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Men at Work
After Little
River Band, and before INXS, Men At Work were Australia's most successful
international rock export, and are still the only Australian artists
with No.1 singles and albums in both America and England.
The
Men At Work story starts with Scottish born and raised singer Colin
Hay. His father ran a music shop in Glasgow, giving Colin the run
of all the instruments contained - a guaranteed breeding place for
a career in music. In 1967 the family decided to migrate to Australia.
Colin was 14. During their first week in Australia Colin's father
bought him a 15-watt amplifier.
Colin Hay started
playing in bands in his first year in Australia, and continued through
his high school years until university. In 1978 Colin met guitarist
Ron Strykert when both were working in Sydney on the stage musical
'Heroes'. Colin and Ron decided to form an acoustic duo and, playing
around Melbourne, started building up the catalogue of songs which
would become the basis of Men At Work's repertoire.
The group itself
grew out of informal jam sessions at the Grace Darling Hotel. Colin
had met drummer Jerry Speiser while studying Economics at university.
In mid-1979, with keyboard player
Greg Sneddon on board, they provided the backing for the amateur
rock musical 'Riff Raff' as their first venture in the recording
studio. Sneddon didn't stay. He was replaced by multi-instrumentalist
Greg Ham, someone they already knew from around the traps. Then,
after a couple of months of playing residency at the Cricketers
Arms Hotel in Melbourne, Men at Work decided to include a fifth
member, and brought in bass player John Rees, allowing Strykert
to move to guitar.
The band played
every Thursday night at the Cricketers for over a year, by the end
of which they had established a loyal following which sought them
out whenever and wherever they played. By the end of 1980 Men at
Work were in a position where they could sell out almost any venue
in Melbourne. During that year they issued a self-financed, independent
single on their own M.A.W. label. The 'A' side was a song called
'Keypunch Operator'. The other side was an early version of a song
with which the group would become synonymous, 'Down Under'.
Along the way
to the world fame they would come to enjoy some unique twists of
fate paved they way. One was the record company executive who would
at this point in Men At Work's career become determined his record
company should sign the band. To make his point he would arrive
at work every day as a different 'man at work' - a plumber one day,
a painter the next, etc . Giving in to their employee's pressure,
CBS signed Men At Work to a recording contract in early 1981. The
first release under that agreement was the single 'Who Can It Be
Now?,' with its deliciously paranoid lyrics and characteristic reggae-tinged
rock style.
'Who Can It
Be Now? reached Australia's No.1 spot in August 1981, and four months
later, both the re-recorded 'Down Under' and Men At Work's debut
album reached the No.1 spot, the biggest selling Australian album
since Skyhooks' record-breaking 'Living In The 70s'. 'Business As
Usual' also became the first Australian album to debut at No.1 in
New Zealand. And there was considerable success throughout Europe
and in Canada.
Produced by
American Ian McIan, 'Business As Usual' was twice rejected for release
in the US by CBS's American affiliates. The band's manager refused
to accept 'no' and eventually his persistence, sitting in record
company offices until he was heard, paid off. Six months after its
release in Australia 'Business As Usual' was released in both the
US and the UK, and the band departed for an American tour supporting
Fleetwood Mac. By October 'Who Can It Be Now' was No.1 in America
too. In November 'Business As Usual' started its 12 weeks stay on
top of the American album chart, the biggest debut album since the
Monkees. In January 1993 'Down Under' was No.1 on both America and
England, where the album was also No.1 now - unprecedented success
for an Australian recording act.
Part of Men
At Work's dramatic rise to popularity was that their arrival coincided
with the introduction of MTV. Men At Work's irreverent videos shone
out like a beacon against their American competition. England and
Australia were already well into the video age. In Men At Work became
the first Australians to win a Grammy Award, for Best New Act.
For Men At
Work the happy problem was that it was now well over a year since
their album had been released in Australia. Business logic said
that since the US and UK were so late coming on board there was
still a lot of life in the record on the world stage, but Men At
Work decided to go ahead with recording a second album. 'Cargo'
restored Men At Work to No.1 in Australia. But its worldwide release
meant that just three months after 'Business As Usual' had been
No.1 in both the US and UK, the second album arrived. 'Cargo' made
top ten in both countries, but the impact of its release was complete
over-exposure for the band, and a year filled with live performances.
At the end
of 1983 Men At Work came back to Australia and took a year's break,
scattering around the world. Colin Hay found time to get married,
honeymooned in France, and produced an album for Melbourne friends
Le Club Foot. Greg Ham joined his girlfriend moonlighting in the
good-time band Relax With Max. While all this was going on, internal
pressures were at work, arguments over management and songwriting,
and John Rees and Jerry Speiser found themselves "not required".
At the start of 1985 Hay, Ham and Strykert, with session musicians,
recorded a third Men At Work album, 'Two Hearts', producing themselves.
Men At Work
now came headlong against their own stature. It had all been too
much too quickly, and the new album, despite its actual contents,
failed to live up to the previous successes. The band's first American
tour for 18 months was cancelled due to poor ticket sales. Rod Strykert
left of his own accord, and Hay and Ham struggled on. Eventually
Ham left too, and now Hay struggled on, determined to keep the band
name alive. By the end of 1985 he also conceded defeat and concentrated
on a solo recording and performing career.
By 1996 some
of the original reasons for that sudden lack of interest in Men
At Work were long forgotten. South America especially rediscovered
their music, to the point where Colin Hay and Greg Ham pulled back
a version of the band to play those songs again in concert. After
two hugely successful tours of South America in 1996 and 1997, and
a few surprise performances in the USA, Men At Work were tentatively
back "in business". 1998 also saw the release of the first new recording
since 'Two Hearts'. 'Brazil', recorded live in Sao Paulo, Brazil,
featured live versions of all the Men at Work favourites plus a
new studio recording, 'The Longest Night'.
In 2000 Men
At Work helped christen the newly built Sydney Olympic Stadium,
and then took part in the Sydney Olympics' closing ceremony.
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