Dorsey, Lee
Soul Mine The Greatest Hits & More
Lee Dorsey was a guy with a pretty strong work ethic -- when he wasn't cutting R&B hits, he ran a body and fender repair
business in New Orleans, and proudly proclaimed himself to be "The best body man in the Ninth Ward." Because of (or in
spite of ) this, Dorsey sang more than a few songs about the indignities of holding down a job, and the best known was
"Working in the Coal Mine," written by the great New Orleans pianist and songwriter Allen Toussaint. Held in place by
Chuck Badie's bass line and punctuated by some clanking percussion, Roy Montrell's stinging guitar interjections, and
soulful but subtle punctuation from the horn section, "Working in a Coal Mine" may be the ultimate working stiff's
anthem, with its lyrics about some poor guy who works from break of day to gloom of night hauling coal out of the
ground, leaving him too tired to go out when Saturday finally comes. However, Dorsey's fatigue has a pretty lively feel
for a guy who's supposed to be running on fumes, and his frequent exclamations of "Lord, I'm so tired! How long can this
go on!" are more comic than anything else, all in the great tradition of New Orleans R&B, where very little is taken
seriously beyond having a good time. "Working in a Coal Mine" was, with the exception of "Ya Ya," Dorsey's biggest hit,
though he wasn't the only artist to tackle Toussaint's classic; Devo cut the tune for the animated sci-fi epic Heavy
Metal in 1981, and mother-and-daughter country stars the Judds put their own stamp on the number when they cut it on
their 1985 set Rockin' With the Rhythm. - allmusic.com
Price
Genre
Format
LP - 1 disk
Release
19-08-2014
Label
Item-nr
945759
EAN
0803415815517
Availability
Not in stock
Tracks
Title
Artist
1
LOTTIE MO
2
YA YA
3
DO-RE-MI
4
MESSED AROUND (AND FELL IN LOVE)
5
RIDE YOUR PONY
6
CAN YOU HEAR ME?
7
GET OUT OF MY LIFE, WOMAN
8
CONFUSION
9
WORKING IN THE COALMINE
10
HOLY COW
11
YES, WE CAN PT. 1
12
EVERYTHING I DO GOHN BE FUNKY (FROM NOW ON)
13
SNEAKIN' SALLY THROUGH THE ALLEY
14
NIGHT PEOPLE