BAR & BISTRO Downstairs at the Treehouse 1769 Franklin Blvd. • Across from the University Dorms Open Noon till Midnight Tuesday • Saturday • Micro Brows on Draft • Satellite TV • State of Oregon On-Line Games • Area’s Greatest Scotch List • Great Everyday Prices! • Come see Monday Niflht Football! • Great stop before & after the U of O flames! /ilb. Burger • Spaghetti • Homemade Onion Rings Entire menu priced $2.00 to $7.00 E E R. Cj r. e> e rvi .y FRIDAY October 8 Free Music between 5 and 7 Free Chips and Salsa between 4 and 5 21 and Over I D Required. Alternative Beverages Available Digging Dig, Muffs and Adams I THE MUFFS j ★★★ 1/2 I GROUP Toe I Muffs lUtftl Werner " Bros By Dave Charbonneau Oregon (Mily f mtxtect The Muffs are a happy band. Their catchy guitar riffs, and heavy-but-not-too-heavy drum beats seem to make them a prime candidate to make the big leap from indie status to main stream mega-stars. However. Kim Shattuck won't let them reach that point Shat tuck is the lead singer/guitarist of the four-member band, and her voice is just raspy and c runchy enough to assure her band no airplay on the dreaded Top SO stations. Shattuck has a voice that (.an sound lovely at one point and screechingly bodacious a split second later With a solid band behind her, Shattuck leads into many ready-for-VH-1 choruses with Headbnnger Hall-inspired screams. Her songs of love don't really touch any new ground, nor does the bond But that's the whole point: using a tried and true approoc h to make an enjoy able record But The Muffs do it a little better than most On The Muffs' slickly pro duc ed, self-titled Compact Disc. the two-male, two-female unit has put together an album pac ked with undeniably tasty punk pop gems While many bands nowadays seem deter mined to create that "new sound'' no matter how bad the music actually sounds, The Muffs use the same straightfor ward approach the Ramones have been using since the 1970s: Don't get too fancy, just find a cool rifT, stick with it. and most importantly, keep the songs short Only one of the lfi cuts on the (T) eclipses the three-and-a-hnlf minute mark, and many c hime in at loss than Iwo-and-a-half minutes, leaving the listener not wanting longer songs, but rnorr songs. The album doe* not have one valley, but has a number of peaks, and quite frankly, too many of them to mention in this space. The opener "Lucky Guy," gets things rolling with pounding drums and (of course) a simple yet catchy guitar lick. The song barrels into a Go-Gos-esque (.ho rus with Shattuck literally screaming at the top of her lungs a la L7. That sets the mood for the next 15 songs, which vary from a 30-second thrash punk splinter to the album's acoustic closer. The other brilliant cuts on the album include "Big Mouth." "Baby Go Round'' and "Another Day." but. for the third time, this album is pretty much flawless. The world needs more bonds like this WASTELAND ★ ★ GROUP: Dig LABEL: Waste I land Records I The first thing I noticed about Dig's new album is it was pro duced by Dave Jergen. who has produced Jane's Addiction and Alii i* In Chains. So. instantly 1 had high expectations. No. it doesn't sound like either of the aforementioned bands. Lead singer/guitarist .Scott Hackwith's voice does resemble Perry Farrell at times, and a lot of the slow bass-car ried rhythms, and voice box enhanced vocals bring to mind Alice In Chains, but this band is by no means a clone of any band. Alice. Jane's or otherwise. Wasteland instead has the band experimenting with a number of different sounds and paces. The result is an uneven, sometimes great, sometimes dull product The best song, for its novelty value as much as anything else, is "Feet Don't Touch the Ground." The song opens with laid-back vocals, and |ust when you think you've got another band of lanes Addiction wannabes, the chorus kicks in that sounds straight off of an early Ratt album. A curious mix to lie sure, but Dig pulls it off with striking ease. "Unlucky Friend” is another one of those listener-friendly songs that flows from a quiet acoustic beginning into a boom ing chorus. Hackwith’s voice especially sparkles in this song. The fuzz-filled “I'll Stay High,” is a wild ride that bounces all over the place, but it's a catchy tune with good lyrics. The rest of the album has a hard time finding a direction. “Tight Brain" is a straight-ahead rocker with some cool overdub bing in the chorus, and "Con versation" is a good thumping number with what sounds like a dinner party at the beginning (fun to try and hear some of the conversations with head phones), but the album loses some points for songs like "Any more" and "Believe" that go absolutely nowhere. The poor songs on this CD are disappointing, but overall, the good songs make it decent enough to maybe warrant spending that refund you got for dropping your math class. EVOLUTION ★ ★ 1/2 GROUP: Oleta Adams LABEL: Polygram By John Flelschll Fen Ifw Oregon Daily £ meraK) Oleta Adams has specialized m the love song. Most of the Turn to ALBUMS. 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