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    April's Best Concerts

    Rolling Stones and Bad Bunny headline Houston's 8 best concerts in April

    Johnston Farrow
    Apr 3, 2024 | 2:30 pm

    After a thrilling, record-setting RodeoHouston season, we get back to our regularly scheduled programming of top-tier shows as the 2024 concert year heats up with marquee names gracing Bayou City stages.

    National and international touring artists are back on the road with gusto, ticket prices showing no signs of abating from their post-pandemic inflation highs, forcing music fans to either take out another mortgage or get very selective as to how they spend their entertainment dollars. Whether its legacy acts squeezing out a few more tours before they call it a day or performers working at their peak with multiple headline shows in each city, it’s a multitude of riches for those who enjoy live music.

    The following are the biggest and best concerts taking place in Houston this April.

    The Black Crowes, April 5, 713 Music Hall
    The brothers Robinson, Craig and Rich, aka The Black Crowes are celebrating 40 years as a band when they bring their Happiness Bastards tour to town. The tour moniker may be a sly nod to the issues the siblings faced over the years, reuniting in 2019 following a long hiatus fueled by bad blood between the two. But there is no denying the power of their blues-fueled American rock that produced a number of hits and made them stars in the ‘90s, such as “Remedy,” “Jealous Again,” and “She Talks to Angels,” selling over 30 million albums in the process. Amplified Heat opens.

    Lauren Daigle, April 11, Toyota Center
    Simply put, Lauren Daigle is one of the biggest Christian artists in the game right now, as evidenced by a headlining RodeoHouston in 2023. She burst onto the scene in 2015 with the crossover smash album, How Can It Be, which achieved platinum status, followed by two more hit records, the two-time platinum, No. 3 charting Look Up Child, and last year’s self-titled album. Her high-energy shows and positive message have earned her a devout following across the U.S.

    Jade Bird, April 11, Heights Theater
    A supremely talented British singer-songwriter, Jade Bird recently moved to Austin to pursue her career further after garnering critical and commercial acclaim across the pond with her self-titled debut in 2019, released at the tender age of 21. Her follow-up, Different Kinds of Light, only strengthened her songwriting prowess, calling on alt-rock, Britpop, indie and folk sounds with a fierce, heartfelt vocal delivery. She’ll be celebrating her latest EP, Burn the Hard Drive, out on April 10.

    Adam Ant and The English Beat, April 20, Bayou Music Center
    U.K. New Wave legend Adam Ant and ska-influenced The English Beat recall a time of eye-catching outfits, art school cool, synth-heavy melodies and inescapable hooks that ruled MTV and pop radio. Adam Ant broke huge around the world with “Goody Two Shoes” and “Stand and Deliver.” The English Beat, while not as high-profile as Adam Ant, had their fair share of hits as a beloved cult act behind songs such as “Mirror in the Bathroom” and “Save it for Later,” garnering radio-friendly popularity in their ‘80s heyday.

    Social Distortion and Bad Religion, April 22, Bayou Music Center
    Two of the best bands of their genre, SoCal punks Social Distortion and Bad Religion are a big reason that punk crossed over to the mainstream in the ‘90s, paving the way for countless acts such as Green Day, Offspring, Rancid, and Blink-182. Social D’s early ‘90s output, their 1990 self-titled album and 1992’s Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell, next to Bad Religion’s No Control (1989) and Against the Grain (1990), are high-water marks, injecting socially progressive songwriting smarts on top of three-chord guitar assaults. It was only time before alt-rock radio came calling, transforming music forever.

    Kane Brown, April 27, Toyota Center
    A five-time American Music Award winner and rising country star, Tennessee-raised Kane Brown is riding a wave right now, with three Top 5 albums under his belt and number No. 1 country singles, including “What Ifs,” “Thank God,” “Heaven,” and “I Can Feel It.” The two-time RodeoHouston headliner is a steady presence on the country touring circuit whose spotlight and pop chart appeal seemingly grows with each successive year. Tyler Hubbard and Parmalee open.

    Rolling Stones, April 28, NRG Stadium
    Down to two original members following the sad passing of steady drummer Charlie Watts in 2021, The Rolling Stones – rock icons Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and gang – continue their seemingly non-stop touring to sold out stadiums worldwide, this time touring their pretty-good 31st studio album, Hackney Diamonds. While they have nothing left to prove, the now-octogenarians remain a huge draw because they have countless hit songs to pull from and they still bring the heat in a live setting, showing up bands 50 years their junior with insane energy and live visuals. Every time might be the last time we see them perform, so make plans accordingly.

