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Not What You Meant?  There are 58 definitions for Lang.  Also try: John Lang or Rough Trade.

Rough Trade (band)

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Rough Trade was a Canadian new wave rock band in the 1970s and 1980s. The band is most famous for their 1981 hit "High School Confidential", one of the first explicitly lesbian-themed Top 40 hits in the world. The band began in 1968, when Carole Pope and Kevan Staples began performing as "O". The following year. In 1970, they changed their name to "The Bullwhip Brothers". In 1975, the band became Rough Trade, adding Joanne Brooks, Rick Gratton, Happy Roderman, John Lang and Marv Kanarek to the lineup. The band, through their combination of hard-edged new wave rock and raw sexuality (Pope often performed in bondage attire), became a popular draw on Toronto's live music circuit through their regular shows at Grossman's. In 1980, the band's lineup changed, with most of the backing musicians leaving and being replaced by Sharon Smith, Jon Cessine, Bucky Berger, Patricia Cullen and Terry Wilkins . Also that year, the band landed a record contract with True North Records. Their first album, Avoid Freud, was released later that year, and the controversy around the raunchy lesbian-themed single "High School Confidential" made them stars. They released one album each year until 1985, scoring at least one significant hit, including "Weapons", "All Touch" and "Crimes of Passion", from each album. Although not as widely remembered as "High School Confidential" today, "All Touch" was the band's most successful single on the Canadian charts during their career. In 1983, they were offered a Pepsi commercial to air in the Canadian market, but the ad was soon pulled from the airwaves as Pepsi had failed to obtain permission from another Canadian rocker, Nash the Slash, to include his picture in the commercial. The 1985 greatest hits compilation Birds of a Feather was the band's final release, although they continued to perform on stage. Their final full scale tour took place in 1986, although they continued to perform occasional concert dates in Toronto until 1988. In their final years, guitarist Wild T also joined the band. The band subsequently performed several reunion shows in the late 1990s.

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Rough Trade (band) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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