Although Men at Work were not the first successful band from Australia, they may very well be the band most associated with it. With a series of catchy videos that featured radio friendly songs, Men at Work were an international phenom in the first half of the 80’s. Their music was underrated as they drew from more influences (a touch of Reggae, a woodwind and a solid horn section) and the success they had around the world was well deserved. They didn’t stay on the scene long, but they brought the ears of the world to Australia; something their country mates did not do.
The bulk of those who are aware of Talk Talk probably are aware of them from their early Synth Pop recordings (and perhaps by No Doubt’s cover of It’s My Life). Beyond that, lay a band whose constant progression left a solid catalogue which in retrospect is a brilliant retrospective of the times they recorded (1981-1991). Those who have experienced all of their work view them as an accomplished complete group as opposed to a blip on the musical radar.
Although the Surfaris are predominantly only remembered for one song (Wipe Out), that song featured one of the most basic yet powerful guitar riffs of all time and more importantly one of the first (and still to this day one of the best) drum solos ever. Guitarists and drummers to this day still cut their teeth to that song and though they did not have an extensive album catalogue it was a solid one and they were one of the better Surf bands ever. The question is can they get in on the strength of their biggest hit.
With beautiful harmonies and as one of the first political Folk groups of memory, there can be little doubt that the threesome established their place in musical history. The question is does the most successful Folk group of the 60’s have enough Rock and Roll credibility to get into the Hall? Unlike Dylan or even Joan Baez, Peter, Paul & Mary may have had some songs about anti-establishment ideas, but they look like your aunt and uncles. They have yet to receive a nomination, and the Hall may remain reluctant a group that seems so mellow.