ARTS ROUNDUP
WEEKEND PERFORMANCES IN REVIEW
Gil, Costa show they still
have the power to thrill
By FERNANDO GONZALEZ
Herald Pop Music Critic
Anniversaries of
revolutions are trou-
bling affairs
reminders that time
corrodes ideals,
energy wanes and the
spark of a surprise is
short-lived.
Twenty-five years
ago, Tropicalia
shook up Brazilian
culture.
Gilberto Gil
With a sort of
backyard-grown
postmodernist atti-
tude and a Dadaist
glint in their eyes, singer-songwriters Gilberto Gil
and Caetano Veloso and singers Gal Costa and
Maria Bethania spearheaded a movement that
PLEASE SEE ROUNDUP, 2C
ROUNDUP, FROM 1C
set out to energize Brazilian pop-
ular music with a jolt of electric
guitars, blues, rock 'n' roll and
post-Eleanor Rigby Beatles. That
much of this sounds somewhat
quaint and familiar is perhaps
the best proof of their success.
And yet, at the Jackie Gleason
Theater on Saturday, Gil and
Costa proved they can still chal-
lenge and, on occasion, even
marvel.
It is not
MUSIC entirely surpris-
Gilhas
ing.
made a career of alchemizing
global styles into local music and
vice versa - a logical extension
of Tropicalia. Costa, a diva who
at times seemed bent on wasting
her talents on inferior commer-
cial pop, hasn't lost her impecca-
ble rhythmic sense or her gift for
nuance.
The concert itself was slow
going at first, however.
Accompanied by a strong five-
piece group, Gil opened with
Parabolicamara, an astute medi-
tation on the changes brought by
technology, and the reggae-ish
Vamos Fugir (Let's Escape) and
Nos Barracos Da Cidade (in the
Shacks of the City). The songs are
compelling, but the perfor-
mances were merely proficient
rather than inspired.
Costa then joined him for
workmanlike versions of Falsa
Bahiana and Cole Porter's The
Laziest (Gal in Town), smoothing
somewhat the ensemble's rough
edges, adding a certain dulling
elegance. She sounded miscast in
the grittier, rootsier Afro-Brazil-
ian drumming pieces such as the
afoxe D'Oxum or the samba-reg-
gae Olodum, a tribute to the
Bloco Afro (a cultural group of
the same name, best known in
the United States for its collabo-
ration with singer Paul Simon.)
It was Gil who, two-thirds of
the way into the program, finally
ignited the feet and spirits of the
near-sellout audience - alarm-
ing the extremely uptight security
people at the Gleason who appar-
ently haven't seen people danc-
ing in the aisles in some time.
The catchy Palco, a song seem-
ingly made for audience singa-
longs, broke the ice and Gil fol-
lowed with strong, personal
versions of Bob Marley's Stir It
Up and No Woman No Cry.
From then on, it turned into a
celebration
Even 25 years later, this revo-
lution is worth dancing to.
MONDAY, APRIL 4, 1994
The Miami Herald
CONTENTS COPYRIGHT © 1994 THE MIAMI HERALD
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