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Men At Work - Cargo

CBS/Columbia CK 38660
1982.10

Men at Work stand as the first band I ever saw live,
back when I was a wee lad in 1982. They played the Santa Barbara County Bowl with Mental As Anything opening (how's that for an '80s flashback?). It's probably where I smelled pot the first time. It was certainly my first tour T-shirt (longsleeve baseball-style, as was the fashion). And Cargo has been in my collection since it came out. But I hadn't listened to it for a long time until I got the CD (and not the remastered version, which I'm still looking for).

Far from being Police-copyists and a dated embarrassment, I think the album still holds up well. This was the early '80s, so the drums are not Gotterdamerung-volume. Apart from a few twee synth sounds here and there, the band is tight (they're like a poppy King Crimson on "I Like To,"? an otherwise throwaway song that turns into an angular jam). Best of all is Colin Hay's lyrics and general songwriting. Yes, he wrote a song about a Vegemite sandwich, but most of this album is sunshine-dappled angst. I think there's a total of one song that could be considered a love song"”"Blue For You"?"”and that ends with intimations of suicide ("I could take a big jump!"?). But mostly there's this: "Blood on the pillow on my bed / Explains the pain that's in my head."? ("High Wire"?). Or songs about nuclear war ("It's a Mistake"?), angst-fueled insomnia ("Overkill"? a great song that was always too dark to have been a single), directionlessness ("No Restrictions"?), or post-breakup depression (the also fabulous and justifiably long "No Sign of Yesterday"?). Great guitars solos on all these, and I'm not a guitar solo guy. They're minimal but refined.

The other thing I enjoyed: the air between the instruments. There's been so much muddy production recently that the sound of this album suddenly stood out as enjoyably crisp. I never followed Men at Work after the core group split (and "Two Hearts"? is just a jumble of sequenced noise), but I'd like to believe Colin Hay is still writing some good tunes. (Decide for yourself.)

Comments

Hi there it was great to read your review on an album that influenced me with my music so much in so many ways. I was just 3 years old when I first heard it and I was taken by the picture sleeve that Ron Strykert painted since I was a kid. I have the original design which looks slightly different along with the acetate from the mastering plant!

So yeah after many years of being a big fan I finally made contact with Ron (Strykert) who is very lovely and we talk quite a bit. He has a myspace page if there are any men at work fans out there wanna know what happened to him..

www.myspace.com/ronstrykert
A great album and it will stay with me forever.

Lee

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