Thursday, Jan. 11
1. Zeitgeist and No Exit: For nine years, Zeitgeist, the dean of Twin Cities new music ensembles, has been collaborating annually with its Cleveland-based kindred spirit, No Exit. After premiering four new pieces — and accompanying films — in Cleveland, they bring them west, each taking for inspiration the dream world and the 20th-century surrealists who explored it. The concerts will feature films and music by Timothy Beyer, James Praznik, Luke Haaksma, Philip Blackburn and Zeitgeist. (7 p.m. Thu., Anderson Center, 163 Tower View Drive, Red Wing; 7 p.m. Fri. and Sat., Studio Z, 275 E. 4th St., St. Paul, $15-$25, zeitgeistnewmusic.org)
Also: After an ultra-hot reception at the Minnesota State Fair's bandshell this past summer, zydeco music heir CJ Chenier and his Red Hot Louisiana Band are offering two sets of their funky, bluesy bayou boogie in one night (6:30 & 8:30 p.m. the Dakota, $25-$35); marimba player Jenny Klukken leads Marimbista, a Twin Cities combo, in an evening of Latin jazz (6 p.m. Crooners, $25-$35); New Primitives, featuring Twin Cities percussion aces Stan Kipper and Chico Perez, return to Shaw's (7 p.m., free); Twin Cities guitarist Tommy Vote helms Self-Titled in its salute to Jeff Beck (7:30 p.m. Crooners, $25-$35); Upper Peninsula to Minneapolis transplant Eli Gardner is celebrating the release of his second record, "Transient," with a stark but evocative folk/Americana sound that's part Steve Earle and Vic Chesnutt (7:30 p.m. Turf Club, $12-$15).
Friday, Jan. 12
2. First Avenue's Best New Bands of 2023: This year's roster of promising Twin Cities newcomers — curated annually by First Ave staffers to keep us warm every January — is as musically diverse as a good weekend-long festival. Indie-pop singer Ber of "Superspreader" Current rotation will bump up against young shoegaze guitar whirrers She's Green. Stirring Americana songwriter Laamar will blend with iTunes-charting jazz funk troupe L.A. Buckner & Big Homie. And alt-twanger Clare Doyle will stir it up with two very different R&B/neo-soul groovers, Barlow and Reiki. Never heard of them, you say? Here's a great chance to catch up. (7 p.m. First Ave, 701 1st Av. N., Mpls., $12-$15, axs.com)
3. The Silent Treatment: Your new favorite punk band might not be a bunch of snotty kids, but rather this quartet of middle-aged Minnesota scene vets and parents who are royally p.o.'d at the world we're leaving those kids. Frontwoman Claire Luger — an educator and Wyoming City Council member by day — channels Joe Strummer and Kathleen Hanna by night with ace backers Keely Lane (Trailer Trash), Rob Sells (Low Rats) and Dave Randall (Kinda Kinky). They're releasing their smartly smarmy, blisteringly boisterous debut album, "Suplex in 10!," at what promises to be a rowdy party with the Mood Swings, Spit Takes and Loki's Folly. (8:30 p.m. 7th St. Entry, 701 1st Av. N., Mpls., $12-$15, axs.com)
4. Mama Digdown's Brass Band: A blast of New Orleans music is the perfect way to warm up in January — even if the funky brass band comes from Madison, Wis. Mama Digdown's has been playing second-line NOLA sounds since 1993. The energetic 12-man combo has released eight albums, the latest being a spirited live set recorded at the Green Mill in Chicago. The group is working on an album of brassy arrangements of Michael Jackson material. Opening is the Akie Bermiss Trio, featuring the sweet Brooklyn soul man best known as the keyboardist/singer with Lake Street Dive. Comedian Trish Cook is the night's emcee. (8 p.m. Parkway Theater, 4814 Chicago Av. S., Mpls. $25-$33, Eventbrite.com)
5. St. Paul Peterson: He started Funk Friday during the pandemic as a weekly Zoom-aided mini-jam web series. To celebrate his 200th episode, the Twin Cities singer and multi-instrumentalist known for his work with the Time and the Family (aka fDeluxe) will play a full-blown concert with many special guests. Some of them have been among the more than 230 musicians featured on Funk Friday. Among those slated to join Peterson are R&B star Stokley, Roger Smith of Tower of Power, Dr. Fink of Prince & the Revolution, Mike Scott from Justin Timberlake's band, Ricky Peterson from Stevie Nicks' band, and Lenny Castro, who has played with John Mayer and Toto. (7 p.m. Green Room, 2923 Girard Av. S., Mpls., $20-$40, greenroommn.com)
Also: Celebrate David Bowie's birthday with the annual Acoustic Bowie tribute show, led by local rock journeymen Chris "Little Man" Perricelli and John Eller with loads of talented friends (8 p.m. Hook & Ladder Theater, $25-$38); Minneapolis percussionist Dave King of the Bad Plus is back with his jazzy trio Happy Apple, also featuring saxophonist Michael Lewis and bassist Erik Fratzke (8 p.m., also Sat., Icehouse, $25-$35); it's a reunion of the funky reggae-ish 1990s Twin Cities band the Mubbla Buggs featuring two current Cedar Cultural Center staffers Eric Hohn and Jared Hemming (8 p.m. the Cedar, $20-$25); two months after debuting his new "Paths" live show at Red Rocks in Denver, British DJ/producer G. Jones is bringing it indoors here (8 p.m. the Fillmore, $30); Urban Classic salutes Earth, Wind & Fire with saxophonist Kenni Holmen and bassist Yohannes Tona sitting in with these Twin Cities all stars (7 p.m. the Dakota, $30-$40); only Pat Hayes knows how to boogie Minnesota style with Lamont Cranston (7:30 p.m. Crooners, $35-$45); a rare gig in the Turf Club's Clown Lounge seems like a great setting for retro-pickers Jack Klatt and Molly Dean (6:30 p.m., $15); former GRRRL Prty partners Shannon Blowtorch and Sophia Eris are pairing up again for the Pv$$y Control dance party (10 p.m. Mortimer's, $10).
Saturday, Jan. 13
6. Arcwelder: Twenty-four years since releasing its last in a series of LPs for the fabled noise-rock label Touch & Go (see also: the Jesus Lizard, Butthole Surfers), the masterfully stormy Minneapolis power trio finally dropped the new album "Control" last week via Bandcamp after years of teasing new work and playing almost-annual reunion gigs. Sibling co-leaders Bill and Rob Graber and drummer/co-vocalist Scott Macdonald worked with J. Robbins of Jawbox fame on mastering the new record, whose manic but melodic songs should appeal to modern fans of bands like Japandroids or Metz. They're playing two sets at the release party, one with the new stuff and one their classic material. Eleganza opens. (8 p.m. Turf Club, 1601 University Av. W., St. Paul, $20, axs.com)