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for Tue., March 26
  • Texas Performing Arts All-New 2024/25 Season

    Texas Performing Arts presents its all-new 2024/25 Season showcasing pioneering performances across multiple genres. Highlights include new work by visionaries in their fields—Twyla Tharp, Branford Marsalis, Huang Yi, Andrew Schneider, Suzanne Bocanegra & Lili Taylor, and more. Save 20% when you buy three or more shows.
    2024/2025  
    Various Locations
  • Fredericksburg Craft Beer Festival

    Break out your lederhosen and get ready for a good time at the 3rd Annual Fredericksburg Craft Beer Festival! Excitement Saturday includes 32 Texas craft breweries, fabulous music, local chefs, corn hole, food concessionaires, Texas wine and more. Come see what’s on tap, you won’t be disappointed.
    Sat. June 8  
    Fredericksburg Marketplace
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  • Music

    Brad Mehldau

    Pianist Brad Mehldau is a contemporary jazz superstar, best known for his visionary reworkings of standards, pop, rock, classical, and original tunes with his hardworking trio. But he’s equally renowned for his solo piano works, which could encompass anything: progressive rock, jazz classics, Bach, and/or the Beatles. On that note, last year’s Your Mother Should Know: Brad Mehldau Plays the Beatles garnered wide acclaim, and his upcoming albums After Bach II (a sequel to 2018’s eponymous release) and Après Fauré, both straining classical pieces through a jazz filter, should provide the backbone of this likely stunning solo performance. – Michael Toland
    Tue., March 26, 8pm  
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      Kids Create: Louise Bourgeois-Inspired Wire Spider Sculptures

      French-American artist Louise Bourgeois once said her art “deals with problems that are pre-gender.” Indeed, a big spider made of bronze, steel, and marble is absent most gendered markers – except, of course, the sculpture’s title: Maman. But what else would Bourgeois call an ode to her own mother, who passed when the artist was only 21? In an interview with the Tate Modern, who commissioned the piece, Bourgeois listed many reasons spiders reminded her of her mom: “Like a spider, my mother was a weaver … Like spiders, my mother was very clever … spiders are helpful and protective, just like my mother.” Kiddos can this week replicate this ode to Bourgeois’ mother in this Women’s History Month workshop. After all, who wouldn’t want a little wire spider to help, protect, and weave? It’s what all good mothers should do. – James Scott
      Tue., March 26
    • Music

      Myra Melford's Fire & Water Quintet

      Guggenheim Fellowship and Doris Duke Artist Award recipient Myra Melford mesmerizes audiences by herself. Backed by the Fire & Water Quintet, which includes MacArthur Fellowship recipient Mary Halvorson on guitar, cellist Tomeka Reid, saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock, and drummer Lesley Mok (all bandleaders themselves), the pianist’s music becomes part of the fabric of reality. With tunes inspired by the paintings of Cy Twombly, Melford and her all-stars envision free jazz as a composer’s medium, bringing visual art to life in a controlled flurry of improvisation (cf. their second LP Hear the Light Singing). Melford’s first Texas appearance arrives via the redoubtable Epistrophy Arts. – Michael Toland
      Tue., March 26, 8pm  
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Science on Screen: The Birds (1963)

      “C’mon, James,” you say to me. “I like movies, but science? That’s for the birds!” Yes, I agree: Science is for The Birds, Alfred Hitchcock’s iconic 1963 thriller about avian aggression. Austin Film Society pairs this screening with an expert panel to talk bird behavior and evolution. That includes associate professor in UT-Austin’s integrative biology department Carlos A. Botero, Ph.D., and research associate Dr. Lucas Legendre from UT-Austin’s Earth and planetary sciences department. Fun fact: In her memoir, Tippi Hedren says she experienced real injuries during The Birds’ filming due to a glass pane shattering on her when a mechanical crow hit it. Unsafe film set practices? Now that really is for the birds. – James Scott
      Tue., March 26
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