Thursday, Oct. 23
Local H w/ The Cocksmiths @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
Mostly
unchanged since their minor hit “Bound for the Floor” in the ’90s,
Local H’s music still crashes and thrashes in deference to the glory
days of grunge-rock, but a steady stream of respectable new material
and a road-tested two-man show has prevented the band from falling into
the nostalgia-act trap like many of their peers. The group is touring
behind this May’s 12 Angry Months, the best calendar-themed breakup
record since The Good Life’s Album of the Year. The disc finds shouting
frontman Scott Lucas in fine, typically cynical form.
The Roots w/ Gym Class Heroes and Estelle @ The Rave, 8 p.m.
After
years of being a non-threatening gateway group for green hip-hop
listeners who were comforted by the band’s live jazz and rock
instrumentation, The Roots have emerged as a take-no-prisoners force on
recent albums, throwing down angry, terse, minor-key rap baked in
political and racial discontentment. Their loaded new disc, Rising
Down, is their most militant yet, but the band’s outrage hasn’t tainted
their live shows, which still aim for the masses that just want to have
a good time. The openers on this current tour suggest a particularly
unaffected evening: Gym Class Heroes keep their emo-rap novelty songs
as featherweight as possible, while R&B singer Estelle, every bit
the talent you’d expect from a protege of John Legend and Kanye West,
has an ear for tropical-tinged, escapist pop.
David Seebach’s Illusions in the Night @ The Modjeska Theatre, 7:30 p.m.
Since
1991, David Seebach has hosted one of Milwaukee’s longest-running
Halloween traditions, his moody “Illusions in the Night” show. In past
years, the local magician has examined Jack the Ripper, conversed with
a mummy and summoned ghosts in addition to requisite tricks like
stabbing a woman in a box. This year’s show promises levitation,
cremation, a live tiger and other freaky tricks, with a focus on
witches and spiders. It’s an allages production, so scarier than the
actual show may be the venue: The Modjeska has long been purported to
be one of Milwaukee’s most haunted locales. (Through Nov. 1.)
Friday, Oct. 24
Lotus w/ Family Groove Company @ Miramar Theatre, 9 p.m.
Gary Louris w/ Ike Reilly @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
As
the guitarist and eventual frontman for the Minneapolis alt-country
institution The Jayhawks, at the turn of the century Gary Louris pushed
the band’s sound into the realm of slick, classic pop, mirroring
Wilco’s direction at the time. By 2005, though, Wilco had become the
biggest band in alt-country, while The Jayhawks still hadn’t translated
their cult following and critical adulation into mass success. They’ve
been on hiatus ever since. Jayhawks fans holding out hope for a reunion
will be thrilled to hear that Louris is readying an album with his
former band mate Mark Olson, but in the meantime Louris is touring
behind his own singer-songwriter disc, Vagabonds, a fine showcase for
his rich guitar-work. Tonight’s show is sponsored by radio station
89.7, so tickets are $8.97.
Saturday, Oct. 25

Sunday, Oct. 26
Tuesday, Oct. 28
Vampir Cuadecuc @ UWM Union Theatre, 7 p.m.Wednesday, Oct. 29

Yeasayer w/ Chairlift @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
It’s
easy to see why Yeasayer has invited so many TV on the Radio and Arcade
Fire comparisons. All three groups share an undisguised veneration for
Talking Heads and how that band grew uneasy little songs into massive,
pan-ethnic sing-alongs. But unlike even their most ambitious peers in
New York City’s experimental rock scene, Yeasayer doesn’t unduly ground
their worldy songs in Western-rock conventions. Their songs follow
their own globe-spanning map, without preference for whether they land
in the jungles of Africa or the deserts of the Middle East. Band
members put their well-stamped passports to good use on their worldly
2007 debut, All Hour Cymbals.
Live! Interactive! Improv Comedy For the Whole Family!
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