Thursday, June 5
Clamnation @ Jazz in the
Park, 6 p.m.
If last weekend’s RiverSplash! didn’t make it official enough, there
can be no doubt that Milwaukee’s summer festival season has finally arrived now
that Jazz in the Park has returned. Every Thursday through September in
Cathedral Square Park, a different jazz artist will headline this free gig while
patrons—some of them jazz buffs, others seemingly indifferent to the
music—picnic and sip wine. Clamnation, one of Milwaukee’s finest jazz acts,
makes a fitting opener for this year’s season. The group throws down thick
jazz-funk, lightened by liberal swaths of nimble Latin jazz.
Friday, June 6
Wanda Sykes @ PrideFest, Summerfest Grounds, 9 p.m.
Rising
steadily since her breakthrough work with Chris Rock in the mid-’90s, Wanda
Sykes has become a familiar character actor, lending her likeness (and often
just her unmistakably pitchy voice) to a series of movies, sitcoms, cartoons and
commercials. Save perhaps for her scene-stealing appearances on “Curb Your
Enthusiasm,” however, she’s at her best when left with her own stand-up
material, which leans heavily on animated rants about social and political
topics. Here’s betting that her extended bit supporting gay marriage finds a
receptive audience at PrideFest tonight.
ZooMusic: Wild Music for
Savage Beasts @ The Milwaukee County Zoo, 6 p.m.
Present Music invites
patrons to explore the Milwaukee County Zoo grounds after hours at 6 p.m. in
advance of an 8 p.m. performance at the Peck Welcome Center. Musicians from the
ensemble, as well as dancers from the Danceworks company, will prowl the
grounds, playing off the natural sounds and movements of the animals. After the
concert, which features compositions and collaborations inspired by wildlife,
Present Music will further take advantage of the after-hours grounds with a
season-ending party.
Port Pirate Festival @ 139 W. Grand Ave., Port Washington
Perhaps your only chance to
cruise a 150-foot, four-masted schooner whilst it’s under siege by pirates (or
whilst it’s not, depending on which cruise you sign up for), the Port Pirate
Festival runs this weekend from Friday to Sunday. Admission is free (though
there are fees for some activities), and in addition to cruises there will be a
buccaneer bash, historical displays—including a pirate encampment—and a
pirate-themed parade. Don’t own an eye-patch? You can find one, along with other
items, at the thieves’ marketplace. Is it a coincidence that Johnny Depp’s new
film is scheduled to be shooting in the area this weekend?
Saturday, June 7
Natasha Bedingfield @ PrideFest, Summerfest Grounds, 8:30 p.m.
The
organizers of PrideFest have long strived to book entertainment with appeal
beyond the typical LGBT circles, but they’ve never before booked one as broadly
popular as Natasha Bedingfield, a British star with no prominent LGBT ties.
She’s best known for her single “Unwritten,” a song that charted around the
world and laid the template for her subsequent work: empowered and relentlessly
optimistic pop. Her newest album, Pocketful of Sunshine, is even breezier than
its title suggests.
Mark Kozelek w/ Davey Von Bohlen @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
Blessed—or perhaps cursed—with an unnatural ability to turn every song
he touches into concentrated depression, Mark Kozelek writes emotionally
devastating songs made all the more harrowing by his cold, disaffected vocals.
His ’90s slowcore band, Red House Painters, always felt like a showcase for
Kozelek, and his subsequent band, Sun Kil Moon, feels even more like a solo
project. Recent years have seen Kozelek enamored by the songs of others—in 2001
he released a solo album of AC/DC covers, and, in 2005, with Sun Kil Moon, a
collection of lonely Modest Mouse covers—but this spring Sun Kil
Moon returned with an acclaimed set of Kozelek originals, April, which further
padded Kozelek’s already beefy critical reputation.
Jeff Dunham @ The Pabst Theater, 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.
The
straight man to his entourage of crass puppets, ventriloquist Jeff Dunham will
film his upcoming Comedy Central special tonight over the course of two
performances. Practice your “I’m shocked but I find this very, very funny” face
now if you’re gunning for some screen time, but don’t expect the material to be
overly timely: It’s a Christmas special.
Sunday, June 8
The Silos @ Shank Hall, 8 p.m.
A forward-thinking group
that in the late ’80s infused assured college-rock with accents of Americana,
The Silos are one of the modern alt-country movement’s unspoken pioneers. Since
the beginning, the band’s records have consistently been strong—hooky and
spiteful in all the right places—but the group has suffered from chronic bad
luck. A stint on a major label in the early ’90s did little to advance their
stardom, and by the end of the decade, their roots-spiked alternative rock no
longer seemed so revelatory. With any luck, the band’s recent partnership with
the elite label Bloodshot Records will prompt a long-overdue critical
reappraisal.
Locust Street Festival
of Music & Art @ 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.
From its modest beginnings
as a neighborhood festival with an understated bohemian streak, the annual
Locust Street Festival, now in its 32nd year, has blossomed into one of the
city’s most crowded outdoor gatherings as revelers from around the county flock
to Milwaukee’s ever-trendy neighborhood. Drum circles, arts and crafts and novel
snacks abound, but the biggest draw is still the music. Among the many acts
playing are Stealin’ Strings, John the Savage, The Trusty Knife, Colin O’Brien
and The Championship.
Monday, June 9
B.B. King @ Potawatomi Bingo Casino, 8 p.m.
It’s easy to take B.B. King
for granted. For 60 years the elder statesman of blues has been touring
rigorously, and even as he entered his 80s he barely slowed down. It was a
sobering moment, then, when he announced his “farewell tour” in 2006. Fans who
had gotten used to seeing him annually were forced to imagine a world where he
would no longer be headlining their favorite blues festivals. But two years
later the hard-touring legend is still booked for plenty of shows and he has
thankfully toned down talk of a final farewell.
Wednesday, June 11
Gogol Bordello @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
The brainchild of Ukrainian
expat Eugene Htz, the New Yorkbased ensemble Gogol Bordello doesn’t mind being
labeled as gypsy punks—they even named their 2005 album Gypsy Punks. Think of
theirs as international drinking music: a hodgepodge of Bulgarian and Slovakian
sounds with crashing percussion and a Pogues-like love for livewire,
call-andresponse.
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.