| 1. I'm Mad |
| 2. Hardcore |
| 3. Rampage |
| 4. Manslaughter |
| 5. Jane 3 |
| 6. For My People |
| 7. Mr. Bozack |
| 8. Gold Digger |
| 9. Give The People |
| 10. Rap Is Outta Control |
| 11. Brothers On My Jock |
| 12. Underground |
| 13. Hit Squad Heist |
| 14. Funky Piano |
| 15. Give The People (Feep Mix) |
Editorial Reviews
Japanese Version featuring a Bonus Track: 'give the People (Jeep Mix)'. Also Includes Two Video Tracks: 'gold Digger' and 'rampage'.
Business As Usual,Epmd,Universal/Def Jam,Rap
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Business as Usual
Men at Work Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000088E77 Release Date: 2003-02-11 |
Tracks:
- Who Can It Be Now?
- I Can See It In Your Eyes
- Down Under
- Underground
- Helpless Automaton
- People Just Love To Play With Words
- Be Good Johnny
- Touching The Untouchables
- Catch A Star
- Down By The Sea
- Crazy Non (Bonus Track)
- Underground (Live( (Bonus Track)
- Who Can It Be Now? (Live)
- F-19 (Bonus Track)
Customer Reviews:
perfect condition, no cracked cases, no scratches.......2007-07-28
Australia's greatest new wave export and that is no joke!.......2006-04-20
Great eighties rock music.......2006-04-20
80's cheese.......2006-04-19
Still a classic new wave album after all these years!.......2006-04-19
The title for Men at Work's debut album says it all: Business as Usual(good straight rock songs with a reggae influence). This album is a classic.
The band(which consisted of Scotland born guitarist, vocalist and songwriter Colin Hay and Australians John Rees(bass), Greg Ham(sax/keyboards), Ron Strykert(guitar) and Jerry Speiser(drums)) got signed to Columbia Records first in Australia because of the song Who Can it Be Now. After the song did well in Australia, America's branch of Columbia/CBS signed the group and released this debut in the spring of 1982. How is this album, read ahead and find out(as I did at age 6 when I kept heisting my sister's record and then subsequently got the cassette now remastered CD).
The opening Who Can it Be Now kicks off the album and was the song that gave Men at Work its first US Top 10 hit and is a great rocker. Next is I Can See It In Your Eyes and is a great rocker with some tasty solos from Strykert. Next is the chart topping Down Under and is a great number and a classic flute solo from Ham and popularized the term vegamite in the US which was unknown outside Australia prior to 1982. Next is the rocker Underground which is a great rocker. The first half ends with Greg Ham's vocal debut Helpless Automaton which is about a robot helplessly in love.
The second half begins with the Strykert penned rocker People Just Love to Play With Words which is a great song. Next is Business As Usual's third and final single Be Good Johnny which is a superb rocker. We slow down a bit with the mid tempo Touching the Untouchables which is a great song. We follow with the reggae-ish sounding rocker Catch a Star which would have not sounded out of place on The Police's first three albums. We end with the classic epic Down By the Sea which is my favorite track on the album.
This album turned out to be a huge success and was #1 on the US album charts for an astounding 15 weeks in late 1982 and early 1983(only to be KO'd by Michael Jackson's Thriller).
I really didn't like new wave(save The Police and The Cars) but Men at Work was one band from childhood I did not ever really outgrow because their songs were catchy and quirky and are still good to listen to.
The album was re-released with remastered sound and FIVE BONUS TRACKS including three live versions and two B-sides.
Recommended!
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Business as Usual
Men at Work Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000025R3 Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Who Can It Be Now?
