The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 12, 1984 --Page 7 Replacements, eelies energize Joe's By Rob Weisberg While Cruisin' Ann Arbor cruises along at the U. Club, those with a taste for imported things can try their luck at Joe's Star Lounge. Joe's hosted the original Cruisin' tapings two years ago but was outbid this time around. Not tc be outdone, Joe's has booked two of the country's leading independent bands for successive nights: Minneapolis' Replacements and the darlings of Hoboken, New Jersey, the Feelies. The Replacements, who perform tonight, at their best epitomize the high- energy hard-edged sound that the whole punk rock thing made possible, fueled with wreckless verve. They're not really a hardcore band, in that they're not as purely political or tied to super high speed three-chord onslaughts as most hardcores. What they are is a good-time rock and roll band dedicated to the principles of that hallowed tradition (They live the life). A Replacements gig is sort of a hit or miss thing, depending on whether they're up to it or not. The first time they played in Ann Arbor their elec- trifying energy crammed into the tiny upstairs room at the Heidelberg boun- ced the patrons off the wall. On their return engagement at Joe's, however, nobody had any idea what they were trying to do on stage. Then again, some fans thrived on the band's apparent ineptitude, so it's probably just a question of taste. The Feelies, on the other hand, are a far cry from the rock and roll animal sort of thing the Replacements represent. Their success lies in having created a thoroughly original sound, simple yet energetic and invigorating. The Feelies combine minimalistic song structures with driving, layered rhythms, using two clanging guitars as much for rhythm as melody. The word "percussive" invariably comes to mind when discussing a Feelies tune, though they generally use only a standard drumkit and one extra percussionist. They are a band dependent on texture and on slowly building intensity. There is an overriding sense of melancholy in their music: Even as songs metamor- phosize from intitial restrained states to climactic wall-of-guitar barrages, the band's somber minor-mode vocals and quiet onstage demeanor is cer- tainly a far cry from the Replacements' jovial hysterics. There is plenty of speed and energy, but the performers themselves stand a bit apart from it. Tomorrow night presents a rare chance to see the Feelies, who have gotten together only occassionally since their first and only album "Crazy Rhythms" came out in 1981. The bandmembers have stayed active in numerous other bands since then, however, including the somewhat more song oriented Trypes, who recently released an in- teresting E.P. on Coyote Records. A recent Feelies gig in Hoboken, in which they relied heavily on material from their album, however, showed them very much in form. Both the Feelies and Replacements thrive on the emotional energy of rock and roll, although they do it in very dif- ferent ways. While the Replacements embody it, the Feelies almost hide behind it. Yet at their best, both bands fill their audiences with that energy in a way few others can. The Replacements, (from 1. to r.) lead guitarist Bob Stinson, bassist Tommy Stinson, drummer Chris Mars and rhythm guitarist and vocalist Paul Westerberg, return to Joe's Star Lounge tonight. ** MUSKET Fall '84 * Production Staff Positions Available: *e DIRECTOR SET DESIGNER MUSICAL DIRECTOR COSTUME DESIGNER CHOREOGRAPHER LIGHTING DESIGNER STAGE MANAGER TECHNICAL DIRECTOR : SOUND-DESIGNER Pick up applications at UAC, 2105 Michigan Union * or call 763-1107. Reagan denounces Mond WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan denounced Walter Mondale's deficit-reduction program yesterday as little more than a "tax increase plan," but Mondale renewed his challenge to the president to come up with a blueprint of his own to reduce the red ink. Artificial pump keeps heart attack victim alive SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The first cardiac arrest victim to be kept alive by, a partial artificial heart until a donor heart was available for a tran- splant was doing well yesterday, doc- tors said. Ronald Meehan, 47, of Sausalito, Calif., was reported in serious condition but gaining strength, and doctors said his new heart was working well. THE ARTIFICIAL blood pump offers hope for some 50,000 to 75,000 Americans who, while otherwise healthy, suffer a heart attack and will die because a heart donor is not im- mediately available for transplan- tation, said Dr. J. Donald Hill, the surgeon who performed the transplant. "By allowing time for the body to be sustained while the search is made for a donor heart, these people have very good chances of going on to live a productive life," he said. "Statistics now show that 50 percent of heart recipients are living five years after transplantation." Meehan had been given the so-called Left Ventricular Assist Device when his own heart was hopelessly damaged by a cardiac arrest Sept. 1. Vice President George Bush, cain- paigning in Charleston, S.C., said he personally favors permitting rape vic- tims to undergo abortions, despite Reagan's support for a constitutional amendment to ban all such operations. ALL FOUR candidates campaigned - even though the president never left ale plan the White House - as their aides arranged the second negotiating session in as many days on the subject of debates. 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