Colin Hay was born in 1953 in Saltcoats, North Ayrshire, Scotland. He emigrated to Australia with his family at age 14 in 1967. In 1978, Hay met Ron Strykert and began playing acoustic music as a duo. Hay and Strykert formed the core of the band Men at Work, with Hay on vocals, guitar and keyboards, and Strykert, on guitar, vocals and bass guitar. Hay and Strykert added Jerry Speiser on drums, John Rees on bass guitar and backing vocals and Greg Ham on flute, saxophone and keyboards. The group released their debut album 'Business as Usual' in 1981.
In 1982, the success of Men at Work and their albums 'Business as Usual' and 'Cargo' prompted Hay to relocate to Los Angeles. He settled in the Topanga region of the city and has resided in the USA since and in January of 2016 became a U.S. citizen. Hay joined as guest vocalist with The Incredible Penguins in 1985, for a cover of "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)", a charity project for research on little penguins, which peaked at #10 on the Australian Kent Music Report in December.
Following the break-up of Men at Work in 1985, Hay released several major label solo albums, including 'Looking for Jack' (Columbia) and 'Wayfaring Sons' (MCA), to fluctuating commercial success. In 2011, Hay commented on his early solo career, stating, "After Men at Work, for the better part of a decade, I was stumbling around being unfocused. It was pre-internet, I really had to try to find my audiences by going out on tour. Men at Work really didn't build a foundational audience. We came in as a pop band with enormous radio success; once that goes away and the band breaks up the audience tends to go away with it. You're left with what you want to make of it. When you start out doing those tours, you start again and you tend not to attract a very big number of people. I'd play to a hundred people or sometimes less."
In 2004 he contributed to the Garden State soundtrack with his solo song "I Just Don't Think I'll Ever Get Over You". In addition to recording, Hay also established his own recording label, Lazy Eye Records, somewhat incorrectly named for his own divergent ocular condition, exotropia, or divergent strabismus (the usage of lazy eye generally refers to Amblyopia) and has made appearances in cult movies such as Cosi and television shows, such as The Larry Sanders Show, JAG, and The Mick Molloy Show. Hay also appeared on television in the NBC show Scrubs, which along with episodes of ABC's What About Brian, NBC's The Black Donnellys, CBS's Cane, and the BBC hospital drama Casualty, have included performances of some of his previous songs.
In December 2005, Hay and Heather Mills released "My Brilliant Feat" as a charity single as a tribute to football player George Best, who died on 25 November of that year. Proceeds were forwarded to the Donor Family Network, supporting organ donor families and promoting organ and tissue donation. The single is available on iTunes with a bonus music video tribute to Best. In 2006 Hay provided his voice for one of the characters in animated movie The Wild. He has also been a member of Ringo Starr's eighth and tenth All-Starr Bands. He continues to perform regularly, including playing some folk venues.
On 13 February 2009, former Men at Work band member Ron Strykert was arrested for allegedly making death threats against Hay. Hay contributed music to the TV series Scrubs in the course of a number of episodes, including on-camera performances. In Episode 1 of Season 2 he performs an acoustic version of the Men at Work-hit "Overkill" and he also makes an appearance in "My Hard Labor"
Hay released his 10th album, 'American Sunshine', on 18 August 2009 on Compass Records. In 2009, Hay's former group, Men at Work, was named in a lawsuit alleging copyright infringement by Larrikin Music, which owns the rights to the "Kookaburra" song. Larrikin Music claims that part of a flute riff from the band's 1981 single "Down Under" was copied from "Kookaburra" originally written by a music teacher, Marion Sinclair, who died in 1988. In February 2010, a court ruled in favour of Larrikin Music. Although the petition from Larrikin Music requested 40% to 60% of royalties dating back to 1981 and future royalties, in July 2010 a judge awarded the plaintiff only 5% of royalties dating back to 2002 and the same amount of future royalties.
In May 2009, Hay performed at the Artist for the Arts Foundation benefit at Barnum Hall, Santa Monica High School, Santa Monica, California. Performing alongside Curt Smith of Tears for Fears, Fee Waybill (Tubes) and Venice and over 70 members of the Santa Monica High School Orchestra and Girls Choir, the benefit helped to provide funds for the continuation of music education in public schools. In August 2010, Hay performed in Missoula, Montana with a Los Angeles Roots rock band named Patrolled By Radar. In December 2013, Hay announced on his website that he was done touring "for the time being" and would spend 2014 writing and recording.
In 2015 he joined the Last Summer on Earth tour with Violent Femmes and Barenaked Ladies. On 4 August 2015, Colin Hay: Waiting for my Real Life, a documentary film about the singer, debuted at the Melbourne International Film Festival. Hay makes an appearance on BNL Rocks Red Rocks by Barenaked Ladies, a live album recorded on the Last Summer on Earth 2015 tour. On 27 January 2017, he released the first single "A Thousand Million Reasons" from his new album, 'Fierce Mercy' released 3 March 2017. He toured in support of the album throughout the US, UK and Australia. Also in 2017, Hay released his first audio book, Aesop's Fables with Colin Hay, published by Devault-Graves Digital Editions, for which he narrated 24 of Aesop's Fables written by author Tom Graves.
In late 2021, Australian producer Christian "Luude" Benson (from the Tasmanian electronic dance music duo Choomba) remixed Men at Work's "Down Under" as a drum and bass track, with Hay re-recording the vocal for the track's release on the Sweat It Out record label. "Down Under" by Luude featuring Colin Hay charted at #32 on the UK Singles chart on 7 January 2022 and at #48 in Australia (ARIA Top 50 Singles for week of 10 January 2022). Hay's fifteenth studio album, 'Now And The Evermore', was released on 18 March 2022.
"Hold Me" (#40) 1987 Columbia
"Looking for Jack" 1987 Columbia
"Can I Hold You?" 1987 Columbia
"Into My Life" 1990 MCA
"Wayfaring Sons" 1990 MCA
"Storm in My Heart" 1990 MCA
"I Haven't Seen You in a Long Time" (#49) 1995
"Don't Believe You Anymore" 1997 Hypertension
"My Brilliant Feat" 1998 Festival
"If I Go" 1998 Festival
"Goodbye My Red Rose" 1999 Hypertension
"Misty Bay" [with Cecilia Noël] 1999
"Far From Home" 2011
"Send Somebody" 2011
"Down Under 2012" 2012
"Trying to Get to You" 2014
"Mr. Grogan" 2016
"A Thousand Million Reasons" 2016
"Come Tumbling Down" 2017
"Secret Love" 2017
"You Saved Me from Myself" 2018
"Now and the Evermore" 2020
"I Just Don't Know What to Do with Myself" 2021
"Oh La La" 2021
'Looking for Jack' 1987 CBS
'Wayfaring Sons' 1990 MCA
'Peaks & Valleys' 1992 EastWest
'Topanga' 1994 Lazy Eye
'Transcendental Highway' 1998 Lazy Eye Records
'Going Somewhere' 2000 Lazy Eye Records
'Company of Strangers' 2002 Lazy Eye Records
'Man @ Work' 2003 Lazy Eye Records
'Are You Lookin' at Me?' 2007 Lazy Eye Records
'American Sunshine' 2009 Lazy Eye Records
'Gathering Mercury' 2011 Lazy Eye Records
'Next Year People' 2015 Lazy Eye Records
'Fierce Mercy' 2017 Lazy Eye
'I Just Don't Know What to Do With Myself ' 2021 Lazy Eye
'Now and the Evermore' 2022 Song
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Hay
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