Saturday, 21 March 2026

Post 796 - Men At Work - The Singles Collection


The nucleus of Men at Work formed in Melbourne around June 1979 with Colin Hay on lead vocals and guitar, Ron Strykert on bass guitar, and Jerry Speiser on drums. They were soon joined by Greg Ham on flute, sax and keyboards, and then John Rees on bass guitar, with Strykert switching to lead guitar. Hay had immigrated to Australia in 1967 from Scotland with his family In 1978, he had formed an acoustic duo with Strykert, which expanded by mid-1979 with the addition of Speiser. Around this time as a side project, keyboardist Greg Sneddon a former bandmate of Jerry Speiser, together with Speiser, Hay and Strykert, performed and recorded the music to "Riff Raff", a low budget stage musical, upon which Sneddon had worked. The name Men At Work was thrown into the hat by Colin Hay, and was seconded by Ron Strykert, when a name was required to put on the blackboard outside The Cricketer's Arms Hotel, Richmond. The band built a "grass roots" reputation as a pub rock band. In 1980, the group issued their debut single, "Keypunch Operator" backed by "Down Under", with both tracks co-written by Hay and Strykert. It was "self-financed" and appeared on their own independent, M. A. W. label.They were best known for breakthrough hits such as "Down Under", "Who Can It Be Now?", "Be Good Johnny", "Overkill", "It's a Mistake". In 1983, they were the first Australian artists to have a simultaneous No. 1 album and No. 1 single on the United States Billboard charts: "Business as Usual" (released on 9 November 1981) and "Down Under" (1981), respectively. With the same works, they achieved the distinction of a simultaneous No. 1 album and No. 1 single on the Australian, New Zealand, and United Kingdom charts. Their second album Cargo (2 May 1983) was No. 1 in Australia, No. 2 in New Zealand, No. 3 in the US, and No. 8 in the UK. Their third album Two Hearts (3 April 1985) reached the top 20 in Australia and top 50 in the US. In 1984, Speiser and Rees were asked to leave the group, leaving Hay, Ham, and Strykert as a trio, accompanied by session musicians. During the recording of the Two Hearts album, Strykert decided to leave. Soon after the 1985 release of Two Hearts, Ham left also, leaving Hay as the sole remaining member. Hay elected to work as a solo artist shortly thereafter in early 1986, and the Men at Work name was retired. On 19 April 2012, Ham was found dead at his home from an apparent heart attack. Thanks again to Henry DeRooy for the fine art work. Flac



 

Friday, 30 January 2026

Post 795 - Avalanche - The Singles 1976/1978

 

With the break up of The Bootleg Family Band in November 1975, Tony Naylor, Geoff Cox and Clive Harrison recruited Adrian Campbell and began gigging as Avalanche in early 1976.

The band’s catchy pop/rock sound was displayed on the singles "Wizard Of Love" (Feb 1976), "Sweet Baby Brown Eyes" (July 1976), "Landslide" (October 1976) and "Good For Me Good For You" (March 1977), and on their self-titled album in September 1976. Cox and Harrison left in early 1977 to be replaced by John Barnes (who in turn was quickly replaced by Barry Cram) and Graham Thompson (ex-Stars) respectively. Gerard McCabe also joined on keyboards, and this line-up released a version of The Beatles‘ "Got To Get You Into My Life" in November 1977.

By 1978, Naylor and Campbell had revamped the band as Front Page and issued the single "I Thought I’d Never Fall In Love Again". But by 1979 it was all over. After splitting, Naylor joined Jon English's backing band "Baxter Funt" and Campbell would be spotted in the early 80s as part of Funk band "Adrian's Wall". Thanks to Henry DeRooy for the artwork.


Tony Naylor Guitar/Vocals 1976 - 1977

Clive Harrison Bass/Vocals 1976 - 1977

Adrian Campbell Lead Vocals 1976 - 1977

Geoff Cox         Drums 1976 - 1977

Barry Cram Drums 1977 - 1977

Gerard McCabe Keyboards 1977 - 1977

John Barnes Drums 1977 - 1977

Graham Thompson Bass 1977 - 1977

Flac