Men at Work
were an Australian reggae-influenced rock band which achieved international success in the 1980s. They are the only Australian artists to have a #1 album and single simultaneously in the United States (with Business as Usual
and "Down Under" respectively). [1] At the same time, they also had a simultaneous #1 single and album in the United Kingdom. The group won the 1983 Grammy Award for Best New Artist and sold over 30 million albums worldwide. The band's sound is distinguished by its use of woodwind and brass instruments.
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History
Origins of the group
Colin Hay emigrated to Australia in 1967 from
Scotland with his family. In 1978, he formed a duo with
Ron Strykert, which expanded with the addition of drummer
Jerry Speiser and Australian
progressive rock keyboard player Greg Sneddon.
[2] [3] They formed an unnamed four-piece group that would later morph into Men at Work. The band's first experience in the recording studio was recording the music to "Riff Raff," a low-budget stage musical Sneddon had worked on.
[4] Sneddon soon left, to be replaced in late 1979 by saxophonist/flautist/keyboardist
Greg Ham.
As Men at Work
By late 1979, the group took up residence at the Cricketer's Arms pub. Desperate for a name, they took the "Men at Work" moniker from a street sign denoting construction. Shortly thereafter, the band, who had been performing with Strykert on
bass guitar, recruited bassist
John Rees and the group was complete.
The group played a regular residency at
Melbourne's Cricketers Arms Hotel and built a strong local following. According to the liner notes in
Contraband: the Best of Men at Work
, the group did not have a name until, driving the group van one night and desperate for something to put on the chalk board outside the pub, Greg Ham spied a "Men at Work" construction sign, and decided to use that for the group's name. In 1980, they financed a single ("Keypunch Operator") backed by an early version of
"Down Under".
In 1981,
Columbia Records signed Men at Work. Their first single, "
Who Can It Be Now?", reached #1 on the Australian chart in August 1981. A subsequent single (a re-worked version of "
Down Under") and their first album (
Business as Usual
) also went to #1. The album also debuted at #1 in
New Zealand.
International success
Despite its strong Australian showing, and having an American producer (Peter McIan),
Business as Usual
was twice rejected by Columbia's parent company in the United States. Thanks to the persistence of the band's management, the album was eventually released in the USA and the UK six months after its Australian release. Men at Work toured the USA to promote the album, supporting
Fleetwood Mac.
In October 1982, "
Who Can It Be Now?" hit #1 in the USA. Then, in November of that year,
Business As Usual
began a 12 week run at #1 on the US album chart. While "
Who Can It Be Now?" was still in the top ten, the second single, "Down Under" was released. It entered the charts at #79; ten weeks later, it was #1. By January 1983, Men at Work had the top album and single in both the USA and the UK - a feat never achieved previously by an Australian act.
Men at Work won a
Grammy Award, winning Best New Artist for 1983 ahead of
Asia,
Jennifer Holliday,
The Human League and
Stray Cats. This was the first for an Australian recording act.
That same year, Canada awarded them a
Juno Award for "International LP of the Year."
The band soon released their second album
Cargo
. It had been finished in the summer of 1982, but held for release due to the phenomenal success of the band's debut. The new album went to #1. The international market, where
Business As Usual
was still riding high, kept the album at #3 on the
Billboard 200 album chart. The album produced three chart singles in the USA: "
Overkill" [#3], "
It's a Mistake" [#6], and "
Dr. Heckyll and Mr. Jive" [#28]. The band toured the world extensively in 1983.
Two Hearts; breakup
In 1984, the band took a long break as members pursued other interests and recovered from the two years of constant touring they'd done in support of both albums. At the end of that period, Jerry Speiser and John Rees were advised by management that they were no longer members of the band. The remaining members (Hay, Ham and Strykert) recorded a third album
Two Hearts
which peaked at #50 on the chart. Although four songs were released as singles to promote the album (lead single "
Everything I Need", "Man With Two Hearts", "Maria", and "Hard Luck Story"), only the first song charted in the U.S., and that only at #47. The record relied heavily on drum programming and
synthesizers and reduced the presence of Ham's saxophone, giving it a different feel than the band's first two records.
