Live music performances on television shows this week include:


Live music performances on television shows this week include:

v Dolly Parton: Tonight on “Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” (NBC)

v Florida George Line: Wednesday on “Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” (NBC)

v Kip Moore: Wednesday on “Late Show With Stephen Colbert” (CBS)

v Barbra Streisand: Thursday on “Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” (NBC)

v Britney Spears: Thursday on “Late Late Show With James Corden” (CBS)

“Halt and Catch Fire” (9 p.m., AMC): Season 3 of “Halt and Catch Fire” picks up in March 1986 as Mutiny leaves Texas for the big leagues of Silicon Valley. Founders Cameron Howe (Mackenzie Davis) and Donna Clark (Kerry Bishe) search for the idea that will turn the company into a major player, but new collaborators test their partnership.

“Adam Ruins Everything” (10 p.m., truTV): Straight from the red carpet comes “Adam Ruins Everything.” In the midseason opener, Adam Conover exposes the hidden truth behind Hollywood’s glitz and glamour. Rachel Bloom and Ariana Madix aid him in his quest.

TV listings, C3

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

Kip Moore coming to Packard hall

WARREN

Country music singer Kip Moore will come to Packard Music Hall, 1703 Mahoning Ave. NW, on Oct. 22 for an 8 p.m. concert.

Tickets are $35 and $40 and go on sale Friday at 10 a.m. at the Packard box office, by phone at 800-745-3000 and online at ticketmaster.com.

Moore, a Georgia native, is best known for his song “Dirt Road.”

GCC hosting satellite choir

GROVE CITY, PA.

Pittsburgh Youth Chorus, in collaboration with Grove City College, will offer a new satellite youth-choir program for children in grades 3-6 from 6:15 to 7:15 p.m. Wednesdays, beginning Sept. 14, in the Pew Fine Arts Building at the college.

Interested singers may attend open rehearsals Sept. 14 and 21. Girls and boys (with unchanged voices) are welcome to participate in the rehearsal and then stay for a brief audition. For information, call 412-2814790 or go to pittsburghyouthchorus.org.

Plaque unveiled at Bowie residence

BERLIN

Berlin’s mayor has inaugurated a memorial to a hero: a plaque commemorating David Bowie’s time in the then-divided city in the late 1970s.

Mayor Michael Mueller recalled Bowie’s “special relationship” with Berlin as he unveiled the plaque Monday at the building where Bowie lived from 1976 to 1978.

The singer died in January at age 69, and the sidewalk outside the house on a busy street in the city’s Schoeneberg district — home to a dental practice among other things — turned into a makeshift shrine in the subsequent weeks.

Bowie’s albums “Low” and “Heroes” were made in West Berlin. The plaque quotes the refrain from the latter’s title track — “We can be heroes, just for one day.”