Gilberto Gil, above, and Gal Costa get tropical Saturday
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Gilberto Gil and Gal Costa: Best known
today for his style of crowd-pleasing,
politicized bossa nova and samba,
Gilberto Gil is just as likely to launch
Sinto a haunting Brazilian-tinged
cover of Hendrix's "Up from the Skies"
when he performs tonight at 8:00 at the
Jackie Gleason Theater of the Performing
Arts (1700 Washington Ave., Miami
Beach). As leaders of the Tropicalia
move
ment in the late Sixties, Gil, Gal Costa, and
other musicians from Bahia (the Carnaval
capital) wrote the score for Brazil's usher-
ing into the information age. Their
music
plugged ethnic rhythms and national issues
into the global-rock revolution, defining a
new cultural identity for Brazilian youth.
Twenty-five years later, Gil remains a politi-
March 31-April 6, 1994
cal figure and international pop idol whose
territory, in one critic's words, is "where
African deities meet the satellite dish.
Costa, known as "the first lady of Brazilian
song." has performed the music of most of
Brazil's major composers and recorded
more than twenty albums. Gil and Gal
reunite here to celebrate the anniversary of
Tropicalia with Brazilian music and interna
tional style. Tickets are $25 and $35. Feel
the tropical breeze at 673-7300. (C)