Portland duo Talkdemonic 's fall-feeling full-length Beat Romantic features sampler-perked percussion, dusts of viola, and assorted earthy plucks of organ and banjo, its molting melodies clinging to the listener like a wool turtleneck. A bittersweet ardor is peppered throughout the songs' sepia tones, cinematic apparitions sounding translucent without being twee. Bask in the folktronic pirouettes as the group opens for Rob Dickinson (The Catherine Wheel) on Wednesday, Jan. 17, at Café du Nord at 9 p.m. Admission is $15; call 861-5016 or visit www.cafedunord.com for more info. Tony Ware
Sonic Boom (Englishman Pete Kember) could've retired a psych-rock legend after Spacemen 3's acrimonious 1991 dissolution. Instead, he embarked on a career that expanded upon the fruitful ideas he and S3 co-founder Jason Pierce explored in their first band. Over four albums and several EPs fronting Spectrum, Kember furthered his interest in astral-dust ballads, minimalist rock, and songs that toggle between celestial bliss and swarming menace. Along with Spectrum, Kember launched Experimental Audio Research to indulge in exactly what the name implies. E.A.R. delved deeper into abstract electronica and dystopian sci-fi-flick soundtracking, forging chattering circuit-bending and unsettling oscillations with loads of rare, arcane devices. Count on Sonic to exploit said gear to its most mind-scrambling potential on Friday, Jan. 19, at the Hemlock Tavern at 9:30 p.m. Admission is $10; call 923-0923 or visit www.hemlocktavern.com for more info. Dave Segal
R&B singer Angie Stone has battled congestive heart failure and the failure of record labels to support her properly and come out a winner except in the case of the recent season of VH1's Celebrity Fit Club, where she was a big loser (of weight, that is). A benefit of Stone's increased energy: a rare local appearance showing off those still full-bodied pipes that have led to frequent comparisons of a young Aretha Franklin. Oakland's Malika, who weathered two seasons of another reality show, Diddy's Making the Band, opens on Friday, Jan. 19, at Mezzanine at 9 p.m. Admission is $25; call 625-8880 or visit www.mezzaninesf.com for more info. Tamara Palmer