SATURDAY
Daughtry
Chris Daughtry’s mainstream rock has proven to be one of the more durable products of the “American Idol” star-maker machine. More proof that winning isn’t everything, since Daughtry came in fourth in season five.
7:30 p.m. June 5. $29.50-$39.50. Gwinnett Arena, 6400 Sugarloaf Parkway, Duluth. 770-813-7500.
SATURDAY
Mono
The Japanese instrumentalists create slowly shifting soundscapes that sometimes erupt in a pulverizing rumble of percussion, bass and six-string squall. Even in the quietest moments, there’s always a sense that something terrifying lies right around the corner. With the Twilight Sad.
8:30 p.m. June 5. $14 advance. The Masquerade, 695 North Ave. N.E., Atlanta. 404-577-8178.
SUNDAY
Chayanne
The Puerto Rican pop singer’s career began in the waning years of the ’70s with a stint in a boy band called Los Chicos. More than 30 years later, he’s still a regular presence on the Latin pop charts. He also had a brief moment of Hollywood stardom as the lead in the movie “Dance With Me.”
8 p.m. June 6. $60.50-$100.50. Gwinnett Arena, 6400 Sugarloaf Parkway, Duluth. 770-813-7500.
SUNDAY
Jethro Tull, Ian Hunter
It wasn’t Jethro Tull’s fault that the folks who were voting on the Grammys back in 1989 thought Tull was the optimal choice to win the brand new “best hard rock/metal performance” category. Tull was most definitely not metal, and though some of the band’s songs rock pretty hard, Tull isn’t hard rock, either. The band should have won a Grammy for 1971’s powerful “Aqualung,” but the Academy never gave out Grammys for best album that blends rock, folk and flutes. Former Mott the Hoople frontman Hunter has made a whole lot of great music in his time, but the one tune that most folks seem to remember is “Cleveland Rocks,” which was used as the theme song on “The Drew Carey Show” for a time.
7:30 p.m. June 6. $38-$50. Chastain Park Amphitheater, 4469 Stella Drive N.W., Atlanta. 404-233-2227.
Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull.
MONDAY
Styx, Foreigner, Kansas
WEDNESDAY
Blitzen Trapper
This Portland, Ore., band’s rock is folksy, fuzzy and adventurous, occupying a place where Pavement and the Band overlap. Blitzen Trapper plays Atlanta the day after the release of their fifth album, “Destroyer of the Void,” the follow-up to 2008’s beloved “Furr,” which appeared on many year-end best-of lists.
8:30 p.m. June 9. $17.50; $15 advance. Variety Playhouse, 1099 Euclid Ave., Atlanta. 404-524-7354.
THURSDAY
Broken Bells
Shins frontman James Mercer joined forces with Danger Mouse (aka former University of Georgia student Brian Burton, also half of Gnarls Barkley) to create one of the year’s best albums. The duo’s self-titled debut is a rich and unusual blend of Mercer’s memorable way with melodies and Danger Mouse’s studio wizardry.
9 p.m. June 10. $26. Center Stage, 1374 W. Peachtree St., Atlanta. 404-885-1365.
Blitzen Trapper