Thursday, Feb. 28
Drive-By Truckers w/ The Felice Brothers @ Pabst Theater, 8 p.m.
The
Drive-By Truckers’ Brighter Than Creation’s Dark is the band’s most
assured and intense collection yet, a largely acoustic record that
further distances the group from the Southern-rock and “cow-punk”
labels they picked up early in their career. Album-opener “Two
Daughters and a Beautiful Wife” sets the tone with simple chords and
nakedly honest, purely beautiful storytelling. What follows is a
sprawling, ambitious 19-song duel of rustic songwriting sensibilities
between primary songwriters Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley. Opening for
the group tonight is The Felice Brothers, a group recently signed to
Conor Oberst’s Team Love label. Hailing from the Catskills and
specializing in back-porch Americana, their sound has drawn fitting
comparisons to Basement Tapes-era Dylan as well as Levon Helm and The
Band.

Drive-By Truckers
Friday, Feb. 29
Dalek w/ Russian Circles and Young Widows @ Cactus Club, 10 p.m.
Unlike
so many other abstract hip-hop artists who create only flimsy, vaguely
dreamlike soundscapes, Dalek runs the gamut from shoegazey atmospherics
to harsh blasts of industrial noise every bit as ferocious as you’d
expect from two bulky, barbarous New Jerseyians. Even though the
group’s temper has cooled on recent releases, the threat that their
brainy musings could at any moment explode into combative dissonance
keeps listeners on their toes. Russian Circles, of Chicago, throw down
muscular, Don Caballero-styled math-rock, while Young Widows embrace
their Louisville, K.Y., roots, channeling the jagged anger of native
sons June of 44 and Rodan.
Dalek
Angels and Airwaves w/ Meg & Dia, The Color Fred, Ace Enders @ Rave Eagles Club, 7 p.m.
On
hiatus from blink-182, guitarist/vocalist Tom DeLonge immersed himself
with work on Angels and Airwaves’ 2006 debut We Don’t Need To Whisper.
The album was an effects-heavy exercise in prog-experimentalism, dismissed
by most critics as an indulgent outlet for DeLonge. With blink-182 now
on an indefinite hiatus, Angels and Airwaves released their second
full-length, I-Empire, last November. A more stripped-down affair, the
album is a conceptual piece filled with earnest, tuneful numbers that
at times recall U2 and at others employ a New Wave throwback
sensibility. Those attending tonight’s show in hopes of hearing a
blink-182 cover may be in luck, since Angels and Airwaves have begun to
incorporate a few choice songs from DeLonge’s better-known band into
recent sets. Lovelorn emo-poppers Meg & Dia open.

