Ekali, 21 Savage, $uicideboy$ and the rest of December’s concerts

Wednesday, December 6

Ekali’s name might not ring a bell, but if you’re a hip-hop fan, you’ve already heard bits and pieces of his work. Portions of his 2014 single “Unfaith” are sampled on Drake’s If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late. Since then, the Vancouver electronic producer has signed to Skrillex’s OWSLA label and dropped the first single from his upcoming debut. Joining Ekali on tour are Dallas producer Medasin and Kansas City native Judge — who is riding high after landing his first string of festival appearances and big placements from Young Thug and Blackbear. — Aaron Rhodes

Ekali With Medasin and Judge

RecordBar, 1520 Grand ($17)


Dustbowl Revival

Knuckleheads

knuckleheadskc.com

Ekali, Medasin and Judge

RecordBar

therecordbar.com

Thursday, December 7


Decades Rewind

Lied Center, University of Kansas

lied.ku.edu

Friday, December 8


Jewel

Uptown Theater

uptowntheater.com

Amy Grant and Michael W. Smith

Sprint Center

sprintcenter.com

Saturday, December 9

Fans were already excited for this show back in September, but Atlanta trap star 21 Savage upped the ante on Halloween with the release of a surprise collaborative album with Migos member Offset and super-producer Metro Boomin’. Without Warning hits where Savage’s solo Issa missed, delivering the murky, gruesome murder raps that his base first fell for. Before the kids can count along with Savage during “Bank Account,” they’ll have an opening set from young Louisiana rapper YoungBoy Never Broke Again, who draws influence from a long line of street-smart Southern rappers, the most evident being fellow Bayou State star Boosie Badazz. — A.R.

21 Savage, YoungBoy Never Broke Again

Uptown Theater

uptowntheater.com

Trans-Siberian Orchestra

Sprint Center

sprintcenter.com

The Folly Jazz Series: Spanish Harlem Orchestra

The Folly Theater

follytheater.org

KPR Presents: Big Band Christmas

Liberty Hall

libertyhall.net

Freedom Sounds Collective, Go Generation, Boomtown United

RecordBar

therecordbar.com

Dream Ritual, Bummer, Youth Pool, Doubledrag

Davey’s Uptown Ramblers Club

daveysuptown.com

Gee Watts, Sauce, Heartfelt Anarchy, Shawn Majors, Clark Rooseveltte, Terence Tyrone

MiniBar

minibarkc.com

Sunday, December 10


Traindodge, Bummer, Sundiver, Nouveau

The Riot Room

theriotroom.com

The Hip-Hop Nutcracker

Arvest Bank Theatre at the Midland

themidlandkc.com

Monday, December 11


Evanescence

Music Hall

ticketmaster.com

Friday, December 15

New Orleans rappers and cousins Ruby Da Cherry and $lick $loth teamed up as $uicideboy$ in 2014, then started pumping out an absurd number of EPs and mixtapes, topping the SoundCloud charts with a fusion of 1990s Memphis flows and trap-rap instrumentation. This KC visit marks a first, but friend and frequent collaborator Pouya worked his way up from playing the Jackpot in 2015 to the Granada in 2016. A packed house at the Uptown would be something of a Midwest milestone for this latest wave of lo-fi rap stars. — A.R.

$uicideboy$

Uptown Theater

uptowntheater.com

Todd Rundgren

Voodoo Lounge, Harrah’s North Kansas City

caesars.com/harrahs-kansas-city

Jackyl

The Truman

thetrumankc.com

Saturday, December 16


Shinedown

The Truman

thetrumankc.com

Pokey LaFarge

Knuckleheads

knuckleheadskc.com

The Interrupters, SWMRS, the Regrettes

The Bottleneck

thebottlenecklive.com

Sunday, December 17


Tatsuya Nakatani and Friends

Tatsuya Nakatani played the first show at the 1900 Building, back when the performance space was just a concrete shell with exposed pipes — a reverberant space perfectly suited to the overlaid textures of the Nakatani Gong Orchestra. This month, Nakatani performs here again, this time in the spruced up recital hall, joined by a cohort of local artists ready to apply themselves to his unique soundscape of bowed and scraped percussion. The ensemble grew out of Nakatani’s experience as an avant-garde soloist, creating a layered array of sounds that defied comprehension as the product of one player. His improvised, free-form sets — the wistful ringing of singing bowls, shimmering bowed gong, erratic bass-drum thumps — generate a visceral, uncanny aural experience. — Libby Hansen

1900 Building (5:30 p.m.)

1900bldg.com

Wednesday, December 20


Handel’s Messiah

Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts

kauffmancenter.org

Thursday, December 21


Illenium, Said the Sky, Dabin

Arvest Bank Theatre at the Midland

themidlandkc.com

Thursday, December 28


Sonic Spectrum Tribute Series: New Order

RecordBar

therecordbar.com

Saturday, December 30

Black Label Society With Corrosion Of Conformity and Eyehategod 

Every act on this tour is important to heavy metal in a different way. Black Label Society, founded in 1998, is the project of longtime Ozzy Osbourne guitarist Zakk Wylde. Despite hailing from New Jersey, Wylde injects a distinctly gruff, Southern attitude into the band’s groove-inflected songwriting. Both opening acts are pioneers of their respective subgenres: Corrosion of Conformity began as a hardcore punk band in 1982 before introducing elements of metal and becoming one of the first purveyors of crossover thrash. A handful of bands preceded Eyehategod in creating sludge metal, but few have contributed more sludge anthems. — A.R. 

Uptown Theater

uptowntheater.com


Homestead Greys, Ricky Dean Sinatra

The Bottleneck

bottlenecklive.com

Black Label Society, Corrosion Of Conformity, Eyehategod

Uptown Theater

uptowntheater.com

Sunday, December 31


Kid Rock

Sprint Center

sprintcenter.com

Split Lip Rayfield

Grassfed

The Bottleneck

thebottlenecklive.com

The Zeros

Ameristar Casino Kansas City

kansascity.ameristar.com

Casi Joy (The Voice)

Uptown Theater

uptowntheater.com

Categories: Music