Hardcore in the afternoon By Joe Hoppe L AST SATURDAY was a nice day - a nice day for a hardcore all-ages matinee down at Joe's Star Lounge. Walk in out of the horrible sun and listen to great noise thrashings and angry yells of defiance. Saturday was such a nice day, that it was too hot to wear your big black dan- ce boots. Many of the boot boys stom- ped around in tennis shoes, they're much better for riding skateboards anyhow. And ride the boards they did, in lazy circles on Joe's dance floor and outside on the sidewalk. Saturday's such-a-nice-day-heat made a skinhead haircut look like a good idea, too, after all-day sweat ferments up in the greasy locks atop one's head. And all of Ann Arbor's young punks, hardcores, boot boys, skins, maybe even some that would label themselves as mod, came in from the suburbs and the high school and streets and far off Metropolitan Detroit (tho' those with the Necros came from as far as Maumee, Ohio) to see a bar finally opened up for music lovera of all ages. The fab Midwest thrash bands DisMissile, Ground Zero, The State, and the Necros (whose album release was the occasion for this gathering were at Joe's Everyone sat on Joe's uncomfortable stools for the first band, DisMissile, who just walked up on stage, picked up their instruments and started in loud and fast - the singer's yells im- mediately getting some recognition. The band has been around for two mon- ths, and are incredibly young - 9th and 10th graders; somehow they look older with that short, short hair. They were loose but enthusiastic. Of note are the girl lead guitar and fun more-than-just-a-backbeat drums. Ground Zero is another young local 2 band, two 15-year-olds, a 16-year-old, and an 18-year-old bassist. Their singer is one of the more scary-looking guys in the local scene, next to Negative Ap- proach's lead singer. Too bad he ignores the audience so much. The music was real, real fast. These guys could go someplace. The State's singer, Preston, looked kind of silly with his hair gunked straight up like a cartoon character in free-fall, but in spite of that the band turned in their best performance that I've seen. Things were in fine form, with Preston illustrating thrash through violent movements across the stage, dance floor and his swinging of the microphone stand. The State is Ann Arbor's oldest and best hardcore band, and they really put all their experience on show. The music had a little more structure than the previous bands', with well-defined licks (although some sounded suspiciously like Black Sabbath's "Iron Man" and "Paranoid" - sped up, of course.) People danced. After the State's part of the after-. noon, the Necros were rather anti- climatic. Ohio's biggest contribution to the world of hardcore seemed kind of slow and too heavy-metalish, with lead singer Barry Hennsler doing devil- horn-fingered Ozzie Osbourne imitations and even a few guitar heroics from Brian Pollack. The heat of the stage, left over from the air conditioning being made useless by all the body heat of a now-packed bar, probably did a lot to make the show less energetic. People were slamming, and sithough the p.a. was messed up, a big response came for the opener, "Be a Man" and "Youth Camp." When the band stopped playing after half an hour everyone was satisfied and exhausted. Fron all stand points, the all ages show at Joe's was a success. Hopefully bands like these now have another place to play in Ann Arbor. Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SO Preston and the lead singer of DisMissile show-off their wonderful do's. $2.00 WED. SAT. SUN. Shows INDIVIDUAL THEATRES before 6:00 p.m. 5h . , t 761.9700 ENDS TONIGHT "Lola" AT 7:20 9:30 Cranium comedy (Continued from Page 10) hilariously malevolent as Dolores. She uses all her beauty and cunning (also on display in Body Heat), and manages to make it funny. David Warner is, in many ways, the film's straight man. He and his brain surgery ideas are not fun- ny in and of themselves, but they do make a good foil for Martin. And lurking in the supporting cast is Paul Benedict, a particular favorite of mine from such roles as the Director in The Goodbye Girl and the next-door neigh- bor on The Jeffersons. The film is quite good, but not great - no whacky laugh-a-minute farce. The Man with Two Brains entertains, not as muchwas the people behind it ought to be entertaining, but close, very close in- deed. "'La Traviata'... a personal triumph for director Zeffirelli. It's not to be missed" Vincent Canby, New York Times JUNE 22-25 A i LYDIA MENDELSSOHN Ann Arbor Civic Theatre THEATRE, 8:00 p.m. presents Sat. Matinee 2:00 p.m. For Ticket Information Call 662-7282, or tickets may be picked up at M idsu m mr the Ann Arbor Civic Ids m e Theatre office, 338 South Main Street N i hts D ream Ann Arbor, Michigan N bL W mrkeam48104 by William Shakespeare