Strykert left the group during the album's production
[5]. Hay and Ham hired new bandmates to tour behind the record, including
jazz/
fusion bassist Jeremy Alsop,
progressive rock drummer Mark Kennedy, and guitarist James Black, who respectively play on seven, eight and one of the ten tracks on
Two Hearts
. Soon after, third guitarist Colin Bayley was added to the band's touring lineup, and Kennedy was replaced by prodigious young drummer
Chad Wackerman. Australian singers
Kate Ceberano and
Renee Geyer also worked and performed live with the group during this period as guests.
Men at Work performed three songs for the
1985 Oz for Africa concert (part of the global
Live Aid program) - "Maria", "
Overkill", and an unreleased song called "The Longest Night". It was broadcast in Australia (on both
Seven Network and
Nine Network) and on
MTV in the US. "Maria" and "
Overkill" were also broadcast by
American Broadcasting Company (ABC) during their Live Aid telecast.
[6]
Ham left during the band's time touring behind the album.
The final Men At Work performances in the 1980s found Australian
jazz saxophonist Paul Williamson replacing Ham. By 1986, the band was defunct, and Hay was working on a
solo album, which would feature participation from Alsop and Wackerman.
1996 reunion
In 1996, after a ten-year absence, Hay and Ham reunited under the Men at Work moniker to tour
South America. They had enjoyed strong fan support in this continent during their heyday, and demands for Men at Work concerts persisted prior to Hay and Ham's decision to reform. The new lineup also featured guitarist Simon Hosford from Hay's solo band, along with bassist Stephen Hadley and drummer John Watson. This tour culminated in the
Brazilian release of a live CD
Brazil '96
in 1997. The album was subsequently released worldwide in 1998 as '
Brazil' with a bonus studio song "The Longest Night", the first Men at Work studio track since
Two Hearts
.
The band toured various corners of the world throughout from 1998-2000. The lineup for these tours varied greatly, occasionally including
Rick Grossman of the
Hoodoo Gurus on bass, among numerous other touring musicians.
Men at Work performed "Down Under" at the closing ceremony of the
2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia, alongside
Paul Hogan of
Crocodile Dundee
fame
[7]. The group has been mostly inactive in recent years, although Hay and Ham still perform sporadically as Men at Work with guest musicians. In February 2009, they performed "Down Under" at the Australia Unites Victorian Bushfire Appeal Telethon.
Hay maintains a successful
solo career. Strykert lives in
Montana, continues to play music and has expressed some resentment towards Hay,
[8] having been arrested February 13, 2009 for allegedly making
death threats against Hay.
[9] Speiser, Ham and Rees still work in the music industry.
Band Members
Current
- Colin Hay – vocals, guitar (1978–1986, 1996–present)
- Greg Ham – keyboards, vocals, saxophone, harmonica, flute (1979–1985, 1996–present)
Former
- Jeremy Alsop - bass, backing vocals (1985-1986)
- Rodrigo Aravena - bass, backing vocals (2000)
- Colin Bayley - guitar, backing vocals (1985-1986)
- James Black - guitar, keyboards, backing vocals (1985-1986)
- Tony Floyd - drums (1997-1998)
- Rick Grossman - bass, backing vocals (1998-2000)
- Stephen Hadley - bass, backing vocals (1996-1998, 2001)
- Simon Hosford - guitar, backing vocals (1996-1998, 1999-2001)
- Mark Kennedy - drums (1985)
- Peter Maslen — drums (1998)
- Heta Moses — drums (2000)
- John Rees – bass, backing vocals (1979–1984)
- James Ryan — guitar, backing vocals (1998)
- Jerry Speiser – drums, percussion, backing vocals (1979-1984)
- Ron Strykert – guitar, bass, vocals (1978–1985)
- Warren Trout - drums (2001)
- Chad Wackerman - drums, backing vocals (1985-1986)
- John Watson - drums (1996-1997)
- Paul Williamson - saxophone, keyboards, backing vocals (1985-1986)
Discography
Studio albums
- 1981 Business as Usual
– (RIAA: 6x Platinum)
- 1983 Cargo
– (RIAA: 3x Platinum)
- 1985 Two Hearts
– (RIAA: Gold)
Live albums
Videos
- 1984 Live in San Francisco... Or Was It Berkeley?
