MUSIC
Megan Thee Stallion
Because Minneapolis has the opening date on her first arena-headlining trek, it’s hard to know what to expect of the Houston rapper’s Hot Girl Summer Tour, which comes just three weeks after her collaborator in the single of the same name, Nicki Minaj, lit up the same venue. The “Hiss” and “Savage” hitmaker earned high marks for her incendiary delivery and highly choreographed twerking at festival gigs over the past two summers. She’s bringing along rising Tennessee rapper GloRilla, who is featured on Megan’s new single “Wanna Be.” (7 p.m. Tue., Target Center, 600 1st Av. N., Mpls., $35-$830, ticketmaster.com)
CHRIS RIEMENSCHNEIDER
Trey Anastasio
After a trippy and triumphant run at the Sphere in Las Vegas with Phish (68 different songs in four nights), the singer/guitarist will visit the Midwest with Classic TAB (bassist Dezron Douglas, drummer Russ Lawton, keyboardist Ray Paczkowski) before they land for three nights in Brooklyn and he performs with National Symphony Orchestra on June 25. In St. Paul, expect a mix of songs from Phish and Anastasio’s solo catalog, including 2022′s “Mercy.” Meanwhile, Phish returns to the road in July for its residency-focused run of outdoor shows. (7:30 p.m. Fri., Palace Theatre, 17 W. 7th Place, St. Paul, $59.50 and up, axs.com)
JON BREAM
Teezo Touchdown
Recently seen on the cover of Rolling Stone’s Future of Music issue and on many of Travis Scott’s tour dates (alas, not ours), the 31-year-old rapper and singer harnessed high-profile features on Tyler the Creator and Drake songs to build up momentum for last year’s debut album “How Do You Sleep at Night?” Tracks like “Impossible” and the Janelle Monáe-accompanied “You Thought” show off a wide, hip array of alt-rock, R&B and electronic influences to sound like little else on the hip-hop charts at the moment. That variety bodes well for his local headlining debut, which got bumped up to the Mainroom from the Amsterdam Bar. (7 p.m. Fri., First Avenue, 701 1st Av. N., Mpls., all ages, $25, axs.com)
C.R.
Scott Sansby benefit
If it’s any indication how respected and loved percussionist and graphic artist Scott Sansby was in the Minnesota music community, more than 20 artists have volunteered to play at a two-day benefit marathon for him this weekend. Sansby, a Twin Cities musician for more than 50 years who also created posters for performers, was partially paralyzed after a fall last summer. He played percussion in numerous local groups including Passage, Doug Maynard Band, Zarathustra and Scottie Miller Band and he toured with Leon Russell and Mary McCreary. Among those appearing at the benefit are the Butanes, Rich Dworsky & Richard Kriehn, Lisa Wenger, Maurice Jacox and the We Still R Band, the New Primitives, Jimmi and the Band of Souls, Dean Magraw, Bobby Schnitzer & Dan Neale and the Peterson Family. (Noon to midnight Sat. & noon to 8 p.m. Sun., Shaws, 1528 University Av. NE., Mpls., $20 suggested donation)
J.B.