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Swims came to perfor- mance via a fascinating hybrid of high school musical theater and stints in alt-rock and hard- core bands, elements of each now evident in his pop- and zeitgeist-dominating body of work. His debut album, I’ve Tried Everything But Ther- apy, is a sprawling affair, spread across two in- stallments and 23 tracks (or 32, if you count the “complete edition”). The second half arrived earlier this year, and serves as the catalyst for Swims’ debut headlining run across America. Swims is also a keen observer of talent: He tapped Dallas’ BigXThaPlug for an appearance on his single “All Gas No Brakes.” Cian Ducrot will open. PRESTON JONES Horsegirl 8 P.M. FRIDAY, AUG. 8, SONS OF HERMANN HALL, 3414 ELM ST. $28.70+ AT AXS.COM Post-punk trio Horsegirl — Nora Cheng, Penel- ope Lowenstein and Gigi Reece — got quite the co-sign for their recently released sophomore album, Phonetics On and On. Acclaimed Welsh singer-songwriter Cate Le Bon signed on as the record’s producer, marking the Chicago group as a force to be reckoned with, less than a de- cade into its existence. To hear them tell it, Hor- segirl will only be making more of an impression as 2025 rolls on: “We used to a little bit actively avoid our femininity in spaces because our he- roes were ‘90s indie rockers,” Reece told Teen Vogue in a recent interview. “Part of what fuels us is we want to take up space, we want to get on stage and do something you weren’t expect- ing.” With Godcaster. PJ Los Lonely Boys 10 P.M. FRIDAY, AUG. 8, BILLY BOB’S TEXAS, 2520 RODEO PLAZA, FORT WORTH. $20+ AT AXS.COM San Angelo siblings Henry, Jojo and Ringo Garza — better known to the world as “Texican rock ’n roll” trio Los Lonely Boys — have kept busy in the 22 years since their debut single, “Heaven,” ex- ploded onto the charts. Although the band briefly took a break in 2019, when Jojo announced he was departing, the hiatus was short-lived. Los Lonely Boys reconnected in 2022, and last year, dropped the appropriately titled studio album Resurrection, the band’s eighth such effort to date. The title stemmed from the sense of grati- tude the brothers felt upon reuniting: “The fact that Los Lonely Boys decided as a group, not just a band, but as brothers, that we were going to do this because we feel that as long we’ve got life in our bones ... we’re going to do our best to repre- sent what the creator has gifted us with,” Jojo told NPR in 2024. PJ Josh Weathers 8 P.M. SATURDAY, AUG. 9, LONGHORN BALLROOM, 216 CORINTH ST. $49+ AT PREKINDLE.COM Those who stay attuned to the ebbs and flows of the local music scene are probably mildly sur- prised to see Josh Weathers’ name again popping up with some regularity. The Burleson-based singer-songwriter, in another life in the early aughts, went viral with a jaw-slackeningly powerful cover of Dolly Parton’s “I Will Always Love You,” which, as of this writing, has amassed three million views on YouTube. Three years after that, he said he was stepping away from his febrile blend of rock-and-soul to focus on his family. But, you can’t keep a talent like Weathers out of the spotlight for long, and he’s back — albeit with a focus now on channeling ‘90s country (another long-time pas- sion of his). This gig will be his biggest in Dallas in recent memory, and despite the passage of time, Weathers hasn’t forgotten how to deliver one of the most kinetic live sets in North Texas. With Paul Thorn. PJ Collective Soul and +LIVE+ 6 P.M. WEDNESDAY, AUG. 13, THE PAVILION AT TOYOTA MUSIC FACTORY, 300 W. LAS COLINAS BLVD. $55+ AT TICKETMASTER.COM You could be forgiven for thinking the now At- lanta-based quintet Collective Soul had drifted into the sunset, its mid-1990s peak far behind it. And from a lodged-in-heavy-rotation perspec- tive, Collective Soul’s smash hits from the turn of the century are definitely more oldies fodder than Hot 100 material these days — sue us, but “Shine” still sorta slaps — yet the band, led by brothers Ed and Dean Roland, hasn’t pressed pause since its 1992 inception. We’ll leave it to far more discerning minds whether it’s a good thing or a troubling thing that a band 33 years into it is offering up double albums (as Collec- tive Soul did with 2024’s Here to Eternity). +LIVE+ is co-headlining, another veteran of Clinton-era ubiquity, and an act which, these days, doesn’t evoke nostalgia as much as pity. Our Lady Peace and Greylin James Rue will open up. PJ Claire Marie Vogel Teddy Swims will bring his big, soulful voice to Irving. | LET’S DO THIS | t Music