"40 Hour Week (For a Livin')" | ||||
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Single by Alabama | ||||
from the album 40-Hour Week | ||||
B-side | "As Right Now" | |||
Released | April 17, 1985 (U.S.) | |||
Format | 7" | |||
Recorded | September 6, 1984 | |||
Genre | Country | |||
Length | 3:20 | |||
Label | RCA | |||
Writer(s) |
Dave Loggins Don Schlitz Lisa Silver |
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Producer(s) | Harold Shedd and Alabama | |||
Alabama singles chronology | ||||
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"40 Hour Week (For a Livin')" is a song written by Dave Loggins, Don Schlitz and Lisa Silver, and recorded by American country music band Alabama. It was released in April 1985 as the second single and title track from Alabama's album 40-Hour Week.
The song, a salute to the America's blue-collar workers, became Alabama's 17th No. 1 song on August 3, spending one week atop the chart. The end of the song includes a few bars from "America the Beautiful."
Country music historian Bill Malone, in his liner notes for Classic Country Music: A Smithsonian Collection, wrote that "40 Hour Week (For a Livin')" "...is a rare country music tribute to American workers. (It) probably owes its popularity as much to its patriotic sentiments as to its social concern." Malone also noted that, with few exceptions, "almost no one in country music has spoken for the industrial laborer," one of the main groups of workers Alabama salutes in this song. "This straightforward homage gives the contemporary worker the respect that the Reagan years denied him," Malone concluded.
A music video was filmed for the song, depicting people on the job in various blue-collar jobs. It was directed by David Hogan and has aired on CMT and Great American Country.
"40 Hour Week (For a Livin')" is one of the songs central to a point of contention among country music historians. Alabama is frequently billed as having the longest uninterrupted No. 1 streak in the history of the Billboard magazine Hot Country Songs chart, with 21 songs peaking atop the chart between 1980 and 1987, "40 Hour Week (For a Livin')" being the song that set the new standard."
However, the band's 1982 Christmas single, "Christmas in Dixie," peaked at No. 35, bringing about the point of contention. Sonny James, a country music superstar in the 1960s and 1970s, had previously set the standard of most Billboard No. 1 songs with 16 straight without a miss in any single release.