Black Belt Eagle Scout Credit: Jeremy Hernandez

THURS APRIL 26
& FRI APRIL 27

KPSU AMP FEST w/Little Wings, Black Belt Eagle Scout, Nsayi Matingou, Sรกvila, Lake, Briana Marela, Oh, Rose, Gillian Frances

Parkway North at PSUโ€™s Smith Memorial
Student Union, 1825 SW Broadway

Portland State Universityโ€™s student-run radio station KPSU puts together some of the best all-ages bills in town, and their annual Amp Fest is no exception. The two-night festival is free to PSU students, and will see beloved K Records singer/songwriter Kyle Field (AKA Little Wings) play alongside local favorites like Black Belt Eagle Scout and Sรกvila, whoโ€™re expected to release their first album soon. But my top pick for Amp Fest is Olympia folksy rock band Oh, Rose; the last time I saw them play was at Holocene a few years back, and it felt like Iโ€™d walked in on some kind of pagan ritual, with frontwoman Olivia Roseโ€™s guttural yowls and shrieks. CIARA DOLAN

SAT APRIL 28

Red Yarn

Aladdin Theater, 3017 SE Milwaukie

With all the easy-to-swallow, sing-song joy that it provides, childrenโ€™s music has long been the home for some of the most direct sociopolitical commentary. Spend some time contemplating the lyrics of โ€œThis Land Is Your Landโ€ or spinning the 1972 classic Free to Be…You and Me if you donโ€™t believe me. Into that subcategory comes the fifth album by Red Yarn, the bearded local known to his family as Andy Furgeson. Red Yarnโ€™s Old Barn is a kind of country-pop concept album about one manโ€™s quest to hold a barn dance, but the underlying message is one of inclusiveness and open doorsโ€”the kind of qualities that are sadly in short supply in our current political climate. Surrounding those ideas are the clap-happy ambling odes to critters and life on the farm that have made Furgesonโ€™s many live performances such a joy to witness. ROBERT HAM

TUES MAY 1

Zola Jesus

Aladdin Theater, 3017 SE Milwaukie

Last year, Zola Jesus (AKA Nika Roza Danilova) released her fifth album, Okovi, and sheโ€™s just dropped a collection of bonus tracks called Okovi: Additions. Both releases find the singer/songwriter sharpening the impact of her industrial goth-pop with operatic vocals, beats that sound like thundering helicopter rotors, eerie piano melodies, aqueous synth, and lyrics that grapple with death. Tracks like the monolithic โ€œVacantโ€ (from Additions) hit especially hard, proving Danilovaโ€™s mastery of dark, powerful, hair-raising music. CD

Formerly a senior editor and the music editor at the Mercury, CK Dolan writes about music, movies, TV, the death industry, and pickles.