Freebie of the week: The summer continues to serve up fun, free community concerts. There are so many, they should hand out a booklet that you can get stamped like a passport. On Thursday, head north and east to Antiochโ€™s Community Center Amphitheater to catch the latest offering in the cityโ€™s Rhythms by the River series, which continues through August. Performing from 6 to 8 p.m. this week is Texas-born, Bay Area-based singer-songwriter Nzuri Soul. Having relocated here about a decade ago, Soul has found the time to perform in venues from the Fox Theater in Oakland to the Empress Theatre in Vallejo, not to mention joints in Las Vegas, Los Angeles and New Orleans. She has a particularly fruitful relationship with Yoshiโ€™s iconic nightclub in Oakland, where she has performed several shows, including a special Womenโ€™s History Month concert in which she paid tribute to such legendary singers as Aretha Franklin, Josephine Baker, Gladys Knight, Beyonce and more. With talent and versatility enough to cover legends as well as perform her own originals, Soul and her band should serve up a fine show on Thursday evening. There will be plenty of food and drink on hand. More information is at www.antiochca.gov/summer-concert-series.ย 


Molly Shannon appears in the 2025 San Francisco Fringe Festival in a one-woman theatrical clown show called “Oh Johnny.” (Molly Shannon via Bay City News)

The Fringe marches on: Although Franciscoโ€™s downtown and theater scene have seen tough times in recent years, consider this: The annual Fringe Festival is still on. Exit Theatre, which saw one of its principal Tenderloin venues shuttered in 2022, presents the 34th iteration of the festival, which always wonderfully has matched its environs. Itโ€™s a little rough and a little ramshackle, but a magnet for the kinds of artists and audiences who thrill in the energy, passion and unpredictability of live performance. This yearโ€™s festival runs Friday through Aug. 24, with performances at the Taylor Street Theatre, 277 Taylor St. The collection of solo and small-group performances in the Fringe Festival ranges from the hilarious to the harrowing. Among the shows are โ€œSaturday Night Liveโ€ alum Molly Shannonโ€™s solo show โ€œOh Johnny,โ€ about a down-on-her-luck mystic and medium who ventures into the spirit realm looking for answers. Described as a โ€œclown play,โ€ reflecting on Shannonโ€™s background as a clown performer, itโ€™s onstage at 8:30 p.m. Aug. 8, 5 p.m. Aug. 16 and 12:30 p.m. Aug. 17. Also on tap is popular Kurt Bodden performing his third solo show โ€œIโ€™m Mad as Hell and I’m Going to Take It Just a Little Bit Longer,โ€ in which the self-help satirist โ€œcheerfully draws from an inner wellspring of unresolved rage,โ€ at 9:30 p.m. Aug. 9 and 5 p.m. Aug. 24. Yes, it can be a crap shoot, but for fans of live theater, thereโ€™s nothing more โ€œlive theater-ish” than the Fringe Festival. Most shows run $15-$20; go to www.theexit.org


Ely Sonny Qrquiza directs an adaptation of “The Two Gentlemen of Verona” presented by San Francisco Shakespeare Festival in free outdoor performances in Redwood City and San Francisco. (Ely Sonny Orquiza via Bay City News)

โ€œTwo Gentlemenโ€ in town: Free Shakespeare in the Park, presenting free, in-person outdoor theater performances is 43!  This year’s presentation is an adaptation of the classic romantic comedy “The Two Gentlemen of Verona.” It’s about the journey of two young men from a small, simple, traditional Midwestern town to California, with its alluring promise and impending challenges. The friends “confront their inner conflicts as they are seduced by the possibilities of love, success and reinvention,” say organizers of the show, which is directed by Ely Sonny Qrquiza. Quickly upcoming performances are in Red Morton Park in Redwood City at 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Aug. 16-17 and Aug. 23-24. The show then moves to San Francisco’s McLaren Park on Aug. 30-Sept. 1 and Sept. 6-7; then to San Francisco’s Sue Bierman Park near Embarcadero Plaza on Sept. 13-14 and Sept. 20-21.  For information, visit sfshakes.org or redwoodcity.org. 


Benjamin Beilman is among the violinists participating in Music@Menlo’s “Six to Eight” chamber concerts in Atherton on Aug. 7 and Aug. 9. (Sophie Zhai via Bay City News)

A last hurrah: Music@Menloโ€™s venerable chamber music festival is winding down, but there is one more impressive program on its lineup for two performances. This yearโ€™s iteration has presented music composed for duos, trios, quartets and quintets, so it comes as no surprise that the programs designed for the final performances at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Stent Family Hall and Saturday in the Spieker Center for the Arts, both in Atherton, are dubbed โ€œSix to Eight,โ€ because they offer compositions for sextet and octet. Brahmsโ€™ magisterial String Sextet in B-flat Major kicks things off, followed by Jorg Widmannโ€™s โ€œ180 beats per minuteโ€ from 1993 (which sounds like it might be a rather lively work), with Mendelssohnโ€™s String Octet in E-flat Major bringing things to a close. Performers include Benjamin Beilman, a winner of major international prizes at competitions in Montreal and Indianapolis, who will be joined by fellow violinists Erin Keefe, Jessica Lee, Kristin Lee, Richard Lin, Julian Rhee and Arnaud Sussman; violists Paul Neubauer and Masumi Rostad; and cellists Dmitri Atapine, Nicholas Canellakis, David Finckel and Clive Greensmith. Find tickets, $25-$87, at music@menlo.org


Going for Baroque: For those who gravitate to the music that was all the rage in the 17th and first half of the 18th centuries, American Bach has just launched a festival with concerts continuing through Sunday that will fully satisfy your cravings. Led by artistic director and conductor Jeffrey Thomas, the American Bach Soloists present works by that great master of the Baroque era and many of his contemporariesโ€”Telemann, Vivaldi, Geminiani, Handel and Purcell among themโ€”in two venues at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, the Sol Joseph Recital Hall and the Caroline H. Hume Concert Hall. Participating musicians include violinist Tatiana Chulochnikova, flautist Bethanne Walker, harpsichordist Corey Jamason, cellist Joseph Howe and many others, and at the finale in Hume hall on Sunday, the ensemble will be joined by students of the American Bach Academy for a program including three Bach cantatas. Performance times are 7:30 p.m. except for the finale, which is a 4 p.m. matinee, and tickets, $20-$65, are available at americanbach.org.