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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Still Strong, August 3, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
Nineteen years after buying the original "Business as Usual" on cassette (and wearing it out years ago), my CD arrived today. I hadn't heard some of these songs for years; "People Just Love To Play With Words" and "I Can See It In Your Eyes" are particular gems that I've rediscovered like some momento lost in my attic. The track listing is awesome; can anyone name a better album closer than "Down By The Sea"? Outstanding. "Business" is as competitive and fresh as it was in 1982. For an '80's album, it does not sound dated (thanks in large part to the use of REAL drums at a time when machines were par for the course!). I will always regard Jerry Speiser as one of the better and more innovative drummers in rock and roll. Colin Hay's voice is timeless. The lyrics are intelligent (if not sometimes odd). Excellent musicianship and crafty songwriting make for a remarkable album.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of The Best Albums in the last 20 years!, January 26, 2001
By 
"chickenbone67" (Pittsburgh, PA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
Although the bands popularity has faded through the years, this album is an icon of the 80's. Known for its chart topping songs, the album also boasts 8 other very good songs, such as "Be Good Johnny", "Catch A Star" and "Down By The Sea". This is one of those albums you can put in your CD player and just let it play the whole way through. Most bands like to have a consistant sound, through instuments. This band uses it's vocals from lead singer Colin Hay. The instumentation varies throughout the entire album so it doesn't put in a "trance" with the same old sound. If you like musical variety with great vocals, then this is a MUST HAVE for your CD collection.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stands the TIme Test, December 9, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
This album is much more subtle than was appreciated in 1982. Now, 17 years later, it stands the time test. I got to hear Men At Work at a small concert they put on in Houston in 1999, and they were every bit as good as when I heard them in concert in 1983. This album had the monster hits Who Can It Be Now and Down Under but my favorite song was I Can See It In Your Eyes, the greatest morning ski song ever made. Plug it in when you first hit the slopes for the warm up run--amazing...[Winter kisses when your lips were blue/like chasing wild geese in the snow/Faces, places on the windowpane/but that's a long long time ago.../We go to a restaurant, but you don't like wine/you say it's love you want/but there is no time/I realize/I can see it in your eyes/You're moving on to something more...]
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Greatest Album of all Time, January 21, 2003
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
In my opinion, this is the GREATEST ALBUM OF ALL TIME. Colin Hay's smooth vocals, Greg Ham's memorable saxaphone riffs, and the smooth blending of rock, reggae, and new wave music make this album a classic. It also features some of Men At Work's most popular hits, such as Who Can It Be Now and Down Under. This album has very diverse songs; the punk rock sound of Helpless Automatan, soulful reggae of Catch a Star, and the memorable Underground. Do yourself a great favor, and buy this album.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars No Work Just Play!, July 6, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
This is one of those albums that no matter what era it is it still sounds fresh.
In a time when most artist were experimenting with the electronical side of things these guys keep to the basics.
Each of the five original members having a very unquie signature sound makes this Album as one of the all time greatest Australian Albums. Even todays standards most artists don't have that true originality that only comes every so often.
With hit songs like 'Who Can It Be Now' & Down Under there's no wonder why this album did so well!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Refreshing Album That May Take A While To Fully Appreciate, July 30, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
I first bought this album when I was a teenager back in the early 80's. I got it mainly for the tunes I had heard on the radio at the time "Who Can It Be Now?" "Down Under" and "Be Good Johnny".

Needless to say, I played the heck out of the first side and thought the second side was just filler.

Many years later I bought the CD and listened to the whole thing more...as an adult this time around. I was pleasantly surprised at how well this album had aged and how I had begun to really love the the second half of the album, which went virtually unnoticed by radio airplay.

The second half features "People Just Love To Play With Words", "Touching The Untouchables", and "Catch A Star", which are excellent pieces of work...much better than any of the singles.

This is a great album by men that may have been largely underrated. It's too bad they couldn't keep working.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars It Can Be Men at Work Now!, May 6, 2005
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
Men at Work exploded in the United States in the formative years of MTV. Their inventive music videos and catchy music captured an audience in the throes of a disco music backlash. Men at Work provided a new sound for a new decade and a new medium.

This album begins with one of Men at Work's signature songs, "Who Can It Be Now?" The song has a predominant saxophone that, in combination with Colin Hay's voice, provides a unique sound. The lyrics for this catchy song are somewhat humorous as they initially describe someone who might be us, wanting to be left alone by a salesman or some other unwelcome door knocker. As the song progresses, we realize that the singer's real fear is that they are coming to take him away, and you realize that perhaps the singer is mentally not quite all there.

The second song is more serious. "I Can See It in Your Eyes" conveys the strange feelings we sometimes have during changes in relationships. The fast song with its dark undertone speaks of images that we sometimes associate with relationships. The collage of phrases initially appears to be unrelated until you tie them together with how we often think as we replay things that happen over a period of years.

