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POP MUSIC REVIEWS : Smithereens Make Most of Material

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The stolid, plodding nature of the Smithereens’ music marks the band as perpetual journeymen. At the House of Blues on Sunday, the New Jersey band book-ended its set with tastes of the level it aspires to but is too mundane to achieve, preceding its appearance with a recording of the Sex Pistols’ scathing “EMI” (their comment on their previous record-company affiliation) and welcoming the Kinks’ guitarist Dave Davies as a guest for the encores.

Unlike Davies’ band, the Smithereens lack the wit and invention to transform musical mud into transcendent pop statements. They have good, garage-rock instincts, deploying riffs and hooks that regularly culminate in rousing anthemlike choruses that manage to be catchy for the moment. But the moods don’t penetrate--it’s all rock-noir atmosphere with nothing lurking in the shadows.

But at Sunday’s show the quartet did what it takes to get the most out of it, turning in a hard, sweaty performance that got the music airborne through sheer force of will. Singer Pat DiNizio does a pretty good Elvis Costello now and--looking more Frank Zappa than Maynard G. Krebs these days--he embodied well the Smithereens’ blend of the blue-collar and the bohemian.

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* The Smithereens appear tonight at the Ventura Theatre, 26 S. Chestnut Ave., Ventura, 9 p.m. $18.50. (805) 648-1936.

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