Thursday, May 5
Under the Canopy kickoff: Conceived and warmly received as a safe, diverse, community-oriented outdoor music option last year, the Hook & Ladder's Under the Canopy series returns with a bigger capacity and more room to dance starting with a KFAI-produced Cinco de Mayo celebration featuring Javier Trejo's new group Caballo Cósmico (7 p.m. Thu., free tickets via kfai.org). The series continues with piano legend Cornbread Harris' 95th birthday bash featuring a special guest (7 p.m., Fri., $15-$20) and then two by rap-rocker Heatbox (5 and 7:30 p.m., $15-$20). Davina & the Vagabonds, the Belfast Cowboys and International Reggae All-Stars are all set to perform on subsequent weekends in May. (Hook & Ladder Theater, 3010 Minnehaha Av. S., Mpls., thehookmpls.com)
Interpol: Before pairing up with Spoon for a summer co-headlining tour and dropping a new album in July, the moody and stormy New York rockers are warming up after the COVID lull with a short spring tour. Paul Banks and his consistently powerful live unit are previewing some of the new songs on the jaunt but also heavily revisiting their debut "Turn on the Bright Lights," which turns 20 this year. Electronic producer Tycho and Texas strummer Matthew Dears open. (8 p.m., Palace Theatre, 17 W. 7th Place, St. Paul, $50, axs.com)
Also: Masterful singer-songwriter Suzanne Vega brings her intimate 2020 live album, "An Evening of New York Songs and Stories" (7 & 9 p.m. Dakota, $30-$50); local jazz singer Joyce Lyons (6:30 p.m. Crooners, $20-$25); Cuban jazz pianist Jore Luis Pacheco (7 p.m., KJ's Hideaway, $15); Virginia's Basement, Jacquie Pine and comedians perform for the Cinco Alternativo party (8 p.m., White Squirrel Bar).
Friday, May 6
Justin Bieber: A pop star for nearly half his life, the Biebs, 28, has gone from a cute Canadian teen to a tattooed Hollywood husband with a newfound religious commitment. On his first tour since 2016-17, he is promoting last year's hit-filled "Justice." Despite the title and a couple samples of Martin Luther King speeches, this is mostly a collection of pop and R&B-tinged love songs. With the new disc, Bieber become the first male artist to have his first six studio albums debut at No. 1 on Billboard's album chart. Material from "Justice," including "Ghost" and "Peaches," will dominate the concert setlist. But Bieber hasn't forgotten about "Baby" and "Sorry." Opening are Eddie Benjamin, Teo and Jaden, son of Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith. (7:30 p.m. Fri. Target Center, 600 1st Av. N., Mpls., $62.50-$202.50, axs.com)
Kassa Overall: The mixing of hip-hop and jazz has evolved into an organically soluble genre of its own, and Overall is in the vanguard of it. The Seattle-raised, Brooklyn-based drummer-rapper-producer studied at Oberlin with current master drummer Billy Hart and has forged his own path since his 2019 debut, "Go Get Ice Cream and Listen to Jazz." During the pandemic, Overall released two remix albums in homage to DJ-producer Madlib. By turns playful, political and sonically profound, "Shades of Flu" puts songs by everyone from Jon Batiste to Archie Shepp in a blender without sapping their essence. (8 p.m. Cedar Cultural Center, 416 Cedar Av. S, Mpls. $28.50-$30. walkerart.org)
Also: Minneapolis' rootsy dance groups the Ukrainian Village Band and Orkestar Bez Ime pair up with SlowCzech for the Musicians for Ukraine benefit concert (7 p.m. the Dakota, $25+); Kansas City indie-rap hero Tech9ne returns on his Asin9ne Tour (7 p.m. Myth in Maplewood, $40, all ages); Americana strummer Ben Rector is touring behind his ninth album, "The Joy of Music" (7 p.m. Armory, $37 and up); Chicago wordsmith and Chance's the Rapper's "Angels" collaborator Saba (7 p.m. First Ave, $25, all ages); Prudence Johnson and Dan Chouinard explore the dark humor of Randy Newman songbook (8 p.m. Crooners, $25 and up); Willie Wisley returns with fellow '80s/'90s scene vets the Scarlett Goodbye and Cindy Lawson (8 p.m., Turf Club, $15);
Saturday, May 7
Janiva Magness: The heralded blues-rock singer, who spent her salad days in St. Paul and won the 2009 Blues Foundation entertainer of the year prize, is preparing to drop her 16th album, "Hard to Kill," on June 24. She has previewed the 11 new originals with the stomping "Don't You Forget About Me" and the smoldering "If Your Heart Needs a Hand." Maybe she'll bring copies of her candid 2019 memoir, "Weeds Like Us," to sign and sell. Opening is Minnesota's own rising blues star, Annie Mack. (7 p.m. Dakota, 1010 Nicollet Mall, Mpls. $35-$45, dakotacooks.com)
The Singers: "Considering Matthew Shepard" is an oratorio created by Minnesota-born, Grammy-winning choral composer and conductor Craig Hella Johnson, reflecting upon the University of Wyoming student who was murdered in 1998 for being gay. The Singers will perform a work that employs elements of J.S. Bach's passions, gospel, blues and musical theater to explore not only the tragedy but a path toward forgiveness. (7 p.m. Kracum Performance Hall, Carleton College, free; also 3 p.m. Sun., St. Andrew's Lutheran Church, 900 Stillwater Road, Mahtomedi, $5-$35; 7 p.m. May 14, St. Michael-Albertville High School Performing Arts Center, 5800 Jamison Ave. N.E., St. Michael, free; 3 p.m. May 15, Ted Mann Concert Hall, 2128 Fourth St. S., Mpls., $5-$35; singersmca.org.)