Illinois Entertainer November 2015 | Page 12

Colin Sets full of wry storytelling at the venue's original Fairfax location would conclude as Hay adjourned to his merch table, signing fans' old Men at Work albums alongside newer solo discs like 1994's Topanga and 1998's Transcendental Highway. "It was a weird time, but it was great for me because it was like establishing yourself in a place where you never really lived before," says Hay. "That was as close to a little Colin Hay with Men at Work, circa 1981 11•2015 labradoodle. "The song originally did end [after the second verse]," says Hay. "I thought about my sister in Melbourne who has a groodle, which is a similar dog. Her first question to me would have been, 'What happened to the dog?' I had to give it the Hollywood ending." "Did You Just Take the Long Way Home" sweetens a story about lost love with a childhood memory. "My mother and I used to go for eggs on a Sunday to this farm in Melbourne," says Hay. "On the way back, we'd hit an intersection called the Five Ways. She always took the wrong turn. I knew she was going to do it, but I let her. It was always fun to have that extra time alone with my mother." Since 1991, Hay has played countless shows at night spot Largo in his adopted hometown of Los Angeles. family as you can get in terms of playing live.” Overlapping the period, Hay also played occasional Men at Work revival shows alongside late friend and bandmate Greg Ham. "We toured for six years from ‘96 until 2002," says Hay. "We had aspirations of doing something new. It didn't turn into what I had envisioned, but it was good to do what we did." "Where are all you people when I play my solo shows, "Hay once asked a packed Men at Work audience at House of Blues Los Angeles, goading fans with a smirk. When Hay performs in Chicago on November 6, he'll appear at the Vic Theatre before a crowd much larger than that House of Blues set. It's a triumph, but Hay remains pragmatic. "It feels good to play to any crowd, and that's the truth of it," he says, before 12 illinoisentertainer.com november 2015 remembering his own Dust Bowl years. "Still, when you go from 150,000 people to 40, it's a bit strange. Not only for a little while, but probably like 10 years, it was very tough. You wonder whether you're just kidding yourself." Ultimately, Hay's longevity is the result of dogged persistence. "Hand to hand combat, all the way," he says, laughing with a survivor's relief. Hay remembers that the faithful few were encouraging in lean times. "They would say, 'please don't stop. We love what you do. Come back, and we'll bring our friends,'" he says. "That's really the basis of it. It's an organic process of people telling other people. The best thing about it is it feels very real." Appearing The Vic Theatre,Chicago November 6, 2015, 8:00 PM, 3145 North Sheffield Avenue, Chicago. Jeff Elbell