H Hall an hand-cli By TOM SOLOMON Battalion Reporter Daryl Hall and John Oates brought a quality show of pop n’ roll to an approv ing crowd Sunday night in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Hall and Oates play “hlue-eyedsoul” music, so-called because while the musicians arc white, the music shows heavy influences of hlack soul music. Their concert, while including a good selection of tunes from their 1980 album “Voices, relied heavily on the bands older, soulful tunes, like "She’s Gone and “Sara Smile,” hits that won the “blue-eyed soul’ reputation for the band. Taking the stage at 9:35 after a short opening set by the Cate Brothers Band, Hall and Oates quickly won over the crowd, as Hall beckoned to clapalongto the band’s opening tunes, HowDocslt Feel To Be Back and “Diddy DooWop (I Hear Voices).” The crowd roared with approval asit quickly recognized the intro to the hit single “Private Eyes, the title cut from fsui