ENTERTAINMENT NOTES
Elsewhere in entertainment and the arts:
WEDNESDAY Ozark bluff shelters
Jamie Brandon and Lydia Rees, writers for the Arkansas Archeological Survey’s “Bluff Shelters of the Arkansas Ozarks” website (archeology. uark.edu/ozarkbluffshelters), will discuss bluff shelters (also called rock shelters, natural dwellings used by people since prehistoric times) and caves in the Arkansas Ozarks and what they can teach about Arkansas’ distant past, noon Wednesday, in the Darragh Center, Central Arkansas Library System Main Library, 100 Rock St., Little Rock. It’s part of the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies’ monthly “Legacies & Lunch” series. Admission is free. Attendees should supply their own sack lunch; the Butler Center will provide drinks and cookies. Call (501) 918-3033 or email sstormoe@cals.org.
Beach Boys perform
The Beach Boys are onstage, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Griffin Music Hall, 101 E. Locust St., El Dorado. Tickets are $40-$50. And ’80s tribute group The Molly Ringwalds perform there at 8 p.m. Saturday Tickets are $25. Call (870) 863-4547 or visit the website, eldomad.com.
Rutter Requiem
The choir of Christ Episcopal Church, 509 Scott St., Little Rock, will sing Requiem by John Rutter, accompanied by harp, oboe, flute, cello, glockenspiel, timpani and organ, during the Eucharist service, 7 p.m. Wednesday, to mark All Saints’ Day. The performance also honors Steve Bullock’s 30th anniversary as choirmaster and organist. A reception will follow. Admission to the service is free. Call (501) 375-2342 or visit the website, christchurchlr.org.
ETC. Fluke revisited
The debut issue of Fluke, the Little Rock fanzine that started in 1991 and covered the nascent central Arkansas punk rock scene, has been reissued, says co-creator Matthew Thompson. Copies are $2 and are for sale online at flukefanzine.com.
The 28-page issue features interviews with Washington band Fugazi, Plaid Retina of California, Little Rock punk pioneer (and creator of another ’zine, Lighten Up) Tim Lamb, comics, record reviews and more.
Thompson, who created Fluke with friends Jason White and Steve Schmidt, still publishes the fanzine from his home in Arizona.