u- ; By Paul Bradley 5&3“ ' . For Those Who Think Young — Rough Trade v .- YOu may have seen Rough Trade performing g on the 1980 Juno Awards where the band's head mistress, Carol Pope - with an anatomical gesture generally unbecoming a lady -.- managed to embarrass the CBC, the studio audience, . ,. and most of the good folks in T.V. land. That, mupledeith the subject a matter of, RoughTradejs , last album, Avoid Freud, has given Carol Po . the reputation of being a frustrated binbo obsessed with the seedier side of the world's oldest pastime. ' However, as POpe insists on'Eor Those Who Think YOungme is "nobodys bimbo". Though the atmosphere of sex, booze, and other goodies is still a visible ' element in Rough Trade's work, Pope seens to have backed off from the tough and aggressive posture that she went out of- her way to establish on Avoid ‘Freud. The change is definitely for the better. As good as their last l.p. was, Pbugh Trade's latest offering (is a more polished and cohesive effort. MOst of the , Carol Pope/Kevan Staples compositions arecl‘ean and danceable, especially: "All Touch", "Faking It", and "Blood Lust". é{Bopcats — the Bopcats Just what the world needs - another Elvis ‘ Presley soundalike. ’ The Music Beet Given the fact that there is more Elvis nenorabilia on the THE SUN, Thursday, October 22, 1981, page 7 market than the average person can stomach,‘ I can't think of any reason why you would want to add this dud to your record collection. There is one good song on the album — namely "Dial Red", a clever piece about a song on the Chinese Top 40. The rest of the l.p. finds the Bopcats mired in bad rockabilly, bad blues, and in pursuit of a fifties sound that they can't seem to nail dam. Maybe there is a time and place for this sort of thing but for ne the Bopcats are a band I can do without. Love that name, though. a , — Ultravox W starts off very strongly and becomes prOgressively more mundane after the third track. "The Voice", "We Stand Alone", and the title out are well written, fairly well arranged and come across quite well. It‘s when the guys start fooling around with the synthetics and the mega— sounds that I lose interest. In fact, I question whether the band knows just what ‘it is doing. At tines they want to sound like Yes, though I can't imagine why. Other tines they want to sound like Gary Newman. Again, I can't imagine why. I suspect that Rage In Eden is supposed to— have a concept; but just what it is gets lost in over-production. Some of it might sound o.k; on the soundtrack of Star I Wars XXll. V'ALBUMS COURTESY 0F— Sam The Record _‘ '61 UNIVERSITY AVENUE 'YOUr complete music Centre" - DEXTER T. GNOME so ENme thH We NAT- URAL deflME FAILS To SPOT AS D.T. LEAVE$ THE LAB,HE CANNOT HELP BUT FEEL OPTIHlSUQ ABOUT mg ...TILL THE LAST MINUTE . . . roams fiIS TAIL DOWN-BESIDEA BOAT, D.T. mans N HIM... « THE “TAM.” THAT Is Fouowme \ .. w- mums; | NM... ‘ WWW§ 712$? *Pmikd you've been Huang—«his stardom 7 Know, what flu s'd’udéen mellow? MT 1142 ml 1: W‘ 23515 7.9;: SLOlALV,Dfl'. ms HIS . - 651- m MJELL TMKBG‘IE .ste,m¥,0(m,w.-.. aflm, {swarmed «MY bowN 1b “$342 ,3 0.,» , V > , . . v , _. ” / Faflg’gmyaflfiy SAL-[y K I Wmufi m- a, ‘ “'5 W “ 3 -°, .°' - - wEASELKuegs 0.1:?" * ‘53 V G a” gamma; " ' 1 MT mm: as m3 t P g ' ’ «or «Avs(oUcH!){fi"J-”.§ W, ; muse» A Tamara; rum-ramp“: I: % mama FOR we ‘7 “" < axes oF A weaseu. THE WE'ASEL MAKE; .. , g . 6000 ms we AND I U outdo—1 DIMPPEARS L 2 n n; {mum—mun- I 1.. .. .y. ., 37‘ at;