(VHS/BETA)
Compilations
- 1987 The Works
- 1995 Puttin' in Overtime
- 1996 Contraband: The Best of Men at Work
- 1998 Simply The Best
- 2000 Definitive Collection
- 2000 Super Hits
- 2003 The Essential
- 2008 Essential Deluxe - Including Bonus DVD
Singles
- "Anyone For Tennis" (1981)
- "Crazy" (1982, now found on 2003 re-issue of Business as Usual)
- "Down Under" (1979, self-produced single, original version, released with "Key Punch Operator")
- "Key Punch Operator" (1979, self-produced single, released with original "Down Under")
- "F-19" (now found on 2003 re-issue of Business as Usual)
- "Shintaro" (now found on 2003 re-issue of Cargo)
- "‘Till the Money Runs Out" (1983, now found on 2003 re-issue of Cargo)
Year
| Title
| Chart positions
| Album
|
U.S. Pop
| U.S. Rock
| U.S. AC
| Australia
| UK [10]
|
1981
| "Who Can It Be Now?"
| 1
| 46
| -
| 2
| 45
| Business as Usual
|
"Down Under"
| 1
| 1
| 13
| 1
| 1
|
1983
| "Be Good Johnny"
| -
| 3
| -
| 8
| -
|
"Underground"
| -
| 20
| -
| -
| -
|
"High Wire"
| -
| 23
| -
| 89
| -
| Cargo
|
"Overkill"
| 3
| 3
| 6
| 5
| 21
|
"It's a Mistake"
| 6
| 27
| 10
| 34
| 33
|
"Dr. Heckyll and Mr. Jive"
| 28
| 12
| -
| -
| 31
|
1985
| "Everything I Need"
| 47
| 28
| 34
| 37
| -
| Two Hearts
|
"Maria"
| -
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
"Man with Two Hearts"
| -
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
"—" denotes a single that didn't chart
|
Live(only)/Rare Recordings
- "Blue Heaven" (live)
- "Coin in the Slot" (live)
- "Cold Finger" (live)
- "Fallin’ Down" (live) (now found on 2003 re-issue of Cargo)
- "I Don’t Understand" (live)
- "Jump in My Car" (rare)
- "Longest Night" (rare/live) (now found on Brazil and 2003 re-issue of Cargo)
- "Love Terrorist" (live)
- "Mr. Entertainer" (live)
- "There’s a Bloke I Know" (rare) (a.k.a. "Ways of the Broken Hearted")
Guest appearances
- Colin Hay has made three guest appearances on Scrubs as 'Troubadour' on "My Overkill", season 2 episode 1, singing "Overkill","My Hard Labor", season 7 episode 2, singing "Down Under" and season 8 "My Finale"
- Colin Hay made a guest appearance on "The Larry Sanders Show"
- Greg Ham sang their hit Helpless Automaton on the Oprah series in 2002
- Colin Hay performed "Down Under" on FOX News Channel for Fox & Friends' "80's Weekend"
.
- Colin Hay Performed "Overkill" on the Bob & Tom TV Show on April 28 2009
- Colin Hay performed "Down Under" and, "Who Can it be Now" on Don't Forget the Lyrics on the Fox network June 5 2009
- Jerry Speiser guest appeared on the Frost track, 'You and Me' receiving hi-rotation on Melbourne's Nova 100 in 2003 and SBS Televsion.
See also
- Artists achieving simultaneous U.S. and UK number-one hits
References
- Howlspace: Men at Work Retrieved on 9 July, 2007
- http://www.80smusiclyrics.com/artists/menatwork.htm
- http://www.informationbrazil.com.au/diversao/musica/biografias/MEN%20AT%20WORK.doc
- http://www.countdown.com.au/the_music.asp?ArtistID=45
- MySpace.com - MEN AT WORK - St. Kilda, AU - Reggae / New Wave / Pop - www.myspace.com/menatwork
- "Oz for Africa"
- VH1.com : INXS : INXS, Midnight Oil, Men At Work Close Sydney Olympics - Rhapsody Music Downloads
- MySpace Music: Ron Strykert Retrieved on 22 July, 2007
- http://www.digitalspy.com/music/a147205/men-at-work-star-arrested-for-threats.html
- British Hit Singles & Albums