    Bad Bunny, April 30 and May 1, Toyota Center
    After two sold-out shows at Minute Maid Park in late-2022, Latin superstar Bad Bunny will get comparably intimate with his rabid fanbase at two headline shows at Toyota Center for his Most Wanted tour. The prolific, Puerto Rican King of Trap is touring behind his 2023 album, Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana, another offering of Latin soul, pop, R&B, trap, and reggaeton. It’s hard to state how much Bad Bunny has done for popularizing Latin music in the last decade, but it’s safe to say this is an opportunity to see a game-changing artist at his peak.

    Kane Brown
      
    Photo courtesy of Kane Brown
    Country star Kane Brown headlines Toyota Center on April 27.
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    Movie Review

    'I Know What You Did Last Summer' reboot lacks energy or thrills

    Alex Bentley
    Jul 17, 2025 | 2:00 pm
    Sarah Pidgeon, Madelyn Cline and Chase Sui Wonders in I Know What You Did Last Summer
    Photo by Brook Rushton
    Sarah Pidgeon, Madelyn Cline and Chase Sui Wonders in I Know What You Did Last Summer.

    When the original I Know What You Did Last Summer came out in 1997, it was riding the coattails of Scream, which came out in 1996. Like that film, it featured hot young actors of the time, albeit with a story that was much more standard than the inventive Scream. Still, it made enough of an impact for some studio executive to think it was worth reviving nearly 30 years later with its own legacy-quel.

    In the new I Know What You Did Last Summer, a group of five high school friends — Danica (Madelyn Cline), Ava (Chase Sui Wonders), Milo (Jonah Hauer-King), Teddy (Tyriq Withers), and Stevie (Sarah Pidgeon) — have reunited at the engagement party for Danica and Teddy on the 4th of July. While on an impromptu trip to watch fireworks on a twisty road in the nearby hills, Teddy goofs off in the middle of the road, causing a truck to swerve and drive off the cliff.

    A year later, having sworn to each other to not speak of the accident to anybody, they start getting stalked by a mysterious person in a fisherman’s slicker carrying a hook. With Teddy’s rich father, Grant (Billy Campbell), actively trying to cover up what his son did (as well as the fallout), it’s up to the group to figure out who is coming after them and how to stop that person.

    Written and directed by Jennifer Kaytin Robinson, and co-written by Sam Lansky, the film doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel; in fact, it barely builds something that can roll. It might just be the laziest and most incompetent attempt to capitalize on an existing piece of intellectual property. There is almost zero effort put into establishing a connection between the members of the friend group, making them feel like strangers for the entire film.

    It doesn’t help that the young male actors in the film — which grows to include Wyatt (Joshua Orpin), a new fiance for Danica — serve no purpose other than to be generically good-looking. The most impactful of the men in the film is the returning Freddie Prinze, Jr., who — along with Jennifer Love Hewitt — has his old character from the first two films shoehorned into the new story. The filmmakers undercut any good feelings from their return by giving them hardly anything to do and then having Hewitt deliver the line, “Nostalgia is overrated.”

    The film as a whole never has a sense of momentum. The inciting incident is so tame — they even attempt to save the driver before the truck goes off the cliff — that the guilt they feel and the anger of the person going after them doesn’t feel warranted. Once the attacks start, it is shocking at how low-energy the sequences are, providing no sense of suspense or thrills. The filmmakers resort to the lamest of horror movie tropes, turning the film into a paint-by-numbers affair.

    Cline (one of the stars of Netflix’s Outer Banks) and Wonders (The Studio on Apple TV+, Bodies Bodies Bodies) are the clear stars of the film, but their characters are made into inert scream queens, negating any acting talent they possess. Hauer-King, Withers, and Pidgeon don’t bring anything interesting to their characters, existing merely to have someone else for the killer to go after.

    Even the worst films can have some kind of redeeming value if you look hard enough, but the only thing I Know What You Did Last Summer has to offer is that it becomes so comically bad by the end that you can’t help but laugh at its ineptitude. Both fans of the original and fans of horror movies in general will feel cheated by the experience.

    ---

    I Know What You Did Last Summer opens in theaters on July 18.

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