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LIFELINE: 10 COOL THINGS TO DO IN TWO WEEKS

WEDNESDAY NIGHT LIVE: VISUAL VANGUARD CELEBRATION

To coincide with the Visual Vanguard exhibition, which examines 25 contemporary Black Carolina artists who create in a variety of vibrant and versatile media, this edition of Wednesday Night Live celebrates the power, passion and allure of the spoken word. Featured artist de’Angelo Dia, acclaimed as a poet, theologian, doctoral candidate at Union Presbyterian Seminary and self-described comic book scholar, joins fellow poets and spokenword masters Angelo Geter and Cedric Tillman to share reflections on the year 2021, along with works that embody a connection to the exhibit. More: Free; Jan. 12, 7 p.m.; Gantt Center, 551 S. Tryon St.; ganttcenter.org

IT’S SNAKES

COURTESY OF HORIZON RECORDS

CHARLIE PARKER: REVERBERATIONS

Arguably the greatest saxophonist of all time, Charlie Parker changed the course of jazz music. His genius reverberated well beyond the musical circles of his time to inspire masterful players like John Coltrane, writers like Ralph Ellison and visual artists as disparate as Jean-Michel Basquiat and Romare Bearden. In partnership with the UNC Charlotte Department of Music’s Charlie Parker 101 project, this event includes live music, a spokenword performance by Hannah Hasan, and a panel conversation featuring internationally acclaimed saxophonist Charles McPherson. More: Free; Jan. 13, 6:30 p.m.; Gantt Center, 551 S. Tryon St.; ganttcenter.org

HOPE NICHOLLS’ BIRTHDAY BASH

Forming and fronting the bands Fetchin’ Bones, Sugarsmack, Snagglepuss and, currently, It’s Snakes, Hope Nicholls is a musical treasure. Fetchin’ Bones has been filed with the likes of Pylon, R.E.M., and the dBs, yet were unlike anything else on the American music scene. Grunge before Nirvana, riot grrrl before Bikini Kill, Nicholls’ band kept faith with the primal blues rock of Janis Joplin. It’s Snakes follows in that tradition, bringing punk attitude and Nicholls’ earthy vocals to the party, joined in this celebration by Space Daddy and the Galactic Go-Gos, Kadey Ballard, and Them Pants. More: Free; Jan. 14, 8 p.m.; Tommy’s Pub, 3124 Eastway Dr.; facebook.com/tommyspub

BARONESS

Early in its career, Savannah DIY metal band Baroness was filed away in the doom metal category, but maybe — like presumed metalheads Opeth and Ghost — they’ve just been closet prog rockers all along. The band, which seemed to rise from the dead in 2012 when a horrific bus crash prompted two members to leave, continues to rely on a whiplash-inducing mix of styles tied together with thundering percussion, but the music has gotten more complex, melodic and prog. Their 2019 release Gold & Grey summons comparisons to such disparate influences as King Crimson, The Cure and Killing Joke. More: $60; Jan. 15, 7 p.m.; The Milestone, 400 Tuckaseegee Rd.; themilestone.club

MLK DAY 2022: COMMUNITY DREAMS

The Gantt celebrates MLK Day with a full day of programming that includes an interactive dance performance, a written dreams workshop hosted by Boris “Bluz” Rogers, panel discussions featuring icons of Charlotte history such as Dorothy CountScoggins and contemporary activists like Kass Ottley, theatrical readings of Dr. King’s epic speeches, film screenings, live music and other interactive programs. More: Free; Jan. 17, 9 p.m.; Gantt Center, 551 S. Tryon St.; ganttcenter.org

‘SON OF THE WHITE MARE’

A psychedelic masterpiece of world animation, Marcell Jankovics’ Son of the White Mare sits amid the august company of Yellow Submarine and René Laloux’s Fantastic Planet. A 1981 Hungarian production, Son of the White Mare pits three brothers, spawned from a horse goddess, against three evil dragons in a quest to rescue three princesses while also reclaiming their ancestral kingdom. The quest is set among a maelstrom of motion and vivid color. Jankovics’ labor of love has been a holy grail for film buffs, often talked about but seldom seen — until now. More: $10 donation; Jan. 19, 8 p.m.; VisArt Video, 3104 Eastway Dr.; visartvideo.org/events

‘LA BESTIA’

In a cloud of smoke, the train flies through the air above the stage as aerialists and acrobats depicting the train’s passengers and moving parts defy gravity. For Charlotte circus arts ensemble Nouveau Sud the train is La Bestia — or “The Beast,” which can offer an avenue toward a new life or kill you outright. La Bestia is a contemporary circus show about the immigrant journey from Latin America to the US. The harrowing yet eerily beautiful journey treks through near-psychedelic scenes that capture the heart of the landscape and its culture. More: $10 and up; Jan. 20-22, 7:30 p.m., 8 p.m.; Booth Playhouse, 130 N. Tryon St.; blumenthalarts.org

‘BRASILIA: LIFE AFTER DESIGN’

What would it be like to live in someone else’s 70-year-old-dream of the future? A concrete Utopia designed by architect Oscar Niemeyer and urbanist Lucio Costa, the city of Brasilia sprang from the desert sands in the 1950s, along with the rebirth of Brazil’s democracy. Director Bart Simpson traces the history of this visionary — and perhaps naive — planned metropolis, but the bulk of the 2017 documentary traces the lives of people living in Brasilia today. The city now serves as a backdrop to people’s feelings of isolation and their changing values. More: Free; Jan. 20, 7:30 p.m.; hosted on Zoom, screened on Vimeo; bechtler.org

CHARLOTTE SYMPHONY: HARRY POTTER

CSO’s homage to film composer John Williams is a strategy to teach the little ones about the different sections of the orchestra through “The Boy Who Lived.” The idea is to rope the youngsters into classical music appreciation though Hufflepuffs, Hagrid and Quiddich. A contemporary refinement of Benjamin Brittan’s 1945 classic The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra, the original “classical for kids” composition, designed to teach children the tone colors and capacities of the various sections of the orchestra. William’s chock-full-of-leitmotifs score should do the trick. More: $41-$69; Jan. 22, 11 a.m.; Knight Theater, 430 S. Tryon St.; blumenthalarts.org

JAMES MCMURTRY

“Talking to the wallpaper/Wandering the halls/I burned a lot of bridges/And I dropped a lot of balls/It’s wonder I can go back to any place I’ve been,” James McMurtry sings in his hazy singlemalt baritone on “If It Don’t Bleed” off his latest album The Horses and The Hounds. The lyrics are peak McMurtry: plain-spoken poetry of a chaotic life that defies understanding, but may be ready for acceptance. Like his father, Texas novelist Larry McMurtry, this singer-songwriter excels at telling humorous stories of hardscrabble lives, but this isn’t ruminative music. It’s ballsy rock ‘n’ roll. More: $20-$25; Jan. 22, 8 p.m.; Visulite Theatre, 1615 Elizabeth Ave.; visulite.com

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