Extra Golden w/ Kings Go Forth @ Cactus Club, 9 p.m. Compared to the typical music scenes, Nairobi, Kenya
stands out as a curiously unique starting point for the multina tional
Extra Golden, which owes as much stylistically to classic American rock
aesthetics as traditional Kenyan Benga music. Initial comparisons to
fellow African harmonic acts like Ladysmith Black Mambazo are
inevitable, but not entirely accurate. Extra Golden can rip off sharp,
pronounced blues riffs, but also the earthy African rhythms and vocals
of the timely “Obama” or the tropically tinged funk of “Night Runners.”
The Police w/ Elvis Costello @ Marcus Amphitheater, 7:30 p.m. The
Police made major headlines when, after 20 years apart, they announced
they were reuniting for a tour. The group has been playing behind
ever-so-delicately tweaked versions of their hits for a little more
than a year now, and the tour has paid handsomely—it’s expected to
become the third highest-grossing tour of all time. If Sting and
company are to be believed, though, there won’t be an encore: After
they complete this fourth and final North American leg of the tour next
month, they plan to break up for good without recording any more
material. Opener Elvis Costello came to prominence around the same time
The Police did, but seems to have grown only more prolific with age.
Inspired in part by his new friendship with indie darling Jenny Lewis,
who contributed backing vocals, Costello’s latest disc, Momofuku, is an
off-the-cuff rock record with ample whiffs of the New Wave organ that
drove his early work.
The Jesse Voelker Band w/ Craig Bauman, Ryan Ogburn and Bryan Cherry @ Linneman’s Riverwest Inn, 9:30 p.m.
The
Jesse Voelker Band describes itself as a poly-eth
nic-progressive-folk-jazz act, which is to say they really, really
enjoy mixing genres. Lead songwriter Voelker has no reservations about
mixing electro-dub beats with pleasant ly down-tempo doses of Spanish
guitar and Prohibition-era jazz sax. Curiously, and thankfully, the
result often borders on an unplugged Mars Volta at its darkest and most
experimental, and the talented coffeehouse acoustic act next door at
their most subdued and traditional.
Summer Slaughter Tour @ The Rave, 4:30 p.m.
If
you needed further proof that death metal is the new emo, look no
further than this year’s Summer Slaughter Tour, which is sponsored by
Hot Topic, long the country’s No. 1 source of Fall Out Boy T-shirts and
Nightmare Before Christmas novelties. The shrieking Michigan metalcore
act The Black Dahlia Murder opens, and an army of young bands with
equally macabre names lend support: Cryptopsy, The Faceless, Despised
Icon, Kataklysm, Psycroptic and Aborted.
The Black Dahlia Murder
The Nice Outfit @ Linneman’s Riverwest Inn, 9:30 p.m.
Formed
from the core of Trolley, a once-prolific Milwaukee group that has
mostly laid dormant for the past half-decade, the power-pop ensemble
The Nice Outfit picks up where that band left off, tightening and
focusing its sound. Packing punchy punk-rock and gorgeous pop melodies
into tight, jangly songs, they conjure The Kinks, The Buzzcocks and The
Byrds on their recent EP, Kissing Jocelyn. Its four songs crackle with
surprising turns and unusual conviction, even though they are
constructed from the same classic ’60s-rock DNA that has resulted in so
many lesser power-pop bands.
The Radiators w/ Honkytonkitis @ Miramar Theatre, 9 p.m.
Part
of an earlier breed of party bands, The Radiators presaged the current
jam-band movement with their knack for incorporat ing multiple,
groove-based genres into their live shows. They’re prone to all sorts
of up-tempo, danceable tangents, but the true heart of the now
30-year-old group has always been the swampy, New Orleans “fish-head
music” scene, as they call it, complete with gravelly nods to Delta
roots and the unabashed lead guitars of classic rock. These guys love
to stretch out a good, classic cover song.
Secret Chiefs 3 w/ Wooden Robot and The Demix @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
Drawing
upon musical styles from all over the globe, both traditional and
obscure, Secret Chiefs 3 is the freewheeling project of lead
composer/producer Trey Spruance of Faith No More. The band has a
penchant for incorporating a grab bag of instruments, though they rely
heavily on a few particular ones. The wispy, pervasive sound of the
Indian Esraj and Sarangi are often paired with new-age electronic blips
and distorted metal guitar. Theirs is world music in the least
traditional sense.
Bill Mallonee w/Casey Stang, StereoFidelics @ Points East Pub, 8 p.m.
Armenian Fest @ St. John the Baptist Armenian Orthodox Church, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Armenian
Fest might not have the cachet of the larger ethnic festivals at the
Summerfest grounds, but the free event has been around far longer than
they have: It began in the 1930s. You won’t find deep-fried cheese
sticks here. The menu is heavy on kebobs, bureks, hum mus, tabouleh and
stuffed grape leaves, which can be washed down with Armenian wine and
baklava. There will also be music and a cultural booth.