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LEHIGH VALLEY WEATHER

8 DAYS A WEEK: Your look at Valley Arts

Fuel, Another Day Dawns, Crooked Ways, 8 p.m. May 21, Penn’s Peak, Jim Thorpe. Doors open at 7 p.m. Fuel founder, guitarist and songwriter Carl Bell and longtime Fuel drummer Kevin Miller put the band back together in 2020, bringing in John Corsale, lead vocals, guitar; Mark Klotz, guitar, vocals, and Tommy Nat, bass, vocals. The band released “Anomaly” in 2021, the group’s first album in 18 years. The band, based in Harrisburg, released its debut album, “Sunburn,” in 1998, with the single, “Shimmer,” peaking at No. 2 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks. Tickets: Penn’s Peak box office, 325 Maury Road, Jim Thorpe; pennspeak.com; ticketmaster.com; 800-745-3000; 866-605-7325

The Pietasters, 7:30 p.m. May 20, Levitt Pavilion, SteelStacks, 645 E. First St., Bethlehem. The 2022 series of 49 free concerts, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and some Sundays, starts May 20 and continues through Sept. 11. The Pietasters, a ska band founded in Washington, D.C., released its first album in 1993 and, among its six albums, “All Day,” released in 2007, is its most recent album. The lineup: Stephen Jackson, vocals; Joe Ross, guitar; Dan Schneider, keyboards; Alan Makranczy, saxophone; Jeremy Roberts, trombone; Carlos Linares, trumpet; Dave Vermillion, bass, and Rob Steward, drums. The concert is free and open to the public.

Yam Haus, 7:30 p.m. May 21, Levitt Pavilion, SteelStacks. The Minneapolis alternative pop band released its first and only album, “Stargazer,” in 2018. Yam Haus was announced as a contestant on the 2022 “American Song Contest” with the song, “Ready to Go,” The lineup: Lars Pruitt, lead vocals; Seth Blum, guitar; Zach Beinlich, bass, and Jake Felstow, drums. The concert is free and open to the public.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO