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Men At Work - Welcome To America•Ca•Ca album flac

Men At Work - Welcome To America•Ca•Ca album flac Performer: Men At Work
Title: Welcome To America•Ca•Ca
Style: Pop Rock
Released: 1983
MP3 album: 1756 mb
FLAC album: 1891 mb
Rating: 4.2
Other formats: MPC AU AHX FLAC AAC XM DXD
Genre: Rock / Pop

Two Hearts is the third and final studio album by Australian group Men at Work, released on April 23, 1985. It is currently out of print. Drummer Jerry Speiser and bassist John Rees had left the band prior to the album's production, while guitarist Ron Strykert left the band during recording sessions. Touring behind the album saw sole remaining members Colin Hay and Greg Ham joined by guest musicians.

Overkill" is a song by Australian pop rock band Men at Work. It was released in 1983 as the second single from their second studio album, Cargo (see 1983 in music). It was written by lead singer Colin Hay. It peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100; No. 5 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart; and top 10 in Canada, Ireland, and Norway. The song was a departure from the group's style of reggae-influenced pop rock, featuring a melancholic feel musically and lyrically.

Men At Work's official music video for 'Down Under'. As featured on Contraband: The Best of Men At Work.

He is gone but never forgotten, and his contribution to the sound and personality of the band, is forever. I loved being in Men At Work.

Produced by S1 & J Rhodes. Welcome to America Lyrics. I was made in America Land of the free, home of the brave And right up under your nose you might see a sex slave being traded And who will do anything for the money Boy, a mama might sell her babies Sell porn, sell pills, anything to pay the bills Anything to bring that pay Gotta scratch that itch, gotta

Jim from Longmont, Co Men at Work musician Greg Ham was found dead in his Melbourne home April 19, 2012. You can hear him do his famous flute riff on this song.

Welcome to America is the sixth album by rapper Schoolly D. The album was released in 1994 and was his first and only album for Ruffhouse Records. Two singles were released for the album, Welcome to America and Another Sign. The beat on "Wanna Get Dusted" is a slower version of "PSK What Does It Mean?". I Wanna Get Dusted – 4:14. I Know You Want to Kill Me – 3:56.

Listen free to Men at Work – Business As Usual (Who Can It Be Now?, I Can See It in Your Eyes and more). Business as Usual is the debut album of Australian new wave band Men at Work, which was released in November 1981 in Australia, and April 1982 in the United States. Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last.

Tracklist

A1 No Restrictions
A2 I Can See It In Your Eyes
A3 Overkill
A4 People Just Love To Play With Words
A5 Shintaro
B1 Down Under
B2 Underground
B3 Helpless Automaton
B4 Who Can It Be Now?
B5 Mr. Entertainer

Companies, etc.

  • Published By – Larry Page Music, Inc.
  • Lacquer Cut At – Greg Lee Processing – L-12709

Credits

  • Cover – The Ted

Notes

Titles on labels:
A1) 52 Girls
A2) Let's Dance
A3) Rock And Roll
A4) He's In My Car
B1) Volcano Lava
B2) Phone Call
B3) Strobe Light
B4) Downtown
B5) Runaround

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Rights Society: BMI
  • Matrix / Runout (A-Side Label): 1282-A
  • Matrix / Runout (B-Side Label): 1282-B
  • Matrix / Runout (A-Side Runout Etching): Nom De Plume 1282-A L-12709
  • Matrix / Runout (B-Side Runout Etching): Nom De Plume 1282-B L-12709-X

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
1282 Men At Work Welcome To America•Ca•Ca ‎(LP, Unofficial) Nom De Plume 1282 1983
Comments: (1)
Uscavel
This bootleg record was recorded live, most likely from an amplifier feed, and that's the real weakness of it. There's absolutely no sense of ambiance (audience noise can only be heard when Colin talks to fans), no natural room reverb, and some instrument lines are muffled or completely missing. There's a lot of snare drums, but no bass drum at all, and barely traces of bass guitar. Without rhythm base, the sound is tinny, anechoic, dislocated. The listener has to make up mentally what was lost in recording. For most listeners, except old-school fans, that would be too much to ask. Technically, LP surface looks like a sloppy DIY job, but it plays surprisingly clean, no issues with surface noise or clicks here. And, yes, track names on the label are complete nonsense (Volcano Lava in place of Down Under, etc.). That said, the performance itself is solid, Mr. Hay as good as it gets.