HOLIDAY Twin Cities music vets Chan Poling, John Munson and Steve Roehm began reinventing themselves and their favorite songs as the jazz-pop vehicle the New Standards in 2005, and their star-studded holiday concerts became an instantaneous hit. For the sixth annual installment, they are dropping a jewel of a stocking stuffer. As hinted at by Alec Soth's bleak cover photo and the Kris Kristofferson-penned title track, the new album "Sunday Morning Coming Down" is not as cheery as the Standards' typical show, but its touching odes to lost loved ones are well-timed to the season. Among the highlights are a Dan Wilson-produced version of Beck's "The Golden Age," a snow-fluttery take on Tom Waits' "You're Innocent When You Dream" and escapist-vibed covers of Talking Heads' "This Must Be the Place" and Arcade Fire's "No Cars Go." There are a few fun ones, too, especially the gender-flipped Robyn remake, "Call Your Boyfriend." (8 p.m. Fri. & Sat., 2 p.m. Sun., Fitzgerald Theater. $33 Fri.-Sat., $22 Sun.) Chris Riemenschneider
If you can't go to New York City to see the Rockettes, the Rockefeller Plaza tree and all those fabulous department-store windows, at least you can hear the Christmas sounds of the Big Apple courtesy of Manhattan Transfer. The vocalese-loving quartet has recorded two holiday collections on which they jazz up "Winter Wonderland" and other seasonal fare. (7 & 9 p.m. Fri.-Sat., Dakota Jazz Club, $40-$75.) Jon Bream
Guitar wizard Billy McLaughlin, whose remarkable persistence in the face of a neuro-muscular disorder was chronicled in a recent public TV documentary, is celebrating the 10th season of his holiday ensemble SimpleGifts. The group finds McLaughlin surrounded by talented females, including Celtic music mainstay Laura MacKenzie on whistles and bagpipes, and singer Karen Paurus of Lili's Burlesque Revue. (7:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat., St. Stephen Lutheran Church, 8400 France Av. S., Bloomington. $15-$25. See simplegiftsmusic.net for more shows.) Tom Surowicz
Two treasures of the Twin Cities scene, favorites from "A Prairie Home Companion" who are well-versed in classic jazz, swing, blues, folk and ragtime, Butch Thompson and Pat Donohue should need no introduction. What does need exposure is their new Red House album, "Vicksburg Blues," which is mostly a hard blues recording, showcasing gems from the genre's 78-rpm, acoustic era, though at least one romantic pop track sneaks onto the album -- the lovely, "If I Had You," on which piano great Thompson gets to use his other instrument, the clarinet. (7 p.m. Sun., Dakota, $20.) Surowicz
For their 2003 Christmas album, "Go Tell It on the Mountain," the Blind Boys of Alabama invited an odd-lot parade of guests, including George Clinton, Tom Waits, Solomon Burke, Michael Franti, Chrissie Hynde and Mavis Staples. But the guests weren't really necessary. If any harmonizing group knows how to celebrate yule favorites, it's the roof-raising Blind Boys. (7 p.m. Mon.-Tue., Dakota, $45.) Bream
Santa's all-time favorite helper, Elf Vez, is finally back in town to wish us all a "Merry Mex-Mas." There is simply no more fun all-around entertainer in rockabilly and roots-rock than El Vez. He's been a good little boy for many years, parodying Mr. Presley with wit, flair, boundless energy, hilarious patter and those sexy Elvettes. If you've been dreaming of a "Brown Christmas," this is the place to be. (7 p.m. Tue., First Avenue, $15.) Surowicz
Indie-folk charmer Sufjan Stevens has been intentionally goofy in the past (i.e., the cheerleader-accompaniment on his 2005 "Illinois" tour) and not so intentionally (his Orpheum Theatre show for the electroni-corny 2010 album "Age of Adz"). Thankfully, his current holiday-themed tour appears to be unabashedly based on cheese and good cheer. It's called -- ahem! -- "The Surfjohn Stevens Christmas Sing-A-Long Seasonal Affective Disorder Yuletide Disaster Pageant on Ice," and if that doesn't sound like a total hoot, then how about the promise of a "Wheel of Fortune"-style spinning database of seasonal tunes? One thing Stevens is serious about, though, is this music, as evidenced by his fan-adored "Songs for Christmas" collections. (8:30 p.m. Wed., Mill City Nights. Sold out.) Riemenschneider
Fingerstyle guitar master Tim Sparks celebrates the 20th anniversary of his landmark solo version of "The Nutcracker Suite" with a reissue of the disc and a Guthrie show. Don't expect dancing toy soldiers, sugar plum fairies or any woodwinds, violins or percussion. This is the Tchaikovsky perennial at its most intimate. Read an interview in next Monday's Variety section. (7:30 p.m. Wed., Dowling Studio, Guthrie Theater, $25.) Surowicz