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    Live Music Now

    These are the 5 best shows to see in Houston this week

    Johnston Farrow
    Johnston Farrow
    Feb 15, 2018 | 2:34 pm

    From steamy salsa, to cool electronica, it's another hot week of music in Houston. Here are the best shows coming up over the next seven days.

    Best show that will bring a taste of Miami to H-Town
    Riding the wave of mainstream Latin acts in the late-'90s that included Ricky Martin and Enrique Iglesias, the former Mr. Jennifer Lopez — also known as Marc Anthony — remains a huge draw on the Latin music circuit. Anthony boasts the most record sales by a tropical salsa artist, and this show will draw a lot of fans, despite having been rescheduled from an early October 2017 date postponed due to “scheduling and logistics issues.”

    The multiple Grammy and Latin-Grammy award winner will bring the heat to Toyota Center this weekend. He hasn’t released anything but a children’s music album the last few years, so expect a mixture of his hits from over the years.

    Marc Anthony stokes the heat at Toyota Center, located at 1510 Polk St., on Friday, February 16. Tickets start at $55. Tickets from his previously scheduled show will be accepted. Show starts at 8 pm.

    Best chance at seeing indie-rock hero in an intimate space
    Not since Cat Power has a female-fronted indie act offered such heartache — along with head-nodding tunes — like Waxahatchee. It’s no surprise that Katie Crutchfield started this project following the break-up of a relationship and band — it’s pure heart-on-sleeve, gut punch guitar music that sounds like the most confessional works of Liz Phair, and melodic sensibility of The Breeders.

    Four albums in, she has yet to produce a dud, the latest being the fabulous 2017 set Out in the Storm, which chronicles a love gone sour. Following a great booking in Pedro the Lion, Rockefellers has struck programming gold with Waxahatchee, with the benefit of the more intimate space.

    Waxahatchee brings the intimacy to Rockefellers, located at 3620 Washington Ave., on Friday, February 16. Night Shop will open. Tickets start at a reasonable $16 plus fees. Doors open at 7 pm.

    Best electro-pop from north of the border
    Valerie Anne Poxleitner, also known as Lights, has made a name for herself in her native land of Canada as a forward-thinking electro-pop star. She earned the Juno, the Canadian equivalent of a Grammy, for Best New Artist back in 2009, and later Best Pop Album in 2015 for her disc Little Machines. She’s appeared on tracks with emo-rock bands, rappers and some of the biggest EDM producers around.

    Expect an epic light show and a lot of screaming fans dancing along to her high energy show. She’ll roll into town with a new single “We Were Here,” off her acclaimed 2017 album Skin & Earth, from which she wrote and drew her very own comic book series. Not too shabby.

    Lights shines at White Oak Music Hall, located at 2915 N Main St., on Saturday, February 17. Chase Atlantic and DCF will open. Tickets start at $21 plus fees. Doors open at 7 pm.

    Best show for beat-lovers
    Toronto’s Keys N Krates keeps some exclusive company. The trio released music on DJ Steve Aoki’s Dim Mak label, as well as Diplo’s Mad Decent label, meaning their cred as electronic music artists is not to be questioned. Consisting of a drummer, keyboard and turntablist, Keys N Krates has been making waves on the festival circuit with their mix of trap, hip-hop and electronica and they are already booked for summer appearances at major musical gatherings.

    Houston EDM fans will get a chance to see them in the cozier confines of Stereo Live as part of their Cura World Tour, promoting their first full-length album of the same name.

    Keys N Krates plays at Stereo Live, located at 6400 Richmond Ave., on Saturday, February 17. Promnite and Jubilee open. Tickets are $12.50 in advance. Show starts at 9 pm.

