Cypress Hill plays the Fillmore this week.

/ The Fillmore

A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie stops by the Fillmore this week. The Fillmore

TUESDAY, MARCH 5

SoundCloud rapper-turned-Billboard topping artist A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie brings his trap-heavy hip-hop to The Fillmore. Show 8 p.m. $35-$49. All ages, accessible venue.

They’re back, and this time they’ve got Mike Campbell of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and Crowded House vocalist/guitarist Neil Finn. It’s Fleetwood Mac, and we can only assume they’ll play at least most of the hits, from “Dreams” to “Rhiannon” to “Go Your Own Way” to “Everywhere” to “The Chain” to “Landslide” to … dare we go on. See them at Capital One Arena. Show 8 p.m. $69-$199+. All ages, accessible venue.

High Waisted plays Rock and Roll Hotel this week. Joakim Gleisner

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6

Brooklyn foursome and SXSW alum High Waisted brings some solid surf rock to Rock and Roll Hotel. Show 8 p.m. $12. All ages, accessible venue.

If you can’t get enough of Adam Duritz, you might like Arlington garage rock group Milo in the Doldrums, whose lead singer, Rob Mays, definitely has the Duritz touch. Catch them at Jammin Java. Show 7:30 p.m. FREE. All ages, accessible venue.

THURSDAY, MARCH 7

“How about I take your patriarchy, your misogyny/And I put it in the backyard/And set fire to it?” Alice Phoebe Lou tenderly sings on “Skin Crawl.” (Just try to tear your pupils away from this what’s-going-to-happen-next video.) Catch the South African-raised, Berlin-based singer-songwriter at Jammin Java. Show 7:30 p.m. $12-$25. All ages, accessible venue.

Atlanta rapper Bali Baby (who christened her poppy 2018 album Baylor Swift) comes to DC9. Show 8 p.m. $12-$15. All ages, inaccessible venue.

Cypress Hill plays the Fillmore this week. The Fillmore

FRIDAY, MARCH 8

Let legendary hip-hop outfit Cypress Hill remind you that sanity’s overrated at The Fillmore, where they’ll be joined by Hollywood Undead, Xzibit and Demrick. Show 7:30 p.m. $35-$52. All ages, accessible venue.

Funk/R&B outfit Black Folks Don’t Swim? and all-female supergroup The OSYX join the lineup at the first-ever MilkGirl International Women’s Day Concert at MilkBoy ArtHouse. Show 8 p.m. $10-$14. All ages, accessible venue.

Socially conscious hip-hop group Arrested Development, whose 1992 album yielded multiple Billboard hits, plays City Winery. Shows 7 p.m./10:30 p.m. $35-$45. All ages, accessible venue.

SATURDAY, MARCH 9

Is that a best-loved funk band from the late ’70s we hear? Why no, it’s The Motet, a groove-heavy group out of Denver formed in the Y2K era, and it’s about to bring its retro-chic self to the 9:30 Club. Doors 8 p.m. $20. All ages, accessible venue.

Philadelphia folk-pop artist Shannen Moser joins Brooklyn’s Bellows and local psychedelic outfit Makeup Girl at Comet Ping Pong. Show 10 p.m. $12. All ages, accessible venue.

Aurora stops by the Lincoln Theatre this week. Morgan Hill-Murphy

SUNDAY, MARCH 10

She looks like Sia, sounds like the lead vocalist of MisterWives, and would give original-recipe Kesha a run for her money. Catch AURORA at the Lincoln Theatre. Doors 6:30 p.m. $25. All ages, accessible venue.

Jazmine Sullivan, an R&B vocalist with nearly a dozen Grammy nominations to her name (check out her video for “Insecure,” filmed on what appears to be the set for, you guessed it, Insecure), joins Mumu Fresh and other musicians at Rock Like a Girl, presented by Black Girls Rock and The Kennedy Center. Show 8 p.m. $59-$119. All ages, accessible venue.

At the end of “Whiskey Sour,” Swedish bedroom pop artist Molly Nilsson sings, “But suddenly I have a deja vu about a deja vu about a deja vu.” And the sentiment of the song—a blend of boredom, loneliness and perhaps just general inertia—is certainly one we’ve all felt again and again and again. Catch her at Union Stage. Show 7:30 p.m. $15. All ages, accessible venue.

MONDAY, MARCH 11

Grammy-nominated reggae artist J Boog comes to the 9:30 Club. Doors 7 p.m. $25. All ages, accessible venue.