- I Can See It In Your Eyes
- Down Under
- Underground
- Helpless Automation
- People Just Love To Play With Words
- Be Good Johnny
- Touching The Untouchables
- Catch A Star
- Down By The Sea
Amazon.com
Helped immeasurably by the heavy rotation with which its clever videos were greeted by the then brand-new MTV network, the Australian group Men at Work were one of the biggest--and least anticipated--success stories of 1982. On the strength of two No. 1 singles, the sax-driven "Who Can It Be Now" and the geocentric "Down Under," the band's debut album spent an astonishing 15 weeks at the top of the charts. Bandleader Colin Hay's Sting-like, reggae-influenced singing was welcomed by the emerging video music generation--even if they had no idea what a "Vegemite" sandwich was. --Billy AltmanCustomer Reviews:
One of the best albums of the early 1980s...........2005-10-11
It Can Be Men at Work Now!.......2005-05-06
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.
Greatest Album of all Time.......2003-01-22
No Work Just Play!.......2002-07-06
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!
Good Beat, Great Sound, Moderate POP/ROCK.......2002-04-11
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Business as Usual
EPMD Manufacturer: Fontana Def Jam ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000024J0 Release Date: 1994-09-06 |
Tracks:
- I'm Mad
- Hardcore
- Rampage
- Manslaughter
- Jane 3
- For My People
- Mr. Bozak
- Gold Digger
- Give The People
- Rap Is Outta Control
- Brothers On My Jock
- Underground
- Hit Squad Heist
- Funky Piano
Amazon.com
EPMD's 14-cut third album, Business As Usual, is their bumpingest and most influential. By 1990 the Long Island duo of Erick Sermon and Parrish Smith had perfected their beatmaking formula. They didn't have to raid vocoder guru Roger Troutman's vaults for the funk. On "Gold Digger," an austere commentary on materialistic female groupies, and the battle-rhyme cut "Manslaughter," the duo flex their unusual ability to meld danceable rhythm tracks with hardcore rhymes, a strength which helped EPMD appeal to rap fans of all persuasions. "Rampage" resurrected a burnt-out LL Cool J. "Hardcore" and "Brothers on My Jock" marked the introduction of Redman to the MC game, further proving that the boondocks can produce something other than strip malls. --Dalton HigginsCustomer Reviews:
"All Non Believers Can Get The Bolzack" (Rating: 9 out of 10- -4.5 stars) {400th Review!!}.......2007-06-23
Business As Usual has many classic tracks on here. Redman gets his first appearance on the song "Hardcore" and "Brothers On My Jock" both excellent tracks. Another excellent track on here is "Manslaughter" where Erick and Parrish rhyme over a dope beat. Before Kanye West went popular with the song "Gold Digger", Erick and Parish had a song with the exact title and the same subject matter. I also like the beat to that song here as well. I personally believe that is the best track on this LP.
And the production here is done by Erick and Parish as well, with the exception of "Funky Piano" which was by George Spivey. The production here has that EPMD flavor that everyone loves so much. "Jane 3" has a nice beat as well and was produced nicely (with the samples and etc.). "Rap Is Outta Control" has a boom bap, neck snapping beat to it (I swear they are freestyling on this track).
There aren't really too much complaints about the album. EPMD's "Business As Usual" is definately worth owning. Also it wasn't easy to make, seeing that this came out in 1990, and the fact that Strictly Business & Unfinished Business were both made in '88 and '89 respectively. So making three albums in three years wasn't easy to do, not to mention that they are constistant year after year. Erick and Parrish are still running on this album. "Business As Usual" isn't their best LP, but it was definately one of the best in '90. Fans of 90's rap will love this album. They would go on to release Business Never Personal in '92 (which is out of print, why?) and break up into their solo careers for five years. In fact, I recommend the first four albums, because all of them are classic or near classic LPs. Peace!
