New Times August 28 - September 3, 1997
Robert Huff's sculpture stands on its own Tuesday
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Big Wig: From New Jersey, the
state that gave the world Bruce
Springsteen, the Misfits, and
Bon Jovi, among others, comes
Big Wig a hyper-catchy
melodic-core band that packs a punk punch.
The band's recent album, Un Merry Melodies
(on Fearless Records), boasts a dozen fast-
paced, moshibly delightful numbers, as well
as the most bugged bunny imaginable on
its cover. Big Wig goes off tonight at 9:00
p.m. at the House
of Rock (5360 N. Federal
Hwy., Pompano Beach), with local bands
the Vacant Andys and Radio Baghdad.
Admission is five dollars for those age 21
and over, seven for those ages 18 to 20. Call
954-429-9966.
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Gilberto Gil: One of the most signifi-
cant and beloved singers, com-
posers, and instrumentalists of
contemporary Brazilian pop
Rhythm Foundation presents Gilberto Gil,
performing songs from his new album, Quan-
ta, tonight at 8:00p.m. at the Gusman Center
for the Performing Arts (174 E. Flagler St.).
36 Three years ago Gil performed in Miami with
Brazilian chanteuse Gal Costa in the 25th
anniversary celebration of tropicalia, the
musical and pop culture revolution he found-
ed together with singer-composer Caetano
Veloso in the late Sixties. Always at the fore
front of popular Brazilian music, even during
a period of exile in London in the early Seven-
ties, Gil has infused the music
of his nation
with not only its popular samba and bossa
nova beats, but with the traditional rhythms of
his home in Bahia - xote, xaxado, afoxé, and
baião - and other rhythms from the
Caribbean and Africa. Tickets cost $20, $30,
and $40. Call 672-5202.
Miami Home Design and Remodeling Show/Fort
Lauderdale Fall Home Show: If it's time to start
thinking about remodeling and redecorating
the old homestead, there are two places
you'll want to be this Labor Day weekend.
Dade dwellers can head over to the Miami
Beach Convention Center (1901 Convention
Center Dr., Miami Beach) for the Miami
Home Design and Remodeling Show. The
show features more than 1200 displays,
including furniture and accessories from
more than 30 countries; architecture and
interior design services; home improvement
products and seminars, and fine art, hard-
ware, electronics, and gardening items. A
highlight of the show is a series of rooms
five local radio personalities.
The show runs
today and Tuesday from 6:00 to 10:30 p.m.;
tomorrow and Sunday from noon to 10:30
p.m.; and Monday from noon to 7:30 p.m.
Admission is seven dollars. Call 667-9299. If
for the week
Friday Gilberto Gil sings tunes from Quanta
your dilapidated shack is farther north,
you might want to visit the Broward Coun-
ty Convention Center (1950 Eisenhower
Blvd., Fort Lauderdale) for the 26th annual
Fort Lauderdale Fall Home Show. The
show encompasses more of the same, plus
a new-home display, a pet expo, a stress-
relief-gadget area, and a Music in Design
showcase, with live performances in rooms
decorated in classical
, rock, jazz, country,
and rap motifs. Show hours are 5:00 to
10:00 p.m. today: 11:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.
tomorrow and Sunday; and 11:00 a.m. to
7:00 p.m. on Monday. Admission is $6.50.
Call 954-966-0704.
Ife' lle' Dance and Music Ensemble: Neri Torres,
founder and director of Ife' lle' Dance and
Music Ensemble, celebrates the opening of
the troupe's Cuban Dance and Music Center
with a fundraising performance tonight at 9:00
p.m. at Power Studios (3701 NE Second
Ave.). A dancer and choreographer trained at
Havana's Instituto Superior de Artes (she
recently toured as a dancer and choreograph-
er with Gloria Estefan's Evolution world
tour),
Torres has devoted herself to educating the
public on the finer points of Afro-Cuban cul
ture, exploding myths and celebrating its rich
ness, and exposing Cuban-American children
to their roots. Tonight's performance, titled
palo, and son montufio traditions. Tickets cost
$30. Call 863-2151.
American Indian Powwow: Celebrate this Labor
Day weekend with the color and rhythm of
Native American dance and music at the
ninth annual American Indian Powwow at
C.B. Smith Park (900 Flamingo Rd., Pem-
broke Pines). The fest features intertribal
powwow dancing, specialty dances such as
the eagle and the hoop dances, and flute
music, plus tepee displays, Native Ameri-
can arts and crafts, and traditional foods.
(Maybe the event will make you think
about the inappropriateness of naming a
football team the "Seminoles." The "Fight-
ing Caucasians," anyone?) Admission is
three dollars (kids under six get in free).
The festival runs today from 6:00 to 10:00
p.m., tomorrow and Sunday from 10:00
a.m. to 10:00p.m., and Monday from 10:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Call 954-437-2650.
Always First-Ever In-Progress Arts Festival: Okay,
so Squeeze (2 S. New River Dr., Fort Laud-
erdale) has actually hosted a whole bunch of
these, but they are always first-evers because
they are each unique. What makes this In-
Progress Arts fest installment unique is the
reunion of veteran Fort Lauderdale band
Black Janet, which tonight celebrates the
sixth anniversary of its first show at the club.
Just for the occasion, a plethora of players
from the band's ever-changing lineup will
come out to jam; the first 50 people at the
door will receive a copy of the band's most
recent CD, She. As is common practice at In-
artists are invited to draw and paint, for prizes,
on paper draped over the walls. Doors open at
9:00p.m. Admission is five dollars for those
age 21 and over, seven for those ages 18 to 20.
Call 954-522-2151.
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