COUNTRYAfter shows at the State Fair and Mystic Lake's amphitheater, country princess Carrie Underwood will finally bring her full arena production to the Twin Cities for the first time -- along with two new hits, the title track and "Good Girl," from this year's "Blown Away" album. Opening is Hunter Hayes, who claimed this week's No. 1 Billboard country singles spot with "Wanted." (7:30 p.m. Thu. Target Center, $46-$66.) Jon Bream
POP/ROCK After reviving his post-punk band in 2010, visionary New York art-rocker Michael Gira takes Swans to a whole new level on "The Seer," an expansive new double-disc/quadruple-vinyl set that bounces wildly from droning psychedelica to hair-raising noise to freak-out folk. Low's Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker joined Gira's fray along with Karen O and more guests. California experimenters Xiu Xiu open. (9 p.m. Fri., Fine Line. $22.) Chris Riemenschneider
At 78, Frankie Valli has discovered the fountain of vocal youth. The knockout falsetto remains (unless he's lip-syncing) as he revisits the repertoire that made "The Jersey Boys" possible: "Sherry," "Walk Like a Man" and "Rag Doll." He works with a decidedly younger incarnation of the Four Seasons. Plus he'll reprise his solo hits, including "Grease" and "My Eyes Adored You." (8 p.m. Sat. State, $63.50-$104.) Jon Bream
After a four-year hiatus and a solo album by frontman Kele Okereke, England's Bloc Party has returned to angular post-punk form on its obviously titled fourth album, "Four." The Current is all over this much-anticipated album, spinning the tension-filled "Octopus." Ceremony opens. (7:30 p.m. Sat. First Avenue, $25-$27.) Bream
Ariel Pink is self-consciously and proudly weird. His latest Haunted Graffiti project, "Mature Themes," finds the L.A. lo-fi aficionado exploring sex, Nostradamus and the sound of AM radio. The album is noteworthy if only for a remake of Donny and Joe Emerson's 1979 tune "Baby" (which 89.3 the Current is giving almost Bieber-like love) and "Schnitzel Boogie," which should please your favorite Wisconsinite. (9 p.m. Sat. Fine Line, $15.) Bream
With a peculiar, pesky sonic patchwork that's part Björk electro-static, Grizzly Bear harmony-swirl and Muppet-voiced cutesy/grating, British quartet Alt-J will make its Twin Cities debut just a week after earning a Mercury Prize nomination. The former art students have been in steady rotation at 89.3 the Current for months with their tra-la-la-spiked single "Fitzpleasure," from their debut album "An Awesome Wave." JBM opens. (9 p.m. Sat., Triple Rock. Sold out.) Riemenschneider
With theaters and folk venues as her main haunts nowadays, indie heroine Ani DiFranco makes a welcome return to First Ave, a ghost of rock tours past. The folk-music torch carrier enlisted Pete Seeger to help on her latest album, "Which Side Are You On?," which also incorporates the funky sounds and stellar musicians of her recently adopted hometown, New Orleans. New York acoustic trio Pearl and the Beard opens. (8 p.m. Sun., First Avenue. $36.50.) Riemenschneider
When Olivia Newton-John comes to the Guthrie, which will rank higher: the kitsch or cuteness factor? Will her "Grease" fans outnumber her "Physical" followers or her "Have You Never Been Mellow" believers? It's the Aussie singer's first Twin Cities appearance in 10 years. (7:30 p.m. Mon. Guthrie, $55-$58.) Bream