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Pop/Rock Listings for Jan. 27-Feb. 2

Prices might not simulate ticketing use charges. For full reviews of new concerts: nytimes.com/music.

ASAP Rocky (Wednesday) After his boisterous singular “Peso” strike Hot 97’s airwaves, this immature internal rapper sealed a reported multimillion-dollar understanding with Sony. His ardent multiple of Southern-style ego riffage and a deftly built rhymes of a golden age of hip-hop translated total to a mixtape “LiveLoveASAP,” suggesting he is value a price. With Danny Brown, G-Eazy and Flatbush Zombies. At 7:30 p.m., Irving Plaza, 17 Irving Place, during 15th Street, Manhattan, (800) 745-3000, irvingplaza.com; sole out. (Stacey Anderson)

Eve Beglarian’s Riverproject (Friday and Saturday) Though she chose to span a strong Mississippi by kayak, not raft, Ms. Beglarian’s aspiring new Americana strain cycle captures those quick currents as vividly as Mark Twain did. The works rush gracefully on her large folk croon and sundry folk orchestration as puzzling as their inspiration. At 8 p.m., Abrons Arts Center, 466 Grand Street, during Pitt Street, Lower East Side, (866) 811-4111, abronsartscenter.org; $25, or $15 for students and seniors. (Anderson)

Nick Carter (Thursday) The blondest of a Backstreet Boys attempted a bar reinvention final year with “I’m Taking Off” (Sony), his second solo manuscript and a pure bid for a synthesized cocktail trail of OneRepublic and, to a many obtuse extent, David Guetta and a rising dance tides. The irascible genre is a smartest accessible entrance for his high voice, nonetheless a cliché-riddled hooks forestall genuine ignition. At 8 p.m., Irving Plaza, 17 Irving Place, during 15th Street, Manhattan, (800) 745-3000, irvingplaza.com; $29.50. (Anderson)

Petula Clark (Friday, Saturday, Tuesday by Thursday) The singer, singer and all-around English rose is one of a best-selling musicians in British history, interjection to her breakthrough ballad “Downtown” and an indirect slew of Top 40 hits in a 1960s. Recently she has dabbled in sultry, French-language contemporary pop, nonetheless her residency during a august Feinstein’s should resurface all those wily musical inclinations that shot her to initial glory. Friday and Saturday during 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. and Tuesday by Thursday during 8 p.m., Feinstein’s during Loews Regency, (212) 339-4095, feinsteinsattheregency.com; $71.86 to $109.96. (Anderson)

Lenny Kravitz (Saturday) The rocker flashes comedic chops as both a lacquered game-show horde and a preening bandleader in a video for his singular “Stand” (off his ninth album, “Black and White America,” on Atlantic/Roadrunner). Cast in a film instrumentation of “The Hunger Games,” Mr. Kravitz is putting his smoldering glamour to good use on screen, nonetheless his pleasant riffs could advantage from a identical shot of theatrics. With Raphael Saadiq. At 8 p.m., Radio City Music Hall, (866) 858-0008, ticketmaster.com; $39.50 to $104.50. (Anderson)

★ Miranda Lambert (Saturday) Of all a pistol-packing ladies in nation music, Ms. Lambert has a excellent lyrics, a sturdiest guitar work and a many splendidly unapologetic charisma. Her Grammy-winning ballad “The House That Built Me” paved a approach for her many pop-rock spin yet, “Four a Record” (RCA Nashville) of final year, that still flashes her scathing wit; as she barks to a pitiable lover on “Baggage Claim, “When we strike a ground, check a mislaid and found/’Cause it ain’t my problem now.” With Chris Young and Jerrod Niemann. At 7:30 p.m., Izod Center, 50 Route 120, East Rutherford, N.J., (800) 745-3000, meadowlands.com; $25.75 to $49.75. (Anderson)

Ted Leo and a Pharmacists (Thursday) A maestro of mid-1990s hardcore (Chisel, Citizens Arrest), Mr. Leo is now a singularly constant force in punk rock. The perennially smiling frontman of a Pharmacists, he specializes in brisk, resourceful bursts of melody. He joins a comedian Julie Klausner, author of a now ironically named “I Don’t Care About Your Band” (Gotham), for a taping of her renouned podcast (howwasyourweek.libsyn.com) and a set that should offer as a beginner’s authority to his catalog. At 8 p.m., Bell House, 149 Seventh Street, Gowanus, Brooklyn, (718) 643-6510, thebellhouseny.com; sole out. (Anderson)

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