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Working in the Coal Mine

"Working in the Coal Mine"
Working in the coal mine lee dorsey.jpg
Original vinyl release
Single by Lee Dorsey
B-side "Mexico"
Released July 1966
Format 7"
Genre R&B
Length 2:42
Label Amy Records
Writer(s) Allen Toussaint
Producer(s) Allen Toussaint and Marshall Sehorn
Lee Dorsey singles chronology
"Confusion"
(1966)
"Working in the Coal Mine"
(1966)
"Holy Cow"
(1966)
"Working in the Coal Mine"
Devo Coalmine.jpg
Single by Devo
from the album Heavy Metal OST
B-side "Planet Earth"
Released August 1981
Format 7"
Genre New wave
Length 2:47
Label Warner Bros. Records
Asylum Records
Writer(s) Allen Toussaint
Producer(s) Robert Margouleff
Devo singles chronology
"Gates of Steel"
(1980)
"Working in the Coal Mine"
(1981)
"Beautiful World"
(1981)

"Working in the Coal Mine" is a song with music and lyrics by the American musician and record producer Allen Toussaint. It was an international hit for Lee Dorsey in 1966, and has been recorded by other musicians including Devo in 1981.

After Toussaint returned to New Orleans from the US Army, in which he served from 1963 to 1965, he formed a production company, Sansu (also known as "Tou-Sea Productions"), with partner Marshall Sehorn. He produced a number of singles performed by Lee Dorsey in 1965 and 1966, including "Ride Your Pony" and "Working in the Coal Mine".

Written, arranged and produced by Toussaint, the song concerns the suffering of a man who rises before 5 o'clock each morning in order to work in a coal mine, five days a week, where the conditions are very harsh and dangerous, but which offers the only prospect of paid employment. The singer repeatedly asks the Lord, "How long can this go on?" and complains that when the weekend arrives, he's too exhausted to have any fun. In the instrumental section, as in the song's fade, he says: "Lord, I'm so tired / How long can this go on?" The song features the sound of a pickaxe clinking, as if the musicians were working in a mine. Says producer Allen Toussaint "There wasn’t as much percussion as you might think on there. It was a certain drummer and we had my brother hit the mike stand with a drum stick for the pick sound. Those were the two percussion instruments."

The recording took place at Cosimo Matassa Governor Nichols Street studio in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Musicians included guitarist Roy Montrell, drummer Albert "June" Gardner, and bassist Walter Payton.

It was a hit for Lee Dorsey, released on Amy Records (catalogue number 958), and entered the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 on July 23, 1966, eventually peaking at #8, while reaching #5 on the Billboard R&B chart. It also reached #8 on the UK Singles Chart.


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