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Nearly every genre finds a home this weekend, often within blocks of one another.
Country music star Eric Church headlines the Grand Casino Arena on Friday, February 7, bringing his high-energy tour through Minnesota as part of a winter run that continues to draw strong regional audiences.
At Target Center, anticipation is already building for Brandi Carlile, who arrives later this month on February 21. Her stop is part of a broader 2026 touring calendar that will also bring Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars, and Ed Sheeran through Minneapolis in the coming months.
While not a concert, Target Center will also host the Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday afternoon, underscoring how closely sports, entertainment, and downtown foot traffic intersect in the city’s event calendar.

At Minnesota Orchestra, classical programming meets rock history on Friday night with a special “Music of Pink Floyd” performance at Orchestra Hall. These crossover concerts have become a reliable gateway for new audiences, blending the familiarity of iconic rock catalogs with the depth and scale of symphonic performance.
One of the weekend’s most distinctive offerings concludes Saturday night at The Cedar Cultural Center, where the annual Drone Not Drones festival completes its 28-hour continuous performance. Now in its eleventh year, the event has earned a reputation as one of the Twin Cities’ most ambitious experimental music gatherings, transforming endurance, sound, and collective presence into a shared artistic experience.
Beginning Sunday, February 9, the Listen Here Festival launches at The Hive Collaborative. The two-day event benefits the Listening House shelter and showcases Twin Cities improvisational musicians, reinforcing the region’s long-standing tradition of music as both creative expression and community support.

The Dakota anchors the weekend for jazz, blues, and roots music.
On Saturday, February 7, Mason Jennings performs two intimate sets, continuing a long-running relationship with local audiences built on storytelling and restraint.
On Sunday, February 8, blues guitarist Eric Gales delivers a rare evening of acoustic blues, highlighting his technical precision in a stripped-down format.
Later this month, The Dakota will also host Meshell Ndegeocello and esperanza spalding, further reinforcing the venue’s national profile.
At Aster House, the Ryan Picone Quartet performs Gypsy jazz inspired by Django Reinhardt on Sunday evening.
Crooners Supper Club offers a Simon and Garfunkel tribute titled “Feeling Groovy,” continuing its tradition of cabaret-style performances that blend nostalgia with musicianship.
Granada Theater hosts a jazz tribute honoring Frank Sinatra and Louis Armstrong, connecting vocal jazz traditions across generations.
At First Avenue, reggae-rock favorites The Elovaters bring their “Sunburn Tour” on Friday night, with Shwayze opening.
Across the lobby at 7th St Entry, metalcore acts Left to Suffer, The Last Ten Seconds of Life, and Larcenia Roe deliver a high-intensity lineup that underscores the Entry’s ongoing role as a proving ground for heavier genres.
Local indie favorites Bad Bad Hats are also slated to appear later this month, continuing the venue’s long tradition of elevating regional talent.
MetroNOME Brewery continues its free monthly concert series on February 10, featuring guitarist PK Mayo. The series spotlights genre-bending instrumentalists and reinforces how neighborhood spaces have become essential stages in the Twin Cities music ecosystem.
What emerges this weekend is not merely a list of concerts, but a living portrait of a regional music culture operating at every scale. National touring acts fill arenas. Orchestras reinterpret rock history. Experimental musicians test the boundaries of sound and time. Jazz rooms, breweries, and small theaters sustain nightly performances that rarely dominate headlines, yet quietly define the cultural rhythm of the Twin Cities.
For full listings and ticket information, readers can consult the Mpls.St.Paul Magazine Music Calendar or major ticketing platforms serving the Minneapolis market.