{"id":195977,"date":"2017-06-01T22:36:09","date_gmt":"2017-06-02T02:36:09","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/summer-concert-guide-31-cant-miss-shows-from-kendrick-lamar-to-u2-washington-post\/"},"modified":"2017-06-01T22:36:09","modified_gmt":"2017-06-02T02:36:09","slug":"summer-concert-guide-31-cant-miss-shows-from-kendrick-lamar-to-u2-washington-post","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/zeitgeist-movement\/summer-concert-guide-31-cant-miss-shows-from-kendrick-lamar-to-u2-washington-post\/","title":{"rendered":"Summer Concert Guide: 31 can&#8217;t-miss shows, from Kendrick Lamar to U2 &#8211; Washington Post"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    By Going Out Guide staff By    Going Out Guide    staff June 1 at 1:00    PM  <\/p>\n<p>    In the age of Spotify streams and surprise albums, it seems    that the only reassuring constant in music is the summer    concert season  three reliably glorious months of sprawling    crowds and splashy pyrotechnics, all beckoning us back to    outdoor pavilions and football stadiums for singalongs on a    massive scale.  <\/p>\n<p>    Proof: U2 returns as one of this summers most coveted tickets,    filling FedEx Field to capacity to mark the 30th anniversary of    its landmark album, The Joshua Tree. Hall & Oates,    unironically beloved by a new generation of fans, is here, too,    this time pairing with fellow 1980s hitmakers Tears for Fears    at Verizon Center. Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie,    better known as one-half of Fleetwood Mac, will belt out the    favorites at Wolf Trap, while Jiffy Lube Live will lure crowds    with country-music heavyweights Chris Stapleton and Lady    Antebellum.  <\/p>\n<p>    Not every big show, of course, takes place under the stars.    Mark your calendars for Kendrick Lamar, who gave Coachella fans    a captivating glimpse of the performance-art staging of his    tour, soon arriving at Verizon Center; and the D.C. Jazz    Festival, which spreads across the city this month, including    the air-conditioned halls of the Kennedy Center.  <\/p>\n<p>    Which performer will provide the soundtrack to your summer?    Read on for our guide to the seasons most anticipated    concerts.  <\/p>\n<p>    Jump to: Rock\/Pop |    Hip hop\/R&B | Country\/Americana | Perennial    favorites | Buzzy artists | Jazz\/blues  <\/p>\n<p>    U2    On its current international stadium jaunt, U2 is looking back    30 years to its landmark 1987 album, The Joshua Tree. Its no    surprise at this point that shows on the tour, launched in May,    feature a full reading of the record, which includes the    chart-topping anthems With or Without You and I Still    Havent Found What Im Looking For. But Bono and company have    been keeping it interesting with additional hits, intriguing    visuals and special guests, such as Eddie Vedder in Seattle.    The band has also been offering a glimpse of whats on the    horizon by including the new song The Little Things That Give    You Away in recent set lists. Jedd Ferris    See them: June 20 at     FedEx Field. Sold out. Tickets available on the secondary    market.  <\/p>\n<p>    Gorillaz    Damon Albarn, the leader of the Britpop band Blur, started    Gorillaz as a fun side project. This cartoon band reimagined    the Archies as angst-haunted adults, with Albarns partner,    Jamie Hewlett, creating the spooky anime. Humanz, the first    new album from Gorillaz in seven years, was released in April    with multiple guest stars ranging from Vince Staples to Mavis    Staples, all performing atop Albarns minimalist synth figures    and looped beats. Some, but not all, of the guests showed up at    the first few shows to support the record, and it was a    different cast each time. The center of attention, though, was    always Albarn, whose ringmaster role gave the shows more    cohesion than the album, which resembles a typical mix tape,    widely varying in styles and quality.  Geoffrey    Himes    See them: July 17 at     Merriweather Post Pavilion. $49-$199.  <\/p>\n<p>    Feist    No one could have predicted that, after toiling in the    indie-rock world for more than a decade, Leslie Feist would    find global success thanks to an iPod commercial. Thats    exactly what happened in 2007, when the addictive 1234    propelled Feist to new heights, but success wasnt without its    pitfalls  namely, emotional exhaustion that prompted her to    abandon music for two years. When she returned, she ran away    from the poppy, if accidental, commercialism and slowed her    world down with the dour, muted Metals. On Pleasure, her    first album in six years, the spirit of quiet introspection of    Metals is intact, but rather than strictly subtle, Feist    occasionally grabs a live wire of ragged rock energy, strumming    and singing past any remaining expectations.  Chris    Kelly    See her: June 7-8 at Lincoln    Theatre. $45. June 7 show is sold out.  <\/p>\n<p>    Fleet Foxes    Initially compared to Simon and Garfunkel for its tuneful    harmonies, this Seattle-based modern folk group has developed    an ethereal yet lush sound over the past decade that is    completely its own. Fleet Foxes growing influence has    reverberated throughout the ever-expanding genre, despite a    six-year gap between albums and the 2012 departure of drummer    Josh Tillman, who has remade himself as Father John Misty. The    groups new album, Crack-Up, scheduled to be released this    month, is arguably its strongest to date. Expect a full    unveiling when the band takes the stage at Merriweather    alongside the restlessly inventive Animal Collective, which has    recently been veering toward pop.  Christopher    Kompanek    See them: July 29 at     Merriweather Post Pavilion. $41-$56.  <\/p>\n<p>    Belle and Sebastian, Spoon, Andrew Bird    This triple-headlining bill is the stuff of music-geek dreams.    From Belle and Sebastians well-made melancholic songs to    Spoons impossibly tight soulful grooves and Andrew Birds    genre-defying brilliance, this mini-fest promises to be an epic    day of indie rock. Expect Belle and Sebastian to play a couple    of songs off their rumored upcoming album. Bird is as    unpredictable live as he is consistently good; a recent    Carnegie Hall show had him sharing the stage with Schoolhouse    Rock composer Bob Dorough, mandolinist Chris Thile and avant    classical pianist Gabriel Kahane. A jam with Britt Daniel and    company of Spoon would be a fitting climax for this show.     C.Ko.    See them: July 30 at     Merriweather Post Pavilion.$45-$55.  <\/p>\n<p>    Kendrick Lamar    On his previous two albums, Kendrick Lamar explored concepts    political and personal, general and specific, recounting a    day-in-the-life on the streets of Compton on Good kid, m.A.A.d    city and paying tribute to the history of black music and the    Black Lives Matter movement on the expansive To Pimp a    Butterfly. From its title on down, his latest effort, DAMN.,    is blunt and belligerent. Abandoning the embellishments of his    last album, Lamar returned with a hit parade of songs with    all-caps titles that announce themselves like Hollywood signs    in the collective consciousness. His palpable anger is focused    with a laser sight, and hes as self-assured as ever. As he    boasts on hit single HUMBLE., Im the realest n***a after    all. Chris Kelly    See him: July 21 at     Verizon Center. Sold out. Tickets available on the    secondary market.  <\/p>\n<p>    [Is    Kendrick Lamar the greatest of all time? (Don't ask.    Listen.)]  <\/p>\n<p>    John Legend    John Legend begins his latest album, Darkness and Light, by    singing, Some folk do what theyre told, but, baby, this time    I wont. Building on his track record as a progressive-soul    singer-keyboardist in the lineage of Stevie Wonder and Donny    Hathaway, Legend pushes the limits of his established persona    by working with rock producer Blake Mills (Dawes, Alabama    Shakes), recording with Who bassist Pino Palladino and jazz    keyboardist Larry Goldings, and co-writing songs with Mills,    Bonnie Prince Billy, Zwans Matt Sweeney and One Direction    producer John Ryan. These experiments dont dramatically alter    Legends sound so much as they open it up to more    impressionistic lyrics and music. Geoffrey    Himes    See him: June 20 at     Merriweather Post Pavilion. $59-$499.  <\/p>\n<p>    Chance the Rapper    With last years Coloring Book, Chance the Rapper made the    leap from promising upstart to voice of his generation. The    Chicago talent took the gospel flirtations of The Life of    Pablo, by his mentor Kanye West, and turned them into an album    of full-on gospel-rap paeans. In February, Chance won the    Grammy for best new artist, but in the same way that rapper    doesnt fully capture the extent of his musical gifts, artist    doesnt cover his pursuits. The 24-year-old has quickly become    an able activist  meeting with the governor of Illinois,    donating $1 million to Chicago public schools  so catch him    onstage while you still can. C.Ke.    See him: June 4 at     Jiffy Lube Live, $59.50-$119.50. June 6 at     Royal Farms Arena, $106.50-$116.50.  <\/p>\n<p>    Summer Spirit Festival    For the 12th consecutive year, the Summer Spirit Festival    returns to Merriweather Post Pavilion with a two-day adventure    soundtracked by the best of R&B, neo-soul, hip-hop and    everything in between. As ever, the festival is heavy on    nostalgia, with the legendary Kenny Babyface Edmonds, 90s    girl groups SWV and En Vogue, and influential rap trio De La    Soul anchoring the bill. But the festival isnt just a jaunt    down memory lane: It also features Bronx hybrid Tish Hyman and    neo-neo-soul band the Internet, which makes the kind of    old-meets-new music that will soundtrack the Summer Spirit    Festivals of the future. C.Ke.    See them: August 5-6 at     Merriweather Post Pavilion. $54-$1,170.  <\/p>\n<p>    J. Cole    After teasing his retirement last summer, J. Cole returned in    December with a documentary and a pair of songs, False    Prophets and Everybody Dies, that immediately captured the    rap zeitgeist. Largely read as diss tracks aimed at Kanye West    and such newcomers as Lil Yachty and Lil Uzi Vert,    respectively, the songs collectively served as a marker for    where Cole sees his place in the rap game: as a    wise-beyond-his-years protector of the genre. Its a pose he    assumed on his latest album, 4 Your Eyez Only, an    introspective and mature offering that burnished his    credentials as a rap classicist with plenty of stories to tell    before his (eventual) retirement.  C.Ke.    See him: Aug. 8 at     Verizon Center. $49.50-$125.50.  <\/p>\n<p>    Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit    Following his Grammy-winning 2015 effort, Something More Than    Free, country-rock tunesmith Jason Isbell decided it was time    to crank up his guitar amp. On his new album, The Nashville    Sound, which comes out June 16, Isbell rocks harder than he    has since his days as a member of Drive-By Truckers. Standout    Cumberland Gap is a fuzzy scorcher that still allows the    songwriters usual vivid lyrics, full of blue-collar Southern    imagery, to surface. The new material will be well served    onstage in the hands of Isbells seasoned band, the 400 Unit.    Hell be supported this summer by the Mountain Goats, the    long-standing, folk-punk cult heroes from North Carolina.     Jedd Ferris    See them: June 30 at     Merriweather Post Pavilion. $40-$55.  <\/p>\n<p>    Lady Antebellum    Near the end of Lady Antebellums 2015 Wheels Up Tour, the    country trio announced that it would be taking a 1 1\/2-year    hiatus. During that time off, Charles Kelley released a    hot-country solo album, The Driver, and then Hillary Scott    released a Christian-pop album, Love Remains. Each album rose    to No. 2 on the country charts, although neither yielded a    top-25 country single. Country radio clearly preferred the    three-part harmonies of Kelley, Scott and Dave Haywood, and    though the groups reunion album, Heart Break, wont be    released till next week, the albums first single, You Look    Good, has already hit the country top-10. Kelsea Ballerini and    Brett Young are also on the bill at Jiffy Lube Live.    G.H.    See them: June 24 at     Jiffy Lube Live. $33-$66.25.  <\/p>\n<p>    Lucinda Williams, Mary Chapin Carpenter    When Lucinda Williams played Annapoliss Rams Head On Stage in    May, the singer-songwriter played songs from all phases of her    career: from Changed the Locks, off her 1988 self-titled    breakthrough album, to The Ghosts of Highway 20, the title    track from last years late-career-triumph album. When she    returns to Wolf Trap in August, she will headline the show with    Mary Chapin Carpenter, who turned Williamss Passionate    Kisses into a top-five country hit in 1993. Carpenter, who got    her start in Washingtons coffeehouses, had an even bigger    country hit in 1991 with Down at the Twist and Shout, a song    she wrote about the legendary nightclub in Bethesda.    Geoffrey Himes    See them: Aug. 12 at     Wolf Trap. $28-$60.  <\/p>\n<p>    Chris Stapleton    Chris Stapleton proved people were still willing to pay for an    honest tune when he sold more than 2 million copies of his 2015    debut solo album, Traveller. Last month, the gritty    troubadour with a revivalist spirit unveiled the highly    anticipated follow-up, From A Room: Volume 1, which debuted    at the top of the country charts. Delivering honest, dusty    ruminations with a hearty, soulful voice, Stapleton  once an    in-demand Music Row songwriter  is now a modern outlaw    headlining the countrys big stages. This summer hes fronting    the All-American Roadshow, a package tour with a rotating cast    of supporting Americana acts (Anderson East and Brent Cobb at    this tour stop). J.F.    See him: July 22 at     Jiffy Lube Live. $30.75$70.75.  <\/p>\n<p>    Greensky Bluegrass    After a successful three-night stand at the 9:30 Club in the    winter, jam-friendly string band Greensky Bluegrass is    returning to the area to headline a new boutique amphitheater,    Chrysalis, in Columbia. Nestled in the woods near the    much-bigger Merriweather Post Pavilion, the venue features a    bright green sculpturelike stage and an open lawn with standing    room for 7,000 people. Greensky, which has built a loyal    following across the country for its dynamic live shows, will    be supported by fellow string expansionists Leftover Salmon, a    band that blends bluegrass with Cajun rhythms and full-throttle    rock grooves. J.F.    See them: July 22 at     Chrysalis-Merriweather Park. $40.  <\/p>\n<p>    Paul Simon    When singer-songwriter Paul Simon played in Queens, his    childhood home, last summer, he hinted that it might be his    final tour. While hes back at it this summer, the 75-year-old    legend is donating all proceeds from this 17-show stint to the    Half-Earth Project, scientist E.O. Wilsons biodiversity    preservation initiative. From the intimate early Simon and    Garfunkel songs to the syncopated levity of Graceland, Simon    has a talent for capturing a persistent human longing. A thread    of elusive searching flows through his songs, from Homeward    Bound to 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover. Sarah McLachlan opens    this show with her own brand of deeply emotional    tunes. Christopher Kompanek    See them: June 9 at     Merriweather Post Pavilion. $55-$175.  <\/p>\n<p>    Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie    Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie arent the most famous    members of Fleetwood Mac, but the songs they wrote for the band    are certainly memorable. Buckingham penned the earworms Go    Your Own Way and Second Hand News, while McVie wrote Dont    Stop and Songbird, a gorgeous ballad that features her lead    vocals. The two recently teamed up outside of Fleetwood Mac to    write and record a new album, Lindsey Buckingham\/Christine    McVie, due out early this summer. On this tour, the duo will    perform songs from those new recordings as well as their old    hits. Catherine P. Lewis    See them: June 26 at     Wolf Trap. $45-$95.  <\/p>\n<p>    Hall & Oates    Hall & Oates werent about albums. They were about radio    singles, but their hits were some of the most exquisitely    crafted and emotionally satisfying songs of their era. They    were incredibly prolific; while Bruce Springsteen was releasing    eight albums in the 70s and 80s, Hall & Oates released    15. Anyone who listened to the radio in those two decades will    experience a small flush of pleasure at the mere mention of    such titles as Sara Smile, Rich Girl, Kiss on My List, I    Cant Go for That (No Can Do) and Did It in a Minute. The    duo scored 28 top-40 hits between 1976 and 1988, including six    No. 1s. Theyre joined on this tour by Tears for    Fears. Geoffrey Himes    See them: June 26 at     Verizon Center. $35-$129.50.  <\/p>\n<p>    Merriweather Post Pavilions 50th Anniversary    Concert    Its unusual for a live performance to become a hit single;    its so difficult to control the sonic qualities of a concert    recording compared to a studio session. One of the most famous    exceptions to this rule was Jackson Brownes 1977 live album,    Running on Empty, which yielded not just one but two top-20    Billboard singles: the previously unreleased title track and    the remake of Maurice Williams & the Zodiacs 1960 doo-wop    classic Stay. The album was assembled from recordings at    different stops on the 1977 tour, but both singles came from    the Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia. How better to    celebrate the 50th anniversary of the venerable outdoor venue    than with a return visit by Browne, joined by another    Merriweather perennial, Willie Nelson, and two more recent    regulars: Father John Misty and Grace Potter?    G.H.    See it: July 15 at     Merriweather Post Pavilion. $55-$125.  <\/p>\n<p>    Queen with Adam Lambert    Sometimes, coming in second place isnt so bad. Adam Lambert,    the American Idol runner-up (to Kris Allen in 2009), makes    the perfect frontman for classic rock icons Queen. During time    off from his solo career, Lambert has teamed with active Queen    members Brian May and Roger Taylor for several tours; his    soaring range, theatrical delivery and flamboyant personality    help him fill Freddie Mercurys seemingly inimitable shoes.    Even more perfect? Lambert used Queens Bohemian Rhapsody as    his initial American Idol audition song and performed alongside    May and Taylor on the show. C.P.L.    See them: July 31 at     Verizon Center. $49.50-$175.  <\/p>\n<p>    Gloria Trevi, Alejandra Guzmn    For decades, Mexican rock stars Gloria Trevi and Alejandra    Guzmn have been cast as incorrigible bad girls rivaling for    the spotlight. Audiences will finally have a chance to see who    can out-growl the other when the equally raspy, tough-as-nails    singers unite at EagleBank Arena. Trevi, the rebellious wild    child who rose to fame with her 90s anthem about unruly hair,    has spent the latter half of her career moving past an infamous    arrest in 2000 on charges of kidnapping, sexual abuse and    corruption of minors. Guzmn has also had her slew of    controversies, including drug addiction, airplane brawls and    botched plastic surgery. Now, at age 49, the former scandal    magnets have put their pasts behind them and focused on music,    joining forces this year to release the duet Cuando un hombre    te enamora.  Julyssa Lopez    See them: Aug. 13 at     EagleBank Arena. $49-$153.  <\/p>\n<p>    Kehlani    On her debut album, SweetSexySavage, Kehlani aimed to capture    the three elements of its title, and the Oakland    singer-songwriter succeeded  with flying colors.    SweetSexySavage updates the crazy, sexy, cool R&B of TLC,    Aaliyah and Brandy for millennial listeners and finds the    22-year-old equally adept at rap-fueled slow dances,    guitar-strumming ballads and bubbly pop jams about learning    from the hiccups and hookups of youthful relationships. Being a    pop star in 2017 is tough  some of those relationships have    made her a target of Internet bullies  but, as she sings on    the album, Live for the challenge, only make[s] me    stronger. Chris Kelly    See her: July 13 at     the Fillmore. Sold out. Tickets available on the secondary    market.  <\/p>\n<p>    St. Paul & the Broken Bones  <\/p>\n<p>    St. Paul & the Broken Bones has increased in popularity    pretty quickly for a group that formed in 2012; just four years    ago, the Alabama soul band played the tiny Iota Club in    Arlington. But headlining a show at Wolf Trap is a    well-deserved step up for the young band: Its two albums boast    catchy, well-orchestrated songs, which should translate    beautifully to the big, open-air stage. Frontman Paul Janeways    voice floats up to match the peppy horns behind him on Call    Me, and he howls sorrowfully on That Glow. His vocal    calisthenics add an engaging passion to these soulful    songs. Catherine P. Lewis    See them: June 16 at     Wolf Trap. $30-$55.  <\/p>\n<p>    Michael Kiwanuka    While trying to kick-start material to follow up his breakout    folk-soul debut album, Home Again, Michael Kiwanuka found an    ideal collaborator in Brian Danger Mouse Burton, the    in-demand producer for the likes of Beck and the Black Keys.    The partnership yielded Kiwanukas sophomore effort, last    years Love and Hate, which finds the London-based singer and    guitarists earthy croon enhanced by sweeping strings, haunting    backing vocals and vintage organ swells. The albums lead    track, the icy, retro ballad Cold Little Heart, became a    buzzy sensation this year when it accompanied the bizarre intro    to HBOs Big Little Lies. While mostly busy on the    international festival circuit this summer, Kiwanuka will    squeeze in a few club dates, including a stop at a sold-out    9:30 Club. Jedd Ferris    See him: June 4 at     9:30 Club. Sold out. Tickets available on the secondary    market.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mitski    At times on her album Puberty 2, Mitski sings lyrics  Tell    your baby that Im your baby or Youre the one, youre all I    ever wanted, for example  that would be at home at any time    in pop music history. But those lovey-dovey pleadings belie the    darkness and violence of her work: I will go jogging    routinely\/calmly and rhythmically run, she sings on    Fireworks, And when I find that a knife is sticking out of    my side, Ill pull it out without questioning why. Puberty 2    is full of knives in your side and unanswered questions as the    26-year-old bounds from Pixiesque loud-quiet-loud dynamics to    narcotic ballads to trebly punk meltdowns, all the while    exposing the sordid underbelly of 21st-century    romance. C.Ke.    See her: July 8 at 9:30    Club. $20.  <\/p>\n<p>    Little Dragon    Since Swedens Little Dragon debuted 11 years ago, Yukimi    Naganos soulful soprano has become a chic accessory for other    peoples music. The halfJapanese singer has collaborated with    Big Boi, Gorillaz, Flume and many more. Yet the band tends to    go it alone on its own albums, including the recent Season    High. It seems the four musicians dont need any help to craft    songs that meld 80s-style synth-pop and slow-jam funk with    contemporary touches. The vibe can be loungey, but the group    channels Prince on such upbeat tunes as the new Sweet and    Strobe Light, which party like its almost 1989.    Mark Jenkins    See them: Aug. 8 at 9:30    Club. $35.  <\/p>\n<p>    Herbie Hancock    Herbie Hancock is the rare jazz artist to gain considerable    recognition outside the jazz world. In 2008, his River: The    Joni Letters became only the second jazz album to win the    Grammy Award for album of the year, besting fellow nominees    Kanye West, Foo Fighters, Amy Winehouse and Vince Gill. In    2013, Hancock joined Billy Joel, Shirley MacLaine, Martina    Arroyo and Carlos Santana as recipients of the Kennedy Center    Honors. In August, Hancock returns to the Kennedy Center with a    quintet that features West African guitar virtuoso Lionel    Loueke, Kendrick Lamar collaborator Terrace Martin, Joni    Mitchell drummer Vinnie Colaiuta and Saturday Night Live    bassist James Genus.  Geoffrey Himes    See him: Aug. 8 at the    Kennedy Center. $39-$115.  <\/p>\n<p>    Capital Jazz Fest    Talk about blurred lines: Singer Robin Thicke will help open    this genre-blending jazz and soul music fete. Of course, the    25th-anniversary edition is crowded with longtime festival    favorites, including contemporary jazz titans George Benson and    Lee Ritenour, whove influenced generations of guitar players.    When the focus isnt shifting from, say, the Whispers to    Stokley, women will command the stage, during performances by    Corinne Bailey Rae, Maysa, Sheila E. and Candy Dulfer. Topping    the Sunday finale: a special tribute to the late jazz and pop    great Al Jarreau. Mike Joyce    See it: June 2-4 at Merriweather Post    Pavilion. $64.50-$104.50. Saturday is sold out.  <\/p>\n<p>    DC Jazz Festival    This sprawling jazz summit offers an array of crosstown    concerts  in venues large and small, indoors and out. Among    the artists on tap are two veteran collaborators, guitarist Pat    Metheny and drummer Roy Haynes, although theyll perform at    different sites. Ever engaging at 91, Haynes brings his    Fountain of Youth Band to the Howard Theatre on June 10, while    Metheny, fronting an intriguing new quartet, appears at the    Kennedy Center on June 12. Theyre festival highlights, no    doubt, along with concerts featuring Gregory Porter, Jane    Bunnett and numerous others. M.Jo.    See it: June 9-18 at various venues in the District.    Ticket prices vary.  <\/p>\n<p>    Diana Krall    A multiple Grammy winner, Diana Krall has pitched her tent at    the top of the jazz charts for two decades. Producer Tommy    LiPuma, who died in March, at 80, helped get her there. So this    show is likely to produce some bittersweet moments when the    Canadian vocalist and pianist revisits the vintage pop and jazz    tunes on her new LiPuma-produced album, Turn Up the Quiet  a    now haunting reminder of their special chemistry. Count on    guitarist Anthony Wilson, bassist Robert Hurst, drummer Karriem    Riggins and fiddler Stuart Duncan to provide inspired    support. M.Jo.    See her: June 24 at     Wolf Trap. $43.75-$83.75.  <\/p>\n<p>    La La Land in Concert    La La Land harks back to the achingly idealistic movie    musicals of the 50s and 60s, when lifes troubles were    carried away by a sweeping dance mob, and there was always a    catchy song to articulate how you feel. This screening,    accompanied by the National Symphony Orchestra and conductor    Emil de Cou, seems like the model way to experience Damien    Chazelles love letter to impossible dreams and the wonderfully    rich culture of jazz. Justin Hurwitzs Oscar-winning score    (with a previously unheard overture), filled with frenzied    flourishes of improvisation, should play particularly well in    an open-air, live setting. Christopher    Kompanek    See it: Aug. 4 at     Wolf Trap. $40-$60.  <\/p>\n<p>    READ MORE:  <\/p>\n<p>        The 35 movies everyone will be talking about this summer  <\/p>\n<p>        Our favorite burgers in Washington, from diner-style to    splurge-worthy  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Link: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.washingtonpost.com\/news\/going-out-guide\/wp\/2017\/06\/01\/summer-concert-guide-31-cant-miss-shows-from-kendrick-lamar-to-u2\/\" title=\"Summer Concert Guide: 31 can't-miss shows, from Kendrick Lamar to U2 - Washington Post\">Summer Concert Guide: 31 can't-miss shows, from Kendrick Lamar to U2 - Washington Post<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> By Going Out Guide staff By Going Out Guide staff June 1 at 1:00 PM In the age of Spotify streams and surprise albums, it seems that the only reassuring constant in music is the summer concert season three reliably glorious months of sprawling crowds and splashy pyrotechnics, all beckoning us back to outdoor pavilions and football stadiums for singalongs on a massive scale. Proof: U2 returns as one of this summers most coveted tickets, filling FedEx Field to capacity to mark the 30th anniversary of its landmark album, The Joshua Tree <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/zeitgeist-movement\/summer-concert-guide-31-cant-miss-shows-from-kendrick-lamar-to-u2-washington-post\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187735],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-195977","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-zeitgeist-movement"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/195977"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=195977"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/195977\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=195977"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=195977"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=195977"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}