    Best show of the week
    At the Day For Night Festival back in December, Annie Clark, also known as St. Vincent showcased herself as an artist at the height of her singular creative talent. Her tour for her latest album, Masseduction, one of the best of 2017, relies on a sparse stage set-up – a circular stage for her to stand on, a bank of video screens choreographed to her setlist, and one killer, fashion-forward performer shredding on guitar as good as any professional today. Clark returns to Houston after that triumphant December set, where she expressed her love for Texas audiences (she grew up in the Dallas area) and thrillingly ripped through her biggest alternative hits. Those who missed out will get a second chance to catch a must-see show.

    St. Vincent will bring down the House of Blues, located at 1204 Caroline St., on Tuesday, February 20. Tuck & Patti open. Tickets start at $40. Doors open at 7 pm.

    Toronto electronic trio Keys N Krates plays Stereo Live on Saturday, February 17.

    Keys N Krates
      
    Courtesy Facebook
    Toronto electronic trio Keys N Krates plays Stereo Live on Saturday, February 17.
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    Movie Review

    New horror movie Sinners sings the blues with twin turn from Michael B. Jordan

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 18, 2025 | 12:30 pm
    Michael B. Jordan and Miles Caton in Sinners
    Photo courtesy of Warner Bros.
    Michael B. Jordan and Miles Caton in Sinners.

    Writer/director Ryan Coogler has become so well-known for his blockbuster films — Creed, Black Panther, and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever — that it’s easy to forget that he made his debut with the small-but-powerful 2013 film, Fruitvale Station. After more than a decade, he’s finally returning to original material with his latest film, Sinners.

    Each of Coogler’s films has either starred or featured Michael B. Jordan, and this one gives moviegoers a double dose, as Jordan plays twins who go by the nicknames of Smoke and Stack. Set in 1932, the two hustlers have recently returned from mysterious (and possibly criminal) work in Chicago to their hometown of Clarksdale, Mississippi to open a juke joint.

    They call upon a number of friends and family to help them with the venture, including cousin and guitar player Sammie Moore (Miles Caton), Smoke’s old girlfriend Annie (Wunmi Mosaku), piano player Delta Slim (Delroy Lindo), bouncer Cornbread (Omar Miller), and Chinese couple Bo and Grace Chow (Yao and Li Jun Li). Trouble is never far from the brothers, though, whether it’s Stack’s old girlfriend Mary (Hailee Steinfeld), the Ku Klux Klan leader who sold them the property for the juke joint, or something even more sinister.

    Coogler began his feature film career by confronting the issue of unjustified shootings of Black people by police. How Black people are perceived by society has been a part of everything he’s done since. By placing this film firmly in the middle of the Jim Crow era, he infuses the story with all manner of subtext, including the injustice of sharecropping and prevalent segregation in the South.

    Music, specifically Blues, plays a big part in the film as well. It’s championed through the emerging talent of Sammie and the veteran presence of Delta Slim, but it’s also a driving force for other parts of the plot. Sammie is decried by his pastor father for playing “the devil’s music,” while strange newcomer Remmick (Jack O’Connell) seems to appreciate it a little too much. A fantastically surreal scene at the juke joint turns into an entertaining and educational lesson on the history of Black music.

    It’s Remmick’s obsession that’s at the center of the final hour or so of the film, one in which all hell breaks loose. The manner of that hell is probably better enjoyed if it’s not spoiled here, but suffice it to say that Remmick has an evil to him that threatens to destroy Smoke and Stack’s venture before it even gets started. The horror aspect of the film is fine, but it winds up being the least interesting part of the story.

    Jordan can occasionally go over-the-top with his performances, and with him playing twins the threat of doing so was doubled. But he remains relatively restrained for most of the film, giving each twin their own unique spin. Caton, a rising R&B singer, makes his acting debut in the film and winds up stealing every scene he’s in. The rest of the cast complements each other well, with Mosaku and Steinfeld being standouts.

    Coogler has proven himself to be a savvy filmmaker in each of his previous four films, and with Sinners he combines the personal with crowd-pleasing elements to great effect. It features great music, an insightful story, and even some gory action for an experience you’re not likely to find anywhere else.

    ---

    Sinners opens in theaters on April 18.

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