Thursday, July 23
GZA/Genius @ Apartment 720, 9 p.m.
Debates
over the best solo Wu-Tang Clan albums inevitably boil down to two 1995
releases, Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx… and GZA’s Liquid Swords.
The latter is the more cinematic and foreboding of the two, a fitting
showcase for GZA’s dense but seldom flashy raps. Since Liquid Swords
thrived on the chemistry between the rapper and Wu-Tang producer RZA,
it’s unsurprising that GZA’s subsequent albums with less involvement
from RZA haven’t made the same impression, but on 2005’s excellent
Grandmasters GZA found a fine collaborator in Cypress Hill’s DJ Muggs.
Last year’s Pro Tools was filled with more of GZA’s intricate verses,
though its mostly undistinguished beats only further cemented the
conventional wisdom that, though GZA is a world-class rapper, his
albums are only as good as their producers.
GZA Retribution Gospel Choir w/ Into Arcadia @ Club Garibaldi, 9 p.m.
Though
they’re the quintessential slowcore band, Low is seldom as quiet as
that tag implies. The band plays slow, sure, but the trio can also be
as loud and heavy as many of their ’90s peers—on recent releases in
particular, they’ve cranked up the volume to excellent effect. Low
singer/guitarist Alan Sparhawk more explicitly indulges his rock
fantasies with his side project Retribution Gospel Choir, which also
includes Low bassist Steve Garrington. Without abandoning the searing
tension and intrigue that defines their primary band, they pummel their
way through brooding, psychedelic rock.
GermanFest @ Summerfest Grounds
Of
the many ethnic festivals held at Henry Maier Festival Park each year,
GermanFest claims the strongest ties to the city’s heritage. Once
dubbed the “German Athens,” Milwaukee at one point carried more
German-language newspapers than it did English ones. Serving as a
showcase for traditional German food and culture, this year’s 29th
German- Fest includes a sheepshead tournament, the third annual
dachshund races, the 5k Run/Walk for the Hungry and a Sunday Catholic
Mass in the Marcus Amphitheater. This
year also welcomes German pop superstar Styrina to the mix of
traditional polka and folk bands. Also new this year is the Saturday
night air show, featuring high performance acrobatic planes maneuvering
through pyrotechnic displays. (Through July 26.)

James Kloiber, New Work New York @ Underwood Gallery, 5 p.m.
James
Kloiber, a Milwaukee artist who designed some of the city’s most
memorable concert posters before moving to New York a year and a half
ago, returns to Milwaukee this weekend for two gallery openings. He
beats the Gallery Night rush with a Thursday evening wine-andcheese
reception for “James Kloiber, New Work New York,” a collection of his
watercolor and charcoal pieces, then returns Friday night for an
exhibition titled “Unframed/Uninhibited” at the Skylight Opera Theatre,
a show he splits with portrait painter Jenipher Sob. The Friday night
reception will give way to a dance party around 10 p.m., with digital
projects and music from DJs Fortune and Chris Grant lasting until the
early-morning hours.
Friday, July 24
Kings Go Forth w/ JC Brooks & the Uptown Sound @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
Between
cleaning house at this year’s 88Nine Milwaukee Music Awards—where they
took home honors for Artist of the Year, Song of the Year (“One Day”),
Best New Artist and Most Likely to Blow Up—and signing to David Byrne’s
Luaka Bop Records, 2009 has been kind to Kings Go Forth. Tonight the
local 10-piece retro funk/soul group, which uses three singers to
recreate the sound of early-’60s vocal ensembles like The Esquires and
The Seven Sounds, celebrates the release of its debut LP. Given the
quick success the group found after recording just a handful of songs,
it should be interesting to see what they accomplish now that they have
a full length under their belts. Openers JC Brooks and the Uptown
Sound, from Chicago, draw from a different branch of soul music, the
Memphis R&B popularized by Stax Records.
Tarik Moody Going-Away Party @ Stonefly Brewery, 10 p.m.
As
regular 88Nine Radio Milwaukee listeners know, station DJ Tarik “The
Architect” Moody is taking a leave of absence as he ships out this
month to prepare for a 10-month deployment to Baghdad. He hopes to
continue blogging for the station and to conduct a podcast while he’s
abroad, serving as a public-affairs officer for the Army. First,
though, he DJs his own going-away party tonight at the Stonefly
Brewery, with The Rusty Ps, Adi Mack and Jonathan Frost.
MAM After Dark: Gallery Night @ The Milwaukee Art Museum, 5 p.m.
This
month’s installment of the MAM After Dark series offers late-night
access to the recently acquired American Originals exhibitions, “The
Artistic Furniture of Charles Rohlfs” and “The Eight and American
Modernisms.” The recently reinstalled Contemporary Galleries will also
be on late-night display, featuring a healthy selection of abstract
expressionist, minimalist and conceptual art from the museum’s
1970s-1990s collection. Special activities include a mystery history
scavenger hunt, the opportunity to create music with the Tonal Motion
Music Lab and a live interpretation of the movie Clue simulcast by The
Warped Cast as the movie plays. Cash bar and snacks will be available,
too.
Saturday, July 25
Coldplay w/ Elbow @ Alpine Valley Music Theatre, 7 p.m.
Accusations of plagiarism hurled by Joe Satriani last year and more recently by Yusuf Islam (Cat Stevens) unsurprisingly haven’t taken a toll on Coldplay’s unstoppable popularity. Just this month Chris Martin and company became the first artists to sell 1 million full digital albums in the United States. After the chilly critical response to the band’s third album, 2005’s X&Y, which prompted a scathing takedown in The New York Times, the band reclaimed their early critical standing and cemented their superstar status with last year’s Viva La Vida, a brisker album that supplemented the band’s grand ballads with dynamic, studio-kissed arrangements.
Sunday, July 26
Tortured Soul w/ Codebreaker @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
Tortured Soul has successfully made the case that you don’t need a DJ to create house music.This
Brooklyn trio has honed a formula that combines disco, funk and jazzy
house with sweet soulful vocals that flow from drummer John-Christian
Urich, who lays down the beats behind these pulsating grooves. Opening
for the group is Milwaukee’s electro-funk ensemble Codebreaker, who
similarly aim for the dance floor. Last year’s collaborative track
“Fire,” featuring the U.K.’s Kathy Diamond, and their new single
“Follow Me” were both released on the band’s startup label, Demolition
Disco Records.
Monday, July 27
Downtown Employee Appreciation Week @ Downtown and Third Ward locations
Freebies,
entertainment and time-wasters abound this week as part of Downtown
Employee Appreciation Week, a hodgepodge of morale-boosting free events
held throughout Downtown and the Third Ward. The week’s opening
ceremony begins today at noon at Chase Tower on Water and Wisconsin,
where Cousins Subs will be giving away 1,000 mini subs and chips. The
four-night Downtown Volleyball Challenge at Bradford Beach also begins
tonight, running from 5 to 8 p.m.
Tuesday, July 28
Hayward Williams w/ Robert Hansen and Adam Sullivan @ Linneman’s, 9:30 p.m.
Though
his confessional songwriting recalls Townes Van Zandt and his sparse,
beguiling guitar work suggests Jeff Buckley and Chris Isaak, it’s
Hayward Williams’ big, husky voice that makes the first impression. With
its gritty tones, it screams Bruce Springsteen, so it’s not surprising
that Williams does a mean version of “Thunder Road.” In 2007 the
Milwaukee troubadour released Another Sailor’s Dream, a rustic set of
Americana that won Williams a dedicated European following while
establishing him as one of the city’s most promising songwriters.







