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Pop Reviews : Poison’s Sensitive Side Spoils the Dumb Fun

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Poison’s concert at Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre might turn out better on network television than it did in the flesh.

The show was taped for “ABC’s In Concert ‘91,” a late-night rock program that debuts June 7. If the producers are smart, they will edit out Poison’s main deficiencies--flaccid anthem-ballads and the world’s worst guitar solos--and keep what the band does best: simple, hormonal raunch ‘n’ roll.

Poison, one of the Hollywood hard-rock scene’s main success stories of the late ‘80s, led from strength Sunday, opening with a couple of raw and rowdy numbers from its first and best album, “Look What the Cat Dragged In.”

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This simple, energetic, dumb-fun hard-rock approach worked whenever Poison went back to it, which wasn’t enough. Instead, the band got bogged down in displaying its newfound sensitive side. “Life Goes On” simply dragged; “Something to Believe In” and “Every Rose Has Its Thorn,” at least offered catchy choruses, but the scratchy-voiced Bret Michaels didn’t have the soulfulness or the vocal strength to lift them above cliche.

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