Lyrics: A-
Production: A+
Guest Appearances: A
Musical Vibes: A
My Top 5 Tracks:
1. Gold Digger
2. Rampage (featuring LL Cool J)
3. Manslaughter
4. Hardcore (featuring Red Man)
5. Jane 3
Honorable Mention Tracks
1. Rap Is Outta Control
2. Hit Squad Heist (with Redman and K Solo)
My favorite by EPMD, topten list over best hip-hop records ever. Straight up.......2006-06-16
Long Island have raised a couple of rap legends up through the years. Rakim and the whole Public Enemy are originally from that area. The buddies Erick Sermon and Parrish Smith from Brentwood should also make huge success, and in the wake of the singles "It's My Thing" and "Strictly Business", their debutalbum sold to gold in just three weeks. This was impressive salenumbers in 1988, and since that EMPD have become one of hip-hops most famous duos. Their third album, which was their first for Def Jam, are in my opinion their highlight in their impressive long careers.
On Business As Usual, EPMD appears rougher than before, and even though a hardcore image ain't quite them, it was at least very timeright. Erick and Parrish have never sounded better than here. Check out "Hardcore" and "Brothers On My Jock", and the man himself LL Cool J are guest on the sovereign hitsingle, "Rampage". DJ Scratch have an insane hook on this song, where his scratching sound genius. It sounds very energetic, and it's hard to explain, but the whole record basically has an unique energy and mood feel which make you never get tired of it. When it comes to production, EPMD had dug deeper after funk-samples this time. They moved away from Roget Troutman and George Clinton to advantage for names like Bob James and O'Jays. The production was also more dynamic. You needed more than just loop now. You needed more layers with samples, and E Double and PMD accepted the challenge successfully. They perfectionized their formula for beatmakin', on the same time they sat a new standard for 90's hip-hop.
Their flawless debutalbum, Strictly Business, introduced us to a new type of funk which was about to affect a whole generation of producers. The follow-up, Unfinished Business, became a more coarse affair. On their third try everything matched. In fact this is so good I have it in my top 10-list, and it's actually Just Blaze's favorite record. He got his inspiration from this one, listen to The Game "No More Fun And Games", where Just used the same sample as the EPMD song "For My People".
You need this in your collection. Buy "Strictly Business" too, more classic material from EPMD.
The Ancient Art of Neck Snapping.......2006-04-27
EPMDS BEST.......2006-04-13
The Third Of Three Straight Classics [Part 3 of 3] (5 Stars).......2006-01-05
Anyway, this is a 5 star banger without question. I said this in my other two EPMD reviews and I'll say it here, only a few other groups hit the ground running and dropped three straight classics: A Tribe Called Quest, BDP, Outkast (and quite possibly Organized Konfusion). What makes Business As Usual such a banger is the varied subject matter over hardcore production. EPMD had a knack for storytelling and covered a crazy range of topics. Whether they tackle things like money hungry women (Gold Digger), raps influence on mainstream America (Give The People), rocking collaborations (Rampage), or just straight taking out sucker MCs (Hardcore), they do so all with a precision and flare that was practically flawless. And as a DJ, I can't forget to mention that DJ Scratch is simply one of the illest there's ever been. The scratches and cuts are definitely high grade. His skills are put on display for all to see all throughout the album (the scratches on Funky Piano are tighter that gnat booty).
If there are flaws on this album you'd be hard pressed to find them. I wasn't really feeling their attempt to sound "hard" on this album, but it works, so I can't really call it a flaw.
Business As Usual is indeed a certified classic. EPMD kept the clubs dancin' and got the street heads open. The beats are beyond dope, the rhymes are on point, and the scratches and cuts are nothing short of superior....and lets not forget that this is the album that Redman made his debut on. There's no way this album is anything less than 5 stars. This is a MUST HAVE album from one of the best groups in hip hop history.
Standout Tracks: Give the People, Mr. Bozack, Rampage feat. LL Cool J, Gold Digger (My Favorite), Funky Piano, Jane III, Brothers On My Jock, Hardcore feat. Redman, Hit Squad Heist feat. Redman and K Solo, & Rap Is Outta Control
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Business As Usual
ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005YTEQ Release Date: 2001-05-02 |
Tracks:
- All I Need
- Get Real
- Barriers
- One Wish
- When I Get Home
- Got To Get You Into My Life
- Silent Ruin
- I Can't Wait
- Not The Same
- I Want To Know You
- Days Gone By
- The Return
Album Description
"If you can make a record, you ought towhy not?"That's the response of Steve Hindalong, lyricist/percussionist for The Choir, when asked about the release of Flap Your Wings, the band's first studio album in four years. "Ultimately," says Hindalong, "if you get to keep making records, you win. You're fortunate. At this point in our career, with all of us well beyond the age of optimum marketability, we're astounded that we get to keep making music and that people want to hear it. Whether it's a million or a thousand. That's a lot of people that you receive feedback from and get to establish a rapport with."