Angels and Airwaves
Saturday, March 1
Video Games Live w/ The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra @ Riverside Theater, 8 p.m.
Lending
an air of sophistication—or at least extravagant novelty—to well-known
video game scores, “Video Games Live” is an interactive experience
complete with light shows and live-action performances. This Milwaukee
Symphony Orchestra performance will emphasize familiar themes from
games like Super Mario Brothers and The Legend of Zelda— come see if
they sound as satisfying cascading over an audience as they did blaring
from your basement television—but the new classics are represented as
well (even Guitar Hero is given a nod).The money shot is a medley
featuring Tetris, Frogger, Space Invaders and just about any other
arcade classic fondly remembered from the golden age of gaming.
The Gufs w/ Hillcrest Road @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
Thanks
to the band’s continued play on regional modernrock radio for their
hits “Smile” and “Crash (Into Me),” some might not have even noticed
that The Gufs were on a sevenyear hiatus until their most recent disc,
2006’s A Different Sea, a study in trying to perfect the pop-rock
anthem. Since their stint on Atlantic Records in the mid-’90s, the
group has kept a lower profile, touring less and focusing on personal
projects and non-musical endeavors, but the veteran band and local
point of pride always seems to find the time for a hometown show.
Sky High Celebrates 20 Years @ The Paper Boat Gallery, 7 p.m.
Somewhat
amazingly, Sky High, the modern-looking skateboard shop adorning a
pleasant but unassuming stretch of Howell Avenue, has been there for 20
years, long before a class of young entrepreneurs moved into Bay View
and turned the neighborhood into a hip yet quaint oasis for independent
businesses. Sky High’s neighbor, the Paper Boat Boutique and Gallery,
celebrates the store’s longevity this month with an exhibit of photos,
skateboard decks and memorabilia collected throughout the years. An
opening reception runs from 7 until 10 p.m. tonight at the gallery,
then it’s on to Frank’s Power Plant for drinks and an after-party.
Marquette University Foreign Film Festival @ Marquette University, 3:45 p.m.
Marquette
University kicks off the second year of its free, six-day Foreign Film
Festival today with a pair of dramas (Ju Dou, from China, at 3:45 p.m.,
and Children of Heaven, from Iran, at 6:15 p.m.), before screening the
ambitious ensemble film Paris je t’aime at 8:30 p.m. For Paris, more
than 20 directors from around the world, including Alfonso Cuaron,
Alexander Payne and Wes Craven, created quick vignettes about the city
of romance. Recent Oscar superstars Joel and Ethan Coen contributed a
particularly funny one starring Steve Buscemi as a luckless tourist.
Marquette University Foreign Film Festival
Little Blue Crunchy Things @ Shank Hall, 10 p.m.
Citizen
King may have gotten more attention because of their commercial
prospects, but perhaps no other Milwaukee band captured the
freewheeling spirit of ’90s music better than Little Blue Crunchy
Things, the loose funk/rap/jazz/alternative ensemble that used to pack
Shank Hall on a regular basis (inevitably inciting crowd-surfing fans
to tear down slabs of the venue’s drop ceiling). These days, the gang
still gets together for occasional reunion shows.
Sunday, March 2
Billy Joel @ Bradley Center, 8 p.m.
Although
his tabloid-documented battle with alcoholism tarnished his image
somewhat, never let it be said that Billy Joel isn’t a man of his word.
He promised that 1993’s River of Dreams would be his last pop album
and, sure enough, 15 years later, he has no plans to record a
follow-up. In 2001 he released his first classical album, Fantasies and
Delusions, and last year he unveiled a new ballad he penned for his
wife, celebrity chef Katie Lee, but that’s as close as he’s come. In
many respects, the dearth of new material has actually made Joel a more
coveted touring act. Fans who just want to hear old favorites know that they’ll get what they pay for.

Billy Joel
The Taste of Chaos Tour @ The Rave, 5 p.m.
While
the Warped Tour continues to expand, harboring bands across genres, the
Taste of Chaos Tour, a newer creation from Warped Tour impresario Kevin
Lyman, has kept its focus tight, inviting only bands on the harder end
of the alternative rock and emo-core spectrum. Although this year’s
tour lacks some of the star power of years past, when My Chemical
Romance, The Deftones and 30 Seconds to Mars have headlined, the
festival has had some luck breaking big stars (Paramore was discovered
at a 2005 Orlando, Fla., performance), so there’s always the chance of
seeing a potential next big thing. On the bill this year are Avenged
Sevenfold, Atreyu, Bullet for My Valentine, Blessthefall, Idiot Pilot,
Mucc, D’espairsRay and The Underneath.
Rain: The Beatles Experience @ The Riverside Theater, 8 p.m.
The
Beatles’ only Wisconsin appearance was at the Milwaukee Arena in
September 1964. For those too young to catch that show, “Rain: The
Beatles Experience” promises a faithful recreation from that era, as
well as all of the legendary foursome’s phases, from their wide-eyed
early days to their Abbey Road send-off. The tribute band, culled from
the cast of the Broadway hit Beatlemania, covers the Beatles oeuvre
while an elaborate video projection screens vintage Beatles TV
commercials and rare footage of the band.
91.7 WMSE 6th Annual Rockabilly Chili Contest @ MSOE Kern Center, 11 a.m.- 4 p.m.
The
official culinary fund-raising event for 91.7 WMSE, the Rockabilly
Chili Contest, celebrates six consecutive years today. Aside from
knowing that they’re supporting one of the city’s finest noncommercial
radio stations, patrons will be able to fill up on spicy offerings from
more than 40 area eateries. Last year’s winners (Nessun Dorma and
Wicked Hop for meat; Annona Bistro for vegetarian) will try to defend
their respective crowns, while DJs from the station spin rockabilly,
bluegrass, country and hot-rod sounds. Admission is $5, and chili
samples are $1 each.

Sat., Nov. 22, 2008, 9 PM - Midnight. Maxies Southern Comfort, 6732 W. Fairview Ave., Milwaukee, WI. No Cover. Check out www.libertybluegrassband.com for all the lastest info.