With SXSW in the rear-view mirror and the Austin City Limits Festival still many months away, what's a music lover to do? Spend his or her summer going to one-off road shows, is what.
It was a hard feat, but we've narrowed down the stacked summer roster to 20 intimate shows you shouldn't miss. We've got some novelty acts (Kitty Pryde), some indie icons (New Order), some shredders (Ty Segall) and some buzz-acts (Chvrches).
But we are by no means foolish enough to think that the list below is all that the Live Music Capital has to offer throughout the three hottest months of the year.Take a pass through our top 20 below, buy some tickets, and leave your can't-miss shows in the comments.
Simply put, sweating at a concert is better than sweating at a bar with a shitty house band.
June 2 The Postal Service with Ra Ra Riot, Cedar Park Center Generationals with Young Empires, The Parish
June 3 Kopecky Family Band, Stubb's
June 5 Chvrches with Still Corners, The Mohawk
June 13 Ex-Cult with Captive, Red 7
June 14 Amplified Heat with Sideshow Tragedy, The Mohawk Mike and the Moonpies, Lamberts
June 18 Ariel Pink with Kirin J Callinan, The Mohawk
June 21 Baths with Houses, The Mohawk
June 22 Twin Shadow with Elliphant, Emo's East
June 23 THE UNCLUDED (Aesop Rock & Kimya Dawson), Central Presbyterian Church
July 11 The Appleseed Cast with The Life and Times, Red 7
July 13 Fitz and the Tantrums with Saints of Valory, Stubb's
July 16 Anamanaguchi with Kitty Pryde, Red 7
July 18 CSS with MNDR, Emo's
July 19 New Order with Holy Ghost!, Austin Music Hall
Written by and starring Jared Bonner, "Pickleheads" is a mockumentary about Austin's favorite sport: pickleball.
A deeply unserious new mockumentary out of Austin is memorializing the city's obsession with pickleball. Pickleheads— a sports comedy directed by Josh Flanagan and written by and starring Jared Bonner— premiered in fall 2025 at the Austin Film Festival. Now the film has dropped an official trailer ahead of its Los Angeles premiere March 1 at the TCL Chinese Theatre.
Pickleheads follows disgraced ping pong champion Barney “The Butcher” Bardot (Bonner), whose spectacular fall from grace, involving an on-court bodily betrayal and personal tragedy, sends him into hiding for nine years.
“Everyone says trust your gut,” Barney intones in the beginning of the film. “But what happens when your gut betrays that trust? It murders your mom.”
Yes, it’s that kind of movie.
Barney is to find redemption in an unlikely place: pickleball, the paddle sport that has loudly taken over Austin. His brother attempts to chronicle the comeback by creating a film about it.
The cast blends recognizable faces with the film's indie energy. Harvey Guillén (Guillermo in What We Do in the Shadows) pops up as a debt collector in a small but scene-stealing role. John O'Hurley (J. Peterman in Seinfeld) appears as himself in a mock sports media setting. Kristine Froseth, Pej Vahdat, Adrianne Palicki, Eric Nelsen, Ryan Cooper, and Lindsey Morgan round out the ensemble.
Viewers may also recognize comedian and disability advocate Zach Anner in a supporting role. Anner, known for his offbeat humor and online presence, fits neatly into the film’s chaotic energy.
Harvey Guillén, Kristine Froseth, Jared Bonner, Ryan Cooper, and Pej Vahdat are just some of the cast in Pickleheads. Photo courtesy of Pickleheads
Bonner, who moved to Austin four years ago, found his inspiration the same way many locals did: by picking up a paddle. After wrapping his previous mockumentary, Dance Dads, he started playing obsessively.
“I just went out to the park and played with strangers every day, and just played nonstop,” he says. “I was looking for my next mockumentary, and I was like, how ridiculous is this sport? … I wanted to capture the boom of a grassroots sport.”
The result is a film that leans into the absurdity of backyard tournaments and neighborhood turf wars, including a running joke about tennis players infiltrating pickleball courts.
Shot over 12 days in and around Austin, Pickleheads features familiar sights for locals: sweeping shots of the 360 Bridge, suburban courts and houses out in Dripping Springs, and distinctly Texas features, like an armadillo sanctuary. The production also staged its climactic tournament at a North Austin pickleball facility, underscoring Bonner’s claim that Austin is “the capital of pickleball.”
Improv, Bonner says, was key to the film's tone.
“There’s so much freedom compared to 'stand in this light and deliver the line,'” he says. “To see them kind of open up and explore the character ... it just was an absolute dream.”
That looseness translates into a meandering and silly comedy packed with deadpan interviews, rivalry melodrama, and escalating nonsense — including a hostage subplot and a final pickleball tournament showdown.
Despite the absurdity, Bonner insists there’s a sincere goal beneath the jokes. With minimal profanity and a broad comedic style that swings from physical gags to mock-serious sports commentary, Pickleheads aims to be as inclusive as the sport itself.
“I really want to bring in everybody to just laugh at a movie,” he says. “There’s too much dividing us.”
Bonner says the film's reception at the Austin Film Festival was “electric” with “laughter every seven seconds.” Right now the team is courting distributors, with hopes of landing on a major streaming platform later this year, and certainly some sort of pickleball-themed viewing party here in Austin.
As the details coalesce, Bonner advises folks to follow along on Instagram to find out where they can watch the movie at home, or perhaps, at a pickleball court here in Austin for its launch.