Colin Hay I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself (Vinyl Reissue)
Release Date: June 26, 2026
Label: Compass
Colin Hay's heartfelt covers album I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself gets a striking new limited-edition black-and-white swirl vinyl reissue.
I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself found Colin Hay looking back to the songs that shaped him long before he became the voice of Men at Work. Originally recorded during the isolation of 2021 and now available on a limited-edition black-and-white swirl vinyl pressing, the album serves as both a tribute to the music of his youth and a reminder of just how distinctive his own voice has become.
The project began almost by accident. After the death of Gerry Marsden, Hay picked up his guitar and recorded a simple version of "Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying." He sent it to longtime collaborator Chad Fischer, who added subtle arrangements that inspired Hay to keep going. Before long, ten songs had taken shape.
Each selection carries a personal connection. "Waterloo Sunset" recalls the soundtrack playing as Hay's family left Scotland for Australia in 1967. "I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself" brings back memories of working in his parents' record shop in Saltcoats, where Dusty Springfield's records were constant fixtures on the charts. Del Amitri's "Driving With The Brakes On" reminds him of late-night drives through California, while "Many Rivers To Cross" honors the lasting impact Jimmy Cliff and The Harder They Come had on him decades earlier.
Rather than trying to recreate these classics, Hay strips them back and lets their songwriting shine. Whether tackling "Norwegian Wood," "Can't Find My Way Home," "Across The Universe," or Glen Campbell's "Wichita Lineman," he approaches each performance with the quiet confidence of someone who understands exactly why these songs have endured.
For listeners who grew up with the original recordings, I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself feels like reconnecting with old friends through a familiar voice. For everyone else, it's another chapter in Colin Hay's remarkable career, proving that great songs never stop revealing something new.