MIGUEL: Cosmic, sexy Los Angeles R&B star Miguel piled on the grooves for his new album, "War & Leisure," maybe the most fun, buoyant record released so far this year. Rappers J. Cole, Rick Ross and more spike songs such as "Sky Walker" with a decent amount of hip-hop edge, but mostly the album shows the 32-year-old singer to be an old-school psychedelic soul that Prince and Curtis Mayfield would've loved. (8:30 p.m. Fri., Palace Theatre, $43.50, eTix.com.)
Tune-Yards: Merrill Garbus and her experimental, worldly, New York dance-pop band of "Gangsta" fame added a little more nightclub-ready electronic flavor to their fourth album, "I Can Feel You Creeping Into My Private Life," and are now promising some visual theatrics on their first tour in four years. It should be an extra lively First Ave set this time around, in other words. Opener Sudan Archives is a 23-year-old violinist/singer from North Africa with a strong buzz. (9 p.m. Fri., First Avenue, $26.)
The Von Tramps: Fun-loving frontwoman Jenna Enemy and her hard-pumping, Green Day/Runaways-flavored Minneapolis band are touting their full-length debut, "The Future Is Female," produced by the Ataris' Dustin Phillips. They'll celebrate with loads of special guests, including Claudio Rivera of Motion City Soundtrack as their drummer, and with a fundraiser for the domestic violence victims organization BWJP. (8 p.m. Fri., Southern Theater, 1420 S. Washington Av., Mpls., $15-$35.)
MGMT: After giving one of the dullest headlining performances ever at Rock the Garden in 2010, the electro-pop duo born out of an Wesleyan University dorm room finally sound like they're having fun again on their well-received new album, "Little Dark Age." Their fourth LP piles on more of the candy-coated hooks and nerdishly sexy dance whir heard in early hits like "Electric Feel" and "Time to Pretend." This is their tour kickoff. (8 p.m. Fri., Myth, 3090 Southlawn Dr., Maplewood, all ages, $45, eTix.com.)
Sunny Sweeney: Her fourth album, 2017's "Trophy," is another winner, a retro country effort etched with vivid details, hard truths and deeply felt emotion. She is particularly effective on ballads like "Pass the Pain," a double entrendre request of a bartender, and "Unsaid," about pride that left words unsaid before someone died, and the slow waltz "I Feel Like Hank Williams Tonight," about needing certain music for certain moods. (8 p.m. Fri. Turf Club, $15-$20)
Carnaval Brasileiro: The gold standard of local Carnaval events returns for its 16th year with guitarist/singer Robert Everest and his 10-piece band Beira Mar Brasil at the helm, and with a masquerade ball, samba dancers, a drum troop and capoeiristas (martial artists) part of the colorful, mad-whir mix. (7 p.m. Sat., Cedar Cultural Center, all ages, $22-$30.)
Okee Dokee Brothers: Minnesota's Grammy-winning kids duo of Justin Lansing and Joe Mailander knows how to create folk/bluegrass/roots music that's entertaining and nourishing for the entire family. (11 a.m. & 2 p.m. Sat. Ordway, $16-$20, $5 for "lap passes," ordway.org)
Lee Brice: Before the term bro country was coined, he became a Twin Cities favorite on the strength of hits like "I Drive Your Truck" and "Parking Lot Party." Now he's wearing a fedora instead of a backward ball cap and singing valentines to his son on the single "Boy." (8 p.m. Sat. Myth, $29.50-$39.50)