Skyline Music Festival
The name sounds like something a suburban teen youth center might come up with to attract the cool kids, and the lineup for the Skyline Music Fest's Indie Night looks a lot like Rock the Garden 2008, which also featured Andrew Bird and the New Pornographers as headliners. Bird just issued a Handsome Family tribute album and has a twangy new band that includes Tift Merritt on guitar and ex-Minneapolitan Eric Heywood on pedal-steel. The New Pornos — who long ago lost Neko Case from their tour lineup — are previewing their Aug. 25 release, "Brill Bruisers." Electro-pop charmers Thao & the Get Down Stay Down and local drummers-turned-bandleaders Dosh and S. Carey open. (5:30 p.m. Fri., Target Field, $29-$49.) Chris Riemenschneider
Day 2 of the Skyline fest stars Oscar and Grammy winner Melissa Etheridge, right, the raspy rocker who is essentially a casino act at this stage of her career, and O.A.R., which makes perpetual college-rock party music. Promoters have smartly turned to Minnesota's own Gear Daddies, one of the big draws at last year's inaugural fest, along with two other Twin Cities-connected bands, the rock-solid Honeydogs and the Rembrandts, those "I'll Be There for You" hitmakers. (5 p.m. Sat., Target Field, $29-$79.) Jon Bream
POP/ROCK
The Pizza Lucé Block Party was successfully revived for its 10th anniversary last year in a new location outside the pizza chain's old downtown location. This 11th-year lineup balances new and old flavor with Lizzo's rowdy electro-rap troupe Grrrl Prty and Rhymesayers' budding star Dem Atlas alongside the elder live hip-hop pioneers Heiruspecs and veteran piano-rock showman Mark Mallman, each of whom have new material to bring to the table. The rest of the lineup includes acoustic folk/blues master Charlie Parr, Afrobeat big band Black Market Brass, Afro-beatbox big man Carnage, Sean McPherson's Twinkie Jiggles Broken Orchestra and more. (Noon-10 p.m. Sat., 119 4th St. N., Mpls., all ages, free, PizzaLuce.com.) Riemenschneider
Not quite as famous as their fellow Liverpudlian who came to town last weekend, Echo & the Bunnymen also went nine years between local gigs. The big-haired, pouty-lipped darlings of MTV's "120 Minutes" and the "Pretty in Pink" soundtrack (with "Bring on the Dancing Horses") have a new throwback-sounding album, "Meteorites." Brit-cocky frontman Ian McCulloch and guitarist Will Sergeant are the remaining original members, a sort of poor man's Bono and the Edge who nonetheless share a rich legacy. (8:30 p.m. Sat., First Avenue, $27-$30.) Riemenschneider
A small-by-design arty summer camp-out, the Square Lake Music & Film Festival boasts the biggest small band in Minnesota indie-rock as headliner, Low, which always seems to slip in one memorable, unique outdoor show per summer. More in the truly one-of-a-kind territory, Nona Marie's women's vocal group Anonymous Choir will debut an original live score for the 1975 animated short "Aucassin and Nicolette" and Charlie Parr will play in the barn at night's end. Twang man Frankie Lee, Sarah White's neo-soul buzz band Shiro Dame, fuzzy rockers Carroll and Ruben and pipa specialist Gao Hang also perform. (2 p.m. Sun., Square Lake, Stillwater, sold out, SquareLakeFestival.com.) Riemenschneider
Inspired by Justin Bieber, tween heartthrob Austin Mahone, 18, makes the kind of pop with rhythmic vocals that hopes to gain some street cred. His peeps were savvy enough to recruit Pitbull for the single "Mmm Yeah" to add a little sex appeal and bilingual allure. That was Mahone's best move since landing an opening slot on Taylors Swift's Red Tour. But he's still a teenybop star probably not quite ready for an arena. With the Vamps, Shawn Mendes and Suite 44. (7 p.m. Sun., Target Center, $29.50-$69.) Bream
As she has proven on recent trips to Minnesota, Scarlet Rivera is more than the mysterious violinist who punctuated "Hurricane," one of Bob Dylan's most compelling story songs. Not only did she play on Dylan's "Desire" and "Hard Rain" albums, she has been a key practitioner of the violin in rock, heard on records by Tracy Chapman, David Johansen, Keb Mo and many others. She'll be backed by an all-star Twin Cities band featuring guitarists Lonnie Knight and Gene Lafond, keyboardist Matt Fink and drummer Stan Kipper. (7 p.m. Sun., Dakota Jazz Club, $15.) Bream
Eric Johnson, who would have been a worthy headliner for the Lowertown Guitar Fest a day earlier, was one of the original three on the G3 guitar-gods tour with Joe Satriani and Steve Vai. Less metallic than the other two G's, the soft-spoken Texas slinger has been crafting melodic, innovative, echoey rock instrumentals and elegant acoustic work going back to his Grammy-winning 1986 album "Tones." His new record, "Europe Live," includes an epic remake of John Coltrane's "Mr. P.C." (7:30 p.m. Sun., Cedar Cultural Center, all ages, $30-$35.) Riemenschneider