To understand the band's motivation for recording Flap Your Wings, one needs to look back to a reunion concert The Choir performed at a festival sponsored by KLYT in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in the summer of 1999. Hindalong has a similar response to a query about what coaxed the seminal modern rock band out of its three-year long, self-imposed retirement.
"Somebody asked us to play a concert, and we asked, `How much?' And then we said `Yes,' the drummer explains, a sly smile crossing his face. Guitarist/vocalist Derri Daugherty, Steve's friend of over 20 years (and creative partner for 17) offers a bit more elaboration on the subject. "There's always been a tremendous amount of good will toward The Choirnobody's ever said `please stay retired!' That was definitely one motivation for doing the reunion show. We had been away from the band long enough that the business stress didn't bog us down." Perhaps saxophonist "Buckeye" Dan Michaels nails it best: "We had all grown so much as individuals since we last performed as a band. Maybe we found that we still have something to say. Maybe we still want to connect with our audience and with each other. Maybe we simply wanted to rock. I'm sure it's more than that, but either way I think we're pretty excited to get back to doing what we love in The Choir with the friends that we love so much."
Customer Reviews:
Building Up Christ's Kingdom.......2007-05-29
Another hidden treasure.......2003-03-09
Buck Enterprises is a great band. I liked their trumpets with their music and the singer is pretty good too. He voice isnt the best, but i still like it. The cd has some good beats and i like the love and emotion showed in the song When I Get Home. Only hope has good lyrics and Real proclaims for christains to get real in their faith as some dont. Track 3 talks about how the christian church is divided and that we should forget our differences and just worship and serve god together as we are called to do.
All in all, if you like soft rock u will probably like this cd, even if u dont like it at first, just give it a shot, u wont b let down.
Business as Usual is anything but.......2002-11-21
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Business as Usual
Righteous Jams Manufacturer: Abacus ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000HCPSVW Release Date: 2006-10-17 |
Tracks:
- Thought Vacation
- More Is More
- Instinct and Music
- 23
- Nothing Happens (Til It Happens)
- Business as Usual
- Lizards
- Adams St.
- Price of Redemption [Instrumental]
- Price of Redemption
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Business as Usual
Grant Geissman Manufacturer: Positive Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000JYV Release Date: 1995-08-08 |
Tracks:
- Business As Usual
- Chase The Dragon
- Gypsies
- Thinking Out Loud
- Tomorrow The World
- Skin Deep
- India
- Quiet Time
- The Hardest Part
- Tears Like Rain
- Miles Apart
- Chase The Dragon (Long Version)
Customer Reviews:
Best Album on the Planet.......2004-04-22
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Cactus of Knowledge
Manufacturer: Enja ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000053ZLG Release Date: 2002-05-25 |
Tracks:
- The Lewinsky March
- Business As Usual
- Praises et Creme Fraiche
- Got To Go Home
- Oum Said
- Malrese Chicken Farm
- Me Muse M'amuse
- Pont Neuf
Customer Reviews:
Seductively engaging 'new music'.......2003-10-02
The rhythmic wealth of this album should be a particular attraction. Apart from some beautifully subdued delights, there is constantly a firm but not overbearing rhythmic drive, which is highly syncopated but relentlessly groovy, while being overlaid with subtly varying percussive intricacies that add depth to the general theme/feel of each composition rather than detract from it.