The next song is pure play. "Down Under" is yet another signature song for Men at Work. The song appears to have a number of Australian slang words, which makes the song incomprehensible in places. However, the enthusiasm, pace and harmony pull you into this song. The catchy beat and easily remembered refrain make this a song that will have you singing along when it appears on an oldies station, though it is hard for me to believe that the 80s are already classified as oldies.

I have always liked the next song, "Underground." However, I must admit that I am clueless as to the precise meaning of the song. The words hint at survival during troubled times, but other references are less sure. I think because I saw "Mad Max" and "The Road Warrior" about the time this album came out that I associate this song with those two movies. Like many other Men at Work songs, the music is catchy and you want to sing along, but the lyrics are too hard to remember without memorizing them.

Men at Work rarely created songs that, in retrospect, were throwaway songs. However, "Helpless Automation" may well be such a song. The music is reasonably good, but the lyrics seem like something Devo might have been singing rather than Men at Work. The following song, "People Just Love to Play with Words," is also one of Men at Work's lesser songs. The song starts out somewhat serious, but the reference to a puzzle throws a bit of humor into the song making it much less serious.

The following song is a song about a boy who wants to spend his time dreaming and doing his own thing. "Be Good Johnny" is a kind of tribute to the Chuck Berry song, "Johnny B. Goode." Like the Chuck Berry song, this song is fast and catchy, with Men at Work's unique style. The harmony on the "dreaming" portion of the lyrics is very good. However, the endless "be good be good be good" can feel a trifle overlong sometimes.

"Touching the Untouchables" is the first completely serious song on this CD. The words relate to homeless people. While there are wry twists in the lyrics, the ironic humor is cold because of the context. The music is somewhat downbeat and sad in places. The song is almost out of place given the lighter nature of most of the songs on this CD.

The next song moves back into a more hopeful subject. "Catch a Star" advise everyone to chase a dream, no matter how old you are. Though the tone of the music and the singing is downbeat, the words are relatively upbeat, suggesting there is always hope in a person's life. That hope can extend from career to personal relationships, suggested by various portions of the lyrics.

The last song on this CD has always been one of my favorite Men at Work songs. "Down by the Sea" can be interpreted to fit several topical genres. When I am reading a fantasy novel I see the song relating to voyages to unknown places or quests in faraway lands. At other times I see the song as being a love song. Of course, the plain reading of the words is that the song is about the men who go to sea, whatever their reason or purpose. The tone of this nearly seven minute long song, the longest on this CD, is serious. While Men at Work created catchy songs that are pop, this song is a beautiful song best played loud with the ability to concentrate. This song may be Men at Work's best song.

Men at Work existed for all too short a period of time. Their unique style has yet to have a rival. Of the three albums they created in the early 80s, "Business as Usual," in 1981, "Cargo," in 1983, and "Two Hearts," in 1985, this album was the best. Men at Work's star burned brightly during their relatively short run at the top of the charts; perhaps too brightly as they faded as fast as their rising fame.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Business As Usual is the bands all time best work., May 26, 2000
By 
michael kurkowski (concord, north carolina) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
This mid 1982 release was pure joy for me growing up in Western, New York as a young boy of 10 years of age. My parents had bought me a copy as soon as it came out. But being as young boys are i broke my vinal but soon to be replaced at a yard sale the following week, and i still have that same copy. I could'nt say enough how much i still love it after 18 years. The songs stood the test of time, and are still great. my favorits are with colin hays voice on it, Boy can this guy sing. Tunes like (I can see it in your eyes) (underground) and the ron strkert written (people just love to play with words) of greg hams sax blowing to the intro LOVE IT. And who could forget greg hams written (helpless automation) along with 3 more mentionables (touching the untouchables) (catch a star) and the song i could listen to over and over again the haunting (down by the sea) This may be a forgotten classic shoved away with time, but don't let that fool you. This is an album worth remembering.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A GREAT AUSSIE BAND, January 18, 2000
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
What can one say about men at work. For any aussie who has travelled and lived in a foreign country "down under" is our national anthem. The album is pure AUSSIE class and just simply one of those absolute CLASSIC groups and albums of the 80's. I am a HUGE 80's fan and this particular album you simply just CAN NOT MISS!.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Beat, Great Sound, Moderate POP/ROCK, April 11, 2002
By 
carl womack (north carolina) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Business As Usual (Audio CD)
This is one of those albums you can actually sing along with once you know the words, which by the way you can understand without having to look them up on a website. Back in the 80's before there were CD's, The lp stayed a hot seller for 15 weeks. And no wonder, They were a huge hit on MTV and the Song "Who Can It Be Now" was one of the most requested songs of all time as well as the "Who Can It Be Now" video. This is moderate rock. Nothing too heavy. In other words a pleasant upbeat sound. You have the usual drums, guitars, and the like, but you also have keyboards and sax. The tops hits from the lp/cd are "Who can it be Now" and "Down Under". I own it and I love it. The sounds on some of the songs are very artistic making me think of things like Africa and of course Australia.
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Business As Usual
Business As Usual by Men at Work (Audio CD - 1990)
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