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    Live Music Now

    These are the 5 best concerts to catch in Houston this week

    Johnston Farrow
    Johnston Farrow
    Aug 7, 2018 | 10:31 am

    It may be the heat, or the fact that kids are about to start back to school, but the local live music scene is slower in August — before the fall concert season picks up. That’s not to say there isn’t anything good to see in Houston this week. These are CultureMap’s best and biggest shows of the week.

    CultureMap show of the week: Lucinda Williams, Steve Earle, and Dwight Yoakum
    Fans of the grittier side of country, Americana, roots, and folk music will find a lot to love with a bill that sees three powerhouses bless the lawn at White Oak Music Hall. Lucinda Williams, Steve Earle, and Dwight Yoakum joined forces for the LSD Tour (see what they did there?) this summer, bringing three distinct voices together for a dream line-up. Grammy Award-winning Lucinda Williams is widely hailed as one of the best country-folk singer-songwriters in the game. Steve Earle is a roots rock rabble-rouser, known for his political activism as much as his songwriting chops. And last but not least, neo-traditional country crooner Dwight Yoakum makes country music of a bygone era before pop encroached into Nashville. This is a great opportunity to see three musicians who are critically adored within their respective genres, doing what they do best.

    The LSD Tour featuring Lucinda Williams, Steve Earle, and Dwight Yoakum stops at the White Oak Music Hall, located at 2915 N. Main St., on Tuesday, August 7. King Leg opens. Tickets start at $58.50 plus a $19.80 service charge. Gates open at 5 pm.

    Locals Gio Chamba light up the Continental
    While bigger names stay away from the heat that is southeast Texas in August, it’s a perfect time to check out local talent. Gio Chamba, along with bandmate Coffee Guzman, has been making noise on the local scene for a few years now with an intriguing melange of Texas and international sounds, prescribing to the genre Digital Cumbia, which first got its start in South America, a mix of traditional cumbia, electronic indebted dance, and hip-hop beats. Gio Chamba infuses this with a healthy dose of Santana guitars, adding the requisite Tex-Mex temperature to the proceedings. The duo’s latest is last year’s album, Tejas, and they just released single, “Cobra Dinero” in June.

    Houston’s own Gio Chamba performs at the Continental Club, located at 3700 S. Main St., on Thursday, August 9. San Francisco act Bang Data open. Show starts at 10 pm.

    Miranda Lambert and Little Big Town co-headline in The Woodlands
    Five-time RodeoHouston performer and Texas native Miranda Lambert (2008, 2011, 2012, 2015, 2016) teams up two-time RodeoHouston band Little Big Town (2016, 2018) for a huge country show in The Woodlands for those itching to bust out the cowboy boots and tight jeans. Lambert is still touring her 2016 album, The Weight of These Wings, while Little Big Town is still promoting 2017’s The Breaker, but recently released the country version of "Get Lucky" (but not as good), the disco-inflected "Summer Fever," in June. Both groups boast enough No. 1 songs and albums to fill a barn, which points to a well-attended event.

    Miranda Lambert and Little Big Town co-headline the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, located at 2005 Lake Robbins Dr. in The Woodlands, on Friday, August 10. The Steel Woods and Tenille Townes open. Tickets start at $25 for lawn seating, $64.75 for reserved seating, plus service charges. Gates open at 6 pm.

    Jeff Lynne's ELO
    Anyone who saw Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2 will be instantly familiar with Electric Light Orchestra’s “Mr. Blue Sky,” which kicked off the movie with a memorable action scene. Following the dissolution of the band, original member, guitarist/songwriter, Jeff Lynne, carried on under the moniker, Jeff Lynne’s ELO, and why shouldn’t he have, since ELO was massive in the 1970s — heavily influenced by The Beatles and prog-rock that won the band huge rock radio play for hits such as “Don’t Bring Me Down,” “Livin’ Thing,” and “Turn to Stone.” Lynne is also famous for his turn in the ’80s supergroup The Travelin’ Wilburys, alongside his heroes, George Harrison and Roy Orbison (in addition to Bob Dylan and Tom Petty). If Lynne’s career in ELO is any indication, the stage production will be off the charts and there just might be a UFO sighting, imagery the band became famous for in their heyday.