The discipline of all the players, including the leader, might cause some less attentive listeners to overlook how highly skilled they are. That does not matter too much as this music can be enjoyed at a party or as a work/study background just as much as it can when you let it completely absorb you or when you try to analyze it. Also, for those particularly keen on strummed string instruments, I quote the Penguin Guide to Jazz description of Khalil's oud playing as "fleet and rhythmic as that of any jazz guitarist."
The attention afforded to the tone qualities of each instrument (oud, cello, two trumpets, euphonium, French horn, tuba, clarinet, alto and tenor saxes, frame drums, and drums), including the way the instruments complement each other in this respect is awe-inspiring.
I haven't been able to stop listening to this for two days straight. It has seduced me into breaking my own new rule against writing lengthy reviews.
Ambitious orchestral jazz with "middle east" ambience.......2003-01-01
In short, an object, and a programme of music, to treasure.
RAK reaching new heights of creativity!.......2002-10-04
The compositions are intricate, using new methods of scoring (as can be seen in the partiture for "oum said"), giving room to solos, duets and fun cacaphonies (as in Got To Go Home for instance) and also play a lot on dynamics - utilizing the potential of this relatively large ensemble.
The moods swiftly go from mythological to post modern, and yet there is so much sincerity and dignity in every note. This album shows us RAK experimental and true as ever.
Listen, learn, and enjoy!
Exquisite music from a great original composer.......2002-07-06
Not that bad, not that great.......2002-06-25
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Business as Usual
Robin McAuley Manufacturer: Zard ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00002NDNP Release Date: 2001-01-03 |
Tracks:
- One Way Ticket
- Easy On Me
- When The Rain Came
- Every Little Thing
- In The Groove
- Bad Times
- Time Will Dry Your Tears
- Glass Houses
- Let Me Go
- I Was Gonna Be The One
- Where Will You Go
Album Description
Japanese edition of the M.S.G. vocalist's 1999 solo outing. 11 tracks.Customer Reviews:
Glad To Hear Frankie's Guitar Again.......2000-05-21
It's only Rock'n'roll.......2000-04-12
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Business as Usual
Darrell Nulisch & Texas Heat Manufacturer: Black Top Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000007QBF Release Date: 1992-07-13 |
Tracks:
- Count On Me
- Just Around The Corner
- Love And War
- Beggin' You To Leave
- Teach Me How To Love You
- Love Attack
- Orange Soda
- Pouring Water On A Drowning Man
- Inside Out
- Business As Usual
- I Can't Be Satisfied
- Won't Throw It All Away
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Business As Usual
Secret Affair Manufacturer: Captain Mod ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005AXPJ Release Date: 2006-03-14 |
Tracks:
- Lost in the Night
- Follow the Leader
- Do You Know?
- Hide and Seek
- I Could Be You
- Somewhere in the City
- She's on Fire
- Three Wise Monkeys
- One Voice in the Darkness
- Dancemaster
- Big Beat
- One Day (In Your Life)
Album Description
Reissue of The Jam inspired, mod revivalist's 1981 album. 12 tracks including, 'Lost In The Night' and 'Follow The Leader'. 2001 release. Standard jewel case.Customer Reviews:
Mod Perfection.......2001-07-17
Dance Music:
- Butt Nekkid [Explicit Lyrics]
- Can't Get the Best Pt. 2 [CD-single] [Import]
- Chapters and Verses, Vol. 1 [Explicit Lyrics]
- Conspiracy [Explicit Lyrics]
- Definition of Ill [Explicit Lyrics]
- Diggin' the Crates, Vol. 2: For the West Coast Funk
- Eat at Whitey's
- Eat at Whitey's
- Ecleftic [Import]
- Entrepeni**A
Dance Music
Brian: Doctor Merryheart; For Valor
First Witness - Live at the Belly Up [Live]
Light of Day: Tribute to Bruce Springsteen [Import]
Funkentelechy Vs. the Placebo Syndrome
Bach: Goldberg Variations BWV 988 (Edition Bachakademie Vol 112) /Koroliov (piano)