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Select a Song's Lyrics
40 Hour Week by Alabama
America's Mine Rescue Team by Mel Shaw
Angry American by Toby Keith
Big Bad John by Jimmy Dean
Cajun Queen by Jimmy Dean
Centralia by Ken Batista
Coal Miner's Daughter by Lorretta Lynn
Coal Miner's Hands by Blackwater Outlaw
Coal Miner Visual Song by Shelley Lynch
Crandall Canyon Mine by Mark R. Cronin
Dark As A Dungeon by Johnny Cash
Down in the Mine by Dierks Bentley
Emphysema Blues by Pete Zaharoff
Hard Rock Miner by Robert Gibney
Henry Russell's Last Words by Diana Jones
I Am a Miner by Holy Water and Whiskey
Knox Mine Disaster by Tom Flannery
Miracle at Quecreek Mine by Mountain John
Miner's Prayer by Dwight Yokum
Nothing in Centralia by Raven Hill
Paradise by John Prine
Quecreek Nine by David Morgan
Quecreek Nine by Marcia McKenzie
See You on the Other Side by Les Freres
Shamrock City Preview by Solas
Sheppton Mine Rescue by Ronnie Sando
Song of the Quecreek Miners by Jene' Lind
The Ballad of Springhill by Peggy Seeger
Timothy by Rupert Holmes
Tragedy at the Sunshine Mine by Frank Starr
Upper Big Branch by Holy Water and Whiskey
West Virginia Underground by Taylor Made
Working Man by Rita McNeil
40 Hour Week
by Alabama
There are people in this country who work hard every day.
Not for fame or fortune do they strive.
But the fruits of their labor are worth more than their pay.
And it's time a few of them were recognized.
Hello Detroit auto workers,
let me thank you for your time.
You work a forty hour week for a livin',
just to send it on down the line.
Hello Pittsburgh steel mill workers,
let me thank you for your time.
You work a forty hour week for a livin',
just to send it on down the line.
This is for the one who swings the hammer,
driving home the nail.
Or the one behind the counter,
ringing up the sale.
Or the one who fights the fires,
the one who brings the mail.
For everyone who works behind the scenes.
You can see them every morning in the factories and the fields.
In the city streets and the quiet country towns.
Working together like spokes inside a wheel.
They keep this country turning around.
Hello Kansas wheat field farmer,
let me thank you for your time.
You work a forty hour week for a livin',
just to send it on down the line.
Hello West Virginia coal miner,
let me thank you for your time.
You work a forty hour week for a livin',
just to send it on down the line.
This one is for the one who drives the big rig,
up and down the road.
Or the one out in the warehouse,
bringing in the load.
Or the waitress, the mechanic,
the policeman on patrol.
For everyone who works behind the scenes.
With a spirit you can't replace with no machine.
Hello America - let me thank you for your time!