi from Levitt
26 Wyandot St.
Local brewery with beer, cocktails, sodas, and food in house.

#5 · 0.18 mi from Levitt
105 E. Third St.
A close, low-key neighborhood bar near Third and Jefferson.
Pair the drink stop with the DORA map before you walk toward Dave Hall Plaza.
DORA guideDate: Aug 22, 2026
Time: 7:00 PM - 9:30 PM
Location: Dayton
Price: Free
Parking links are not available for this venue yet. Use the main parking directory for downtown planning.
Nearby business suggestions are not available for this venue yet.
Nearby hotel suggestions are not available for this venue yet.