Thursday, Feb. 23
New Primitives, who used to have regular weekly Northeast Minneapolis gigs at Nye's and then Shaw's, celebrate reggae god Bob Marley (7:30 p.m. Crooners, $30-$40); psychedelic soul-rocker Thomas Abban is back living in Minneapolis and celebrating his tender new EP, "Deep Winter" (7 p.m. the Dakota, $15-$20); Canadian singer/songwriter Forest Blakk is out touting his Atlantic Records debut, which sounds like mellower Imagine Dragons (8 p.m. 7th St. Entry, $15).
Friday, Feb. 24
1. Cécile McLorin Salvant: Now for something completely different from the precociously brilliant jazz singer. She's created an original story, "Ogresse," that started as a song cycle and will eventually become a full-length animated feature. Having performed the work as a theater piece in New York and Washington, D.C., Salvant is premiering "Ogresse" with animation, which she helped create, in Minneapolis. The Grammy-winning jazz vocalist will be the narrator and portray all the characters, accompanied by a 13-piece chamber orchestra. Read an interview with Salvant in Friday's Star Tribune. (8 p.m., also Sat., Walker Art Center, 725 Vineland Pl., Mpls., $36-$45, walkerart.org)
2. Jerry Harrison & Adrian Belew: Forty-three years after they first paired up for Talking Heads' groundbreaking "Remain in Light," Heads guitarist/keyboardist Harrison and King Crimson guitar hero Belew are back on the road together celebrating that Afrobeat-infused album and its subsequent tour. They are joined by bassist Julie Slick and members of the Harrison-produced New York funk band Turkuaz, who also play in the night's opening band, Cool Cool Cool. Reviews from their high-energy festival sets sounded ecstatic. (8:30 p.m. First Avenue, $35, axs.com)
Also: Popular jam-grassers Greensky Bluegrass are supporting last year's "Stress Dreams" (7:30 p.m. Palace Theatre, $30-$65); local blues rocker Dylan Salfer and his band step out from their usual weekly Bunker's gig (10 p.m. Icehouse, $12); poppy young strummers Caleb Dee, TYSM and Grayson DeWolfe try out Uptown's new music venue (8 p.m. Green Room, $15-$20).
Saturday, Feb. 25
3. Chapel Hart: The female country trio from Poplarville, Miss., made a splash last summer on "America's Got Talent." Along the way, they've received praise from Dolly Parton and Tanya Tucker. Darius Rucker enlisted them to harmonize on his single "Ol' Church Hymn," and ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons appeared in Chapel Hart's video for "Jesus & Alcohol." Sisters Danica and Devynn Hart and their cousin Trea Swindle sing traditional country like the Dolly retort "You Can Have Him Jolene," displaying Gretchen Wilson-like moxie, Pistol Annies-like humor and Chicks-like harmonies. Even without a record deal, these bold indie artists have undertaken a 60-city nationwide tour that brings them to the Upper Midwest in the heart of winter. Read an interview with Chapel Hart in Saturday's Star Tribune. (11 a.m. Mall of America meet-and-greet, CD purchase required, and 8 p.m. Mystic Lake Casino, 2400 Mystic Lake Blvd. NW, Prior Lake, $29-$49, ticketmaster.com)
4. Viagra Boys: Yep, there's a lot of pep in this American-fronted Swedish punk band, just as their name suggests. Mixing Gang Of Four post-punk grooves with Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds gutter poetry, gothic twang and dark humor, they're out touring for their third album, "Cave World," after making strong impressions at many festivals last year, including Coachella and Primavera Sound. Southern Cali sibling duo the Steens open. (9 p.m. First Avenue, $25, axs.com)
Also: After returning strong with last year's tender album "Real Heart," Twin Cities indie-folk vet Mason Jennings is playing three solo shows over two nights at his hometown jazz haven, promising to use the venue's grand piano a lot (6:30 & 8:30 Sat., 7 p.m. Sun., the Dakota, $40-$45); soap star-turned-rocker Rick Springfield still pines for "Jessie's Girl" (8 p.m. Fillmore, $79 and up); Bad Plus co-founder Ethan Iverson, the polymath pianist who is always up for a jazzy musical adventure, teams up with the top-shelf Twin Cities rhythm section of bassist Anthony Cox and drummer Kevin Washington (6:30 p.m. Crooners, $20-$30); it's time to celebrate the one-year anniversary of Saturday night jazz at KJ's Hideaway with Steve Kenny Quintet and opener Banh Mi, a jazz ensemble from Southwest High School (8 p.m., $20); in honor of what would have been George Harrison's 80th birthday, the Dark Horse Revue, featuring local stalwarts Noah Levy, John Eller, Steve Price and Randy Casey, salutes the Quiet Beatle (8 p.m. Parkway Theatre, $25-$33); tribute maven Mick Sterling offers "Lowdown" and "Lido Shuffle" in his Boz Scaggs salute, Silk & Soul (8 p.m. Crooners, $30-$40); piano rocker Mark Mallman is the midst of making a promised "disco" album and stepping out to have some fun with Cult Vibes (9 p.m. Icehouse, $15-$18).
Sunday, Feb. 26
5. Muse & Evanescence: Minneapolis is only the second stop on this tour following a kickoff Saturday in Chicago, so it's impossible to say what the arty, Rush-channeling British rockers in Muse have up their sleeves. Their cultish Twin Cities fans know to expect songs from last year's roller-coaster-y album "Will of the People" and the usual big wall of visual effects. Amy Lee's hair-raising vocals are still the big wow in Evanescence, and she continued to reach dramatic heights in her Arkansas goth-metal band's 2021 record "The Bitter Truth." Japanese band One Ok Rock opens. (6:30 p.m. Target Center, 600 1st Av. N., Mpls., $30-$115, axs.com)