By Don Allred
Bone Thugs N-Harmony featuring Krayzie Bone & Wish Bone/Dizzy/Dilemma
On this tour, Cleveland’s Bone Thugs N Harmony are represented by central BTNH figure Krayzie Bone and trusty sidekick Wish Bone, both of whom have voiced low-key assurances/hopes of reunion, echoed by other quintet members, despite furor following the duo’s departure last spring. Fittingly, this fluctuating flow of family affairs recalls the impulsive balancing act of BTNH’s definitive “Crossroads,” where bursts of rapping and singing blend and ride through tumultuous traffic. Between studio experiments, Krayzie and Wish expertly emphasize BTNH classics onstage. Canadian rappers Dizzy and Dilemma bring youthful energy and experience.
03/04 @ Newport Music Hall, 1722 N High St.
Doors Open: 7 p.m.
Valient Thorr/Cadaver Dogs
Vailent Thorr’s early metal battle axes chop through sweet Earth’s crazy problems, while drummer Lucian Thorr keeps the pleasure principle swinging. Lead throat Valient Himself is a spiritually/socially struggling Everyman, whose searing sonic seed might well be Motorhead’s “Eat The Rich.” The bent metal boogie of Columbus’ Cadaver Dogs seems spawned by the cathartic sandpaper blast of Motorhead’s “Ace of Spades.” Drummer/howler Lex Vegas channels the dream: “We want to be the perfect balance of lust and aggression, like really good hate sex or the most awesome time you ever got beat up.”
03/04 @ KOBO, 2590 N High St.
8 p.m.
Jazz on the Avenue: A Soulful Night Of Keys
A Soulful Night of Keys showcases three generations of jazz. Lonnie Liston Smith filtered avant-jazz showmanship into potent smoothness, via ‘70s hits such as the much-sampled “Expansions,” showcased tonight. Also expect Gil Scott-Heron’s trenchant “The Bottle,” featuring the voice, flute, and vintage synthesizer of Brian Jackson, collaborator with late, barely pre-hip hop novelist-poet-singer-songwriter GSH. Young Mark Adams, whose colleagues have included soul jazz vibraphonist Roy Ayers, promises a “unique” rendition of Ayers’ “Everybody Loves The Sunshine.” Veteran guitar, bass and drums further fortify the three keyboard artists’ funky reveries and revelry.
03/10 @ King Arts Complex, 867 Mt. Vernon Ave.
7 p.m.
Lionel the Jailbird/Glow Merchants/Forest And the Evergreens/Pet Lions
Columbus-based Lionel The Jailbird’s vocalist/violinist Dominique De Biasio steers tough-love-is-the-drug ruminations through overcast folk-rock and bluesy waves of psych-garage undertow, singing “Bon Voyage” like an unusually tuneful pirate. Equally fearlessly, Glow Merchants travel “Basked In Fire” ‘s modal whirlpool into wailing Mideast/Midwest serenades. Forest And The Evergreens can wail through their own “Spaceghost” like the Zombies overtaken by the Police, with pole-vaulting cymbals. In recent songs such as “Trinidad,” Chicago’s Pet Lions dig up new/fresh nuances in retro electro-pop.
03/16 @ KOBO, 2590 N High St.
9 p.m.
roeVy/Blatta & Inesha
In Columbus DJ/VJ team roeVy’s perfect world, twin red eye-dots always shine: under a rug lifted by a sexy maid, on a watering can, in the Oval Office, and riding laser beams from the peaked hoods of two figures, working and playing together onstage. Their lavishly layered sound and vision add up to roeVystep, and you probably won’t want to escape (how fortunate). Italian DJs Blatta & Inesha ride and guide techno nouveau’s espresso express, via "Pet Massage,” “Pigeon Flu,” “Get F*$@ed Up,” “Basso Grasso.” and turntable shout-outs to playmates Mustard Pimp.
03/17 @ Skully's, 1151 N. High St.
9 p.m.
Andrew Bird/Eugene Mirman
“Enjoy yourselves/It’s later than you think,” Andrew Bird characteristically sang along with his colleagues in Squirrel Nut Zippers, while swinging toward the Millennium, or somewhere/nowhere. Bird's new Break It Yourself bounces and curves through basically live-in-the-studio explorations of sardonic vitality and oblique-stroke imagery. AB’s voice, violin, guitar, glockenspiel, great whistling, and live looping will join his intrepid band in an enchanted forest of morphing melodies. Genial spoken-word artist Eugene Mirman’s reputation was prophesied by 60s acid-pop-folk minstrel Donovan: “He’ll be so very kind/As to /Blow your mind.”
03/20 @ Southern Theatre, 21 E Main St.
8 p.m.
Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors/Nathan Angelo
Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors mix country, folk, pop, and rock into songs of compassionate candor. Holcomb’s attentive Americana even evokes the wry testimonials of equally faith-based Canadian bard Bruce Cockburn, when he belts out, “I played the religion card,” and describes how such grandstanding set back his own spirituality. Wife Ellie Bannister Holcomb’s crucial vocal and compositional reinforcements keep the pilgrims pertinent and moving. Singer/songwriter/pianist Nathan Angelo’s rippling emotional range is also truthfully, fervently fluid: “Pour me a glass of that fine whining about/ Someway, somehow, getting out!”
03/26 @ A&R Music Bar, 391 Neil Ave.
Doors Open: 7 p.m.
Night Beats
The Night Beats are taking (and taking over) strobe-light-illuminated night classes, while learning how not to turn the mid-60s sounds of teen punk rebellion into hairy hidebound high school cool-rules. “She told me somethin’/I can’t explain”: now you’re getting it, wild boy. Danny Lee Blackwell’s voice orbits the rubbery twang bar of his guitar, which twists the shadows of bass and drums, stomping and strutting toward earthy elegance. The Night Beats function at the junction of good, bad, occasionally evil, and just enough ugly to keep it real.
03/29 @ Ace of Cups, 2619 N High St.
Doors Open: 9 p.m
The Great Flood/Bill Frisell Quartet
Bill Morrison is a filmmaker increasingly known for working with found reels and live musicians. He participated in cellist/photographer Erik Friedlander’s 2009 Wexner-co-commissioned multimedia show, Block Ice & Tackle. Wexner also co-commissioned The Great Flood, Morrison’s documentary collaboration with jazz-Americana guitarist Bill Frisell. Performing the soundtrack onstage, Frisell glides eerily over the steadily converging evidence of 1927’s historic disaster, as HD processing captures nitrate newsreel stock’s random decay, which sometimes dances like jazzy flames around the Mississippi, also strivers and survivors, including those seen talking in a bus station on silent footage.
03/31 @ Thurber Theatre, Drake Center
1849 Cannon Drive, OSU
8 p.m.