Clutch, Sevendust, Tyler Bryant
When people talk about stoner rock (or whatever you wanna call it), and its practitioners, Clutch is all too often left out of the conversation. Which is asinine. Starting with 1993's Transnational Speedway League, the Maryland four-piece has been dropping sinewy Zep-and-Sabb riffs that are worth their weight in gold. And Neil Fallon's gravelly bark spins tales that retell history, drop the occasional pop-culture reference, or take you to another world entirely. (7:30 pm, Roseland, $34-55, all ages) CHRIS STAMM


Kung Fu Theater: Kung Fu Super Power
This monthā€™s installment in Dan Halstedā€™s ongoing celebration of all things whoop-ass the only known 35mm print of 1980's Kung Fu Super Power, which sounds like it might be a turn-of-the-decade riff on cultural phenomena like Superman: The Movie and TV's Spider-Man and Incredible Hulk, but nope! It's just another "Student loses master, swears revenge against his master's foes, fucks 'em up in beautifully brutal ways" kinda movie, but when the student is Billy Chong, and the styles he's learning include "Southern Eagle" and "Horsehead Fist" (!) who needs a cape? (7:30 pm, Hollywood Theatre, $7-9) BOBBY ROBERTS

Cut Worms, Michael Rault
Max Clarke sounds like a lost Everly Brother. He mustā€™ve done some witch a favor to get a voice that smooth. Clarke records midcentury folk ballads under the moniker Cut Worms, which comes from a line in the William Blake poem ā€œProverbs of Hellā€ (ā€œthe cut worm forgives the plowā€). His 2017 debut EPĀ Alien SunsetĀ is spectacular, especially the track ā€œLike Going Down Sidewaysā€ā€”although it contains my least favorite instrument (the cursed xylophone), thereā€™s also a gently cascading guitar riff, honeyed Fab Four harmonies, and lyrics repeated like lovesick mantras (ā€œYou never had a dream/You never had a love, it seemedā€). Clarke repurposed some of theĀ Alien SunsetĀ songs for his twangy debut LPĀ Hollow Ground, released by Jagjaguwar in May. (9 pm, Doug Fir, $14) CIARA DOLAN

Courtenay Hameister
Local writer and Mercury columnist Courtenay Hameister reads from her debut book Okay Fine Whatever, chronicling a year spent actively seeking out experiences she once avoided at all costs in an effort to curb her dread and anxiety. (7 pm, Broadway Books, free)

Future Generationsm, Zuli
The NYC indie pop quintet bring their infectious sounds through Holocene for the Portland stop on a North American tour supporting their sophomore full-length, Landscape. Fellow NY-hailing musician Ryan Camenzuliā€”AKA Zuliā€”rounds out the proceedings with his own blend of psych-tinged pop. (8:30 pm, Holocene, $10)

YolanDa Brown
British-Jamaican saxophonist and composer YolanDa Brown brings her reggae-tinged jazz and R&B through the Jack London Revue for the Portland stop on the "Coming To America" Tour. (9 pm, Jack London Revue, $20)

St. Lucia, The Night Game
The Brooklyn-based synthpop ensemble headed up by South African-born producer/songwriter Jean-Philip Grobler return to the Wonder Ballroom ahead of their forthcoming full-length. (8 pm, Wonder Ballroom, $25)

Don't forget to check out our Things To Do calendar for even more things to do!