    Jeff Lynne’s ELO plays the Toyota Center, located at 1510 Polk St., on Friday, August 10. Alt-country heroes Dawes open. Tickets start at $49 plus service charges. Doors open at 7 pm.

    CultureMap recommends: ATX’s Walker Lukens
    Talented Austin singer-songwriter Walker Lukens is back in Houston this weekend with a headlining slot at the Continental Club. He made a couple of appearances last year at the start of his touring cycle for his great album Tell It to the Judge, a multi-genre mash-up that recalls Beck’s ability to take varying sounds and mix it into melodic magic, with a touch of Prince's showmanship. This featured appearance at one of the best intimate concert venues in the city will be well worth heading out for the late start.

    Walker Lukens plays the Continental Club, located at 3700 S. Main St., on Saturday, August 11. Tickets are $12 in advance, plus a $3 service fee. Show starts at 10 pm.

    Austin singer-songwriter Walker Lukens returns to Houston to play the Continental Club on Saturday, August 11.

    Walker Lukens
    Photo by Chris Corona
    Austin singer-songwriter Walker Lukens returns to Houston to play the Continental Club on Saturday, August 11.
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    Movie Review

    Football drama Him throws a Hail Mary of horror and spectacle

    Alex Bentley
    Sep 22, 2025 | 11:15 am
    Marlon Wayans and Tyriq Withers in Him
    Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures
    Marlon Wayans and Tyriq Withers in Him.

    One of the wildest opening scenes in a movie ever happened in the 1991 film The Last Boy Scout, in which a star running back shoots multiple opposing players in the midst of a touchdown run. That film co-starred Damon Wayans, and now over 30 years later his brother Marlon is starring in an even more insane football-themed movie, Him.

    The film centers on Cameron Cade (Tyriq Withers), a rising star quarterback looking to make it in professional football. His idol is Isaiah White (Marlon Wayans), who’s won a string of championships with San Antonio Saviors in the film’s fictional football league. To see if the team really wants Cade to be White’s heir apparent, they set up a week of pre-draft training for Cade at White’s sprawling desert house.

    What at first appears to be an intense-if-ethically-murky immersion into White’s way of staying physically and mentally fit starts to devolve into a psychological quagmire. Cade, who recently suffered a head injury, is desperate to impress White in order to prove he’s the next GOAT. The main thrust of the film is how far Cade will go in that pursuit, and if White’s tactics will succeed in corrupting Cade fully.

    Written and directed by Justin Tipping, and co-written by Zack Akers and Skip Bronkie, the film tries to say a lot of things but ultimately can’t make a case for any of them. Scenes involving big collisions and questionable behind-the-scenes tactics comment on the danger of the game of football and the win-at-all-costs mentality. But the film also brings in a supernatural element that muddles anything it might have had to say about the game itself.

    There’s actually way less football in the film than you might think. Any actual games are viewed either through a screen or clip montages that don’t give a feel for how talented either Cade or White is. The practice sessions at White’s house aren’t great showcases, either, with the mind games White uses on Cade taking priority. There’s plenty of macho one-upsmanship, but neither main character has the charisma to sell it properly.

    The trailer for the film hints at the bloody craziness the third act contains, but Tipping and his team do a poor job at setting it up. While Cade is slightly unnerved at the things he witnesses, he seems to mostly accept everything asked of him. But the character’s mindset changes in a matter of seconds later in the film, almost as if the filmmakers had left 15-20 minutes of footage on the cutting room floor that would have explained the sudden shift in tone.

    Wayans, best known for his comedy work with his family, does a decent job in portraying a player who will do whatever it takes to stay on top (the fact that the 54-year-old can credibly play someone much younger helps). Withers has the physique to look like a top-level quarterback, but - as seen in the recent I Know What You Did Last Summer remake - his acting could stand to be refined. It’s actually comedians Tim Heidecker and Jim Jeffries who come off the best in supporting parts.

    A football-themed movie like Him coming out just as the football season is ramping up would seem to be perfect timing, but the story doesn’t succeed as either a commentary on the sport or a type of horror film. Football may be a brutal game to play, but sitting through this film might hurt your brain even more.

    ---

    Him is now playing in theaters.

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