Thursday, May 27
Maxwell w/ Jill Scott @ The Bradley Center, 7 p.m.
With his 1996 debut Maxwell’s Urban Hang Suite, Maxwell helped establish mellow, groove-based neo-soul as a commercially viable alternative to the more dance-based R&B of the time, but after his 2001 album, Now, he willfully retreated from the spotlight for some extended downtime. It took eight years, but he returned in top form on 2009’s BLACKsummers’night, an elegant, utterly gorgeous record that swiftly returned the singer to the airwaves and earned him a pair of Grammys. His profi le higher than ever, he’ll share tonight’s show with opener Jill Scott, the neo-soul everywoman who is performing in advance of her upcoming album The Light of the Sun.
Moonalice @ Shank Hall, 8 p.m.
A six-piece group comprised of veteran session players inspired by the tour-heavy business model of younger jam bands, Moonalice plays swampy, bluesy roots rock that allows for ample improvisational tangents. When the group returns to Milwaukee tonight, it will be without perhaps their most famous member: G.E. Smith, who is best remembered as the grinning guitarist and musical director of “Saturday Night Live” from 1985 to 1995. Smith played his final show with Moonalice on New Year’s Eve, moving on to play guitar with Roger Waters.
Friday, May 28
In its fifth year, the Miltown Beat Down beat-making battle moved to a bigger venue and placed more emphasis on between-battle entertainment, so it’s fitting that the event has roped in some big names to supplement tonight’s fi nal showdown. Tonight, the four remaining producers 40 Mil, Zeekzilla, Lex Luther and DJ Peru will compete for the crown on a bill they’ll share with former Roc-a-Fella rapper Freeway, who this year with underground producer Jake One released The Stimulus Package, an acclaimed album for the Rhymesayers label. Also on the bill are producer Vitamin D, mainstay local DJs Kid Cut Up and Madhatter, and Milwaukee rapper Frankie Flowers.
Josh Rouse w/ AM @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
Roots-pop singer-songwriter JoshRouse’s army brat upbringing led him to write a series of inspired conceptalbums about the many places he’s lived. His 1998 debut Dressed Up Like Nebraska honored his native state, while 2005’s Nashvillereflected on his move to Tennessee.Rouse’s recent albums have explored the culture shock following an even moredramatic relocation to Spain,where in 2007 he recorded an EP with his soon-to-be wife Paz Suay, She’s Spanish, I’m American. The titleof his latest disc, El Turista,suggests Rouse still doesn’t feel completely at home in his new country.
Saturday, May 29
For those within the industrial metal community, seasoned Roadrunner Records veterans Fear Factory are considered one of the genre’s most reliable entities, enormously influential for their unique hybridization of disparate hard rock elements. Although the band has been slowed by frequent lineup and hiatuses since the millennium, they’ve still managed to record a rewarding series of concept albums written around dramatic sci-fi imagery, the latest of which, Mechanize, was released in February.
Fresh Cut Collective @ Mad Planet, 9 p.m.
Live hip-hop bands tend to fall back on bland, anonymous grooves, as the actual music takes a backseat to the raps, but Milwaukee’s Fresh Cut Collective escapes this trap, giving the six players who back rapper Adebisi plenty to do. With Black Elephant and Growing Nation off the circuit, Fresh Cut Collective filled a niche as one of the city’s few live hip-hop acts, and the group found its audience quickly through strong word-ofmouth, even before the group had any recorded music to support. Tonight they celebrate the release of their self-titled album, which throws down shifty dub beats and limber soul-funk jams.
The Brian Jonestown Massacre @ Turner Hall Ballroom, 8 p.m.
The Brian Jonestown Massacre’s Anton Newcombe is modern psychedelic rock’s answer to The Game, an erratic frontman who runs his mouth off and beefs with any and everyone possible, usually the nearest person to him. During his concerts that nearest somebody is sometimes in his own band (with which he once broke into a fistfight on stage), though it could also be someone in the audience (the 2004 documentary DiG! detailed him kicking an audience member in the head). Of course, most Brian Jonestown Massacre shows go without such sensational incidents, but stories like these have given the band an almost mythical aura in certain rock circleseven though they’ve come at the expense of the greater, major-label success that once seemed like a sure thing for this group.
Sunday, May 30
Ray Manzarek and Robby Krieger of The Doors @ The Pabst Theater, 8 p.m. Keyboardist Ray Manzarek and guitarist Robby Krieger of The Doors want nothing more than to continue performing the band’s music, but with The Doors’ iconic singer Jim Morrison dead and drummer John Densmore dead set against seeing the band’s legacy exploited in any way, it hasn’t always been easy. Manzarek and Krieger began touring in 2002 as The Doors of the 21st Century before a legal injunction from Densmore forced them to drop that name. They re-branded themselves D21C, then Riders on the Storm, then yet again as Manzarek-Krieger before settling on the blunt “Ray Manzarek and Robby Krieger of The Doors.” Further complicating their efforts, the pair’s touring lineup has been as unstable as their touring name. The latest vocalist to volunteer for the impossible task of filling Jim Morrison’s shoes is Miljenko Matijevic of the hard-rock band Steelheart. He replaces Fuel singer Brett Scallions.
Mouth of the Architect w/ Northless and Enabler @ The Cactus Club, 10 p.m.
Incorporating cerebral keys, tortured guitar delay and literary spoken-word passages, Dayton, Ohio’s Mouth of the Architect avoid metal’s stereotypical, nihilistic malaise, and in doing so has earned a prestigious buzz in underground metal circles. As if to further distance themselves from metal clichés, the group titled its 2008 album Quietly, its title on the album cover typed in an eloquent cursive font instead of the usual doom-and-gloom gothic lettering. The group’s new EP The Violence Beneath is typically varied, balancing aggressive sludge metal with prettier passages. It includes an unlikely cover of Peter Gabriel’s “In Your Eyes.”
Wednesday, June 2
Peter Buffett @ The Pabst Theater, 6 p.m. One-time Milwaukee resident Peter Buffettthe son of power-investor Warren Buffetthas been recording pop and new age albums since the late ’80s, but has found the most success composing material for fi lm and television. His contribution to the Dances With Wolves soundtrack kept work coming steadily throughout the ’90s, a decade that culminated in an Emmy for his score of the 1999 documentary Wisconsin: An American Portrait. In recent years Buffett has incorporated modern electronica and indie-rock influences into his albums. Tonight he’ll appear at the Pabst Theater not only as a musician but also as an author, promoting his self-help book Life Is What You Make It: Find Your Own Path to Fulfillment. The concert is a benefit for 88.9 Radio Milwaukee.
Holy Fuck w/ Nice Nice @ Mad Planet, 8 p.m.
A Toronto group not nearly as incendiary as their name suggests, Holy Fuck plays electronic music using only traditional live instrumentation, with no laptops, samples or drum programming. The band’s emphasis on live percussion gives their records intricate textures and an energy that traditional electronica acts can’t recreate, and their experimental aesthetic and pop sensibility has helped position them as an indie-rock alternative to the similarly instrumental “livetronica” bands embraced by jam-music circles.
The group’s third and latest album, Latin, released this May on XL Recordings, has been embraced by indie-music blogs and dance-music circles alike, peaking at #14 on the Billboard Dance charts.