Black Angels & Black Lips: The local date for this all-"black" tour is doubling as a release party for a new beer in an appropriately black can, Surly +1 golden ale, a partnership with First Ave. It's a good excuse to tout to two great live bands, with the Austin, Texas-based Angels offering hypnotically whirring and reverberating psychedelic-rock roar fashioned after their hometown hero Roky Erickson, while the Atlanta-reared Lips deliver high-adrenaline, hard-boogying punk like a Southern version of the Clash. (8:30 p.m. Fri., First Avenue, 701 1st Av. N., Mpls., $25.)
Leslie Odom Jr.: He's a jazz singer with a supple tenor voice. He was the co-star in the original cast of the hip-hop "Hamilton" on Broadway. And he likes to sing show tunes. He'll honor all of the above with the Minnesota Orchestra, under the baton of Sarah Hicks. (8 p.m. Fri. & Sat. Orchestra Hall, $55-$140)
Kristin Hersh & Grant Lee Phillips: From the late-'80s/early-'90s "alternative" wave bands Throwing Muses and Grant Lee Buffalo, respectively, they share an imaginative, poetic songwriting style and equally distinctive voices. (8 p.m. Fri., Cedar Cultural Center, $22-$25.)
Ness Nite: The St. Paul rapper and singer came to light at age 19 brandishing her "braless/flawless/lawless" brand of confident, chillaxing hip-hop. She returns to town between trips to the South by Southwest conference and her new home of New York with a nationally buzzing album in tow. Titled "Dream Girl" and produced with Greg Grease and Metasota collaborator Mike Frey, the 12-song collection finds the 22-year-old riffing on Instagram selfies and body-image issues with feminist viewpoints and clever world play, the music ranging from "Lemonade"-like electro-pop to Stand4rd-style ambient grooves. (10 p.m. Fri., 7th Street Entry, 701 1st Av. N., Mpls., $10-$12.)
Brent Cobb: The cousin of Chris Stapleton/Sturgill Simpson producer Dave Cobb has written songs for the likes of Miranda Lambert and Kenny Chesney. He's now touring with his own band and gaining traction as another cool Southern country-rocker to watch. (9 p.m. Fri., Turf Club, $12-$15.)
The Long Odds: Traces of early Uncle Tupelo and Jayhawks trickle into this fiddle-spiked Twin Cities alt-twang quintet's promising debut album "Level Ground," recorded at Pachyderm Studio with a guest spot by Yonder Mountain's Allie Kral. (6:30 p.m. Sat., Mortimer's Bar, Mpls., $5.)
Max Weinberg's Jukebox: He's a famous drummer from the E Street Band and Conan O'Brien's talk show. He knows about 200 rock classics. And he and his combo of unfamous musicians will answer requests and perform them like a live jukebox. (7 & 9 p.m. Sat. Dakota Jazz Club, $35-$64.)
Wolf Alice: The British quartet has gone from the indie-rock buzz bin to mainstream-teetering status with its single "Don't Delete the Kisses," a mellower, backseat-make-out kind of tune that belies the band's grungier power. Lead howler Ellen Roswell and her London-based crew are hitting the American clubs ahead of a summer of festival dates touting their second album, "Visions of a Life." Named NME's second-best album of 2017, it promises a wider range of moodiness from a band that already had a strong live show. (8 p.m. Tue., First Avenue, 701 1st Av. N., Mpls., $20, eTix.com. Free in-store: 6 p.m. Mon., Electric Fetus, 2000 3rd Av S., Mpls.)