 |  | SUMMER GUIDE |
| | Mötley Crüe | Music Roundup
With so much going on in music this summer, it’s hard to complain. by Doug Wallen

What’s summer for if not selling out? Right on cue, then, comes a slew of package
tours and festivals aimed right at your wallets. Indie rock is sure to be overshadowed
when rock dinosaurs rise from hibernation, but there are certainly credible acts coming
our way this sunny season amid the high-profile cash grabs.
If you’re craving a mellow blowout, the perennial Philadelphia Folk
Festival (Fri., Aug. 15-Sun., Aug. 17, call for times and prices. Old Pool Farm.)
this year pairs legends Steve Earle and Judy Collins with
younger talent from Espers to Kimya Dawson. And “Hippiefest”
piles on such ’60s nostalgia acts as Eric Burdon and the
Animals, Melanie, the Turtles and
Badfinger (Tues., July 29, 8pm. $39-$79. Mann Center for the Performing
Arts.) while WXPN’s industry-only NON-COMMvention spawns an open-to-the-public show
featuring Jakob Dylan, Alejandro Escovedo, Kathleen
Edwards and What Made Milwaukee Famous (Sat., May 31, 6pm. $10.
Electric Factory.).
Over in Camden, an ever-humble Mötley Crüe headline Crüe Fest with
Buckcherry and Papa Roach (Sat., July 12, 4pm. $26.50-$99.
Susquehanna Bank Center.), and the Projekt Revolution Tour unites
Linkin Park and Chris Cornell (Sat., July 19, 1pm.
$22.75-$76.75. Susquehanna Bank Center.). Bringing up the rear is that punk-y chestnut
Warped Tour (Fri., July 25, 11am. $30-$35. Susquehanna Bank Center.)
and the Slipknot-headlined Rockstar Energy Drink Mayhem Festival (Fri.,
Aug. 15, 1pm. $27-$58.75. Susquehanna Bank Center.).
The almighty arena-rap ticket Rock the Bells is still materializing with
a planned Philly stop Aug. 3, but competing for the crown of biggest summer concert is
the tag-team of Keith Urban and Kenny Chesney with LeAnn
Rimes, Sammy Hagar and Gary Allan in the wings
(Sat., July 19, 3:30pm. $79.50-$99.50. Lincoln Financial Field.). And don’t even get us
started on the massive Fourth of July blowout, complete with Boyz II Men
and John Legend.
Not all festivals are so soul- sucking and overwhelming. The inaugural Roots
Picnic (Sat., June 7, 2pm. $49.50. Festival Pier at Penn’s Landing.) boasts a
bustling dream lineup—Diplo, Gnarls Barkley, Sharon
Jones
and the Dap-Kings, Santogold and Deerhoof—and
WXPN’s XPoNential Music Festival (Thurs., July 10-Sun., July 13, call for
times and prices. Wiggins Waterfront Park.) mingles Beth Orton, Amos
Lee, Shelby Lynne and Chuck Prophet with the
Blind Boys of Alabama, O’Death and a bona fide punk
band—locals the Loved Ones—among many others.
The elephant in the room here is the Popped! Festival, which morphed from
warehouses and noise bands in its first year to a swollen weekend of popular national
talent and solid locals. It kicks off with White Ts and White Belts and
Steven Bloodbath spinning before old-school rapper Slick
Rick, backed by a live band (Fri., June 20, 8pm. $15. Trocadero.). The next day
is an outside bash in University City (Sat., June 21, noon, $32.50. Drexel University.)
with huge names—Vampire Weekend, Mates of State, Crystal
Castles, Gogol Bordello, Dan Deacon, Mr.
Lif—and Sunday packs in more still, with Daniel Johnston and our own
Capitol Years headlining (Sun., June 22, 3pm. $30. World Cafe Live.).
Massive stars can be found in equally high numbers outside the festival circuit. The
Susquehanna Bank Center will thrive this summer with Dave Matthews Band
(Tues., June 3-Wed., June 4, 6pm. $40-$75.), Iron Maiden (Tues., June 17,
6pm. $29.50-$75.), Pearl Jam and Ted Leo (Thurs., June
19-Sat., June 20, 7:30pm. $48-$68.), Chicago and the Doobie
Brothers (Thurs., June 26, 6:30pm. $27.50-$86.), Steely Dan (Sat.,
June 28, 7pm. $35-$135.), Jack Johnson and indie- approved guests
Rogue Wave and Mojave 3’s Neil Halstead (Thurs., Aug. 7,
5pm. $35-$49.50.), Maroon 5 and Counting Crows (Sat., Aug. 9,
6pm. $25-$96.), Radiohead and Grizzly Bear (Tues., Aug. 12,
6:30pm. $39.75-$59.75.), Jonas Brothers (Wed., Aug. 27, 5:30pm.
$25-$80.75.), and a killer triple-bill of Journey, Heart and
Cheap Trick (Tues., Aug. 26, 6pm. $20.75-$125.).
In other power pairings, expect Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers
with Steve Winwood (Thurs., June 5-Fri., June 6, 8pm. $75-$95. Wachovia
Center.), Robert Plant with Alison Krauss (Sat., July 12, 8pm.
$55-$80. Mann Center for the Performing Arts.), Snoop Dogg with 311
(Tues., Aug. 15, 7pm. $64-$245. Penn’s Landing.), the soon-to-retire (again)
Police with Elvis Costello (Tues., July 29, 7:30pm.
$53-$278. Wachovia Center.), Peter Frampton with Jethro Tull
(Fri., Aug. 8, 8pm. $43-$79. Mann Center for the Performing Arts.), and for all you
punk/ska fans, Dropkick Murphys with Goldfinger and Less
Than Jake (Sun., June 29, noon. $37.50. Penn’s Landing.).
Most impressive about the season’s concerts is the sheer diversity. Dig this
cross-section: Squeeze share their wiseacre power-pop (Fri., Aug. 22, 8pm.
$39.50-$49.50. Keswick Theatre.) a week before Nine Inch Nails consolidate
their dark legions of fans (Fri., Aug. 29, 7:30pm. $44.50-$54. Wachovia Center.).
Jimmy Buffett steers his gravy train into town (Sat., June 14, 7:30pm.
$39-$129. Citizens Bank Park.) the same night Rush will knock your dad’s
socks off (Sat., June 14, 7:30pm. $45-$123. Wachovia Center.).
Though indie shows—even Wolf Parade (Wed., July 30, 8pm. $22. Electric
Factory.), Rilo Kiley (Thurs., June 5, 8:30pm. $25. Electric Factory.), and
a reunited Breeders (Sun., June 8, 8pm. $21. TLA.)—can’t possibly compete
with most of the above events, there are a few examples of indie rock’s increasing
foothold. R.E.M. bring Modest Mouse and the National
to the Mann (Wed., June 18, 7pm. $35-$39.50. Mann Center for the Performing
Arts.) less than a week after Death Cab for Cutie check in there (Thurs.,
June 12, 8pm. $35. Mann Center for the Performing Arts.). Later that month
Devo commandeer the waterfront as part of Paul Green’s School of Rock
(Sat., June 28, noon. $37.50-$52.50. Festival Pier at Penn’s Landing.) with the
Hold Steady, which isn’t bad for band that once played the Khyber to a
handful of Pabst-nursing passers-by.
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