Music has long proved an antidote to the mundanities of the working week so it's only right that it should offer the occasional commentary on our working lives.There is of course a great irony to be found in the millionaire popstar lamenting the plight of the working man. A cynical attempt to relate to the record-buying everyman? A nostalgic nod to their former pre-fame lives? Either way, there are some great work-related songs out there that really stick it to the man!
Sounding suspiciously upbeat after a nightshift, The Beatles 'Hard Days Night' maintains that it's all worth it because when they get home "everything seems to be right". Thankfully, the aptly named "Boss" keeps it real in 'Dancing in the Dark': "I get up in the evening and I ain't got nothing to say. I come home in the morning, I go to bed feeling the same way. I ain't nothing but tired, man I'm just tired and bored with myself." That's more like it.
In 'No Surprises' Radiohead confront middle class resignation to the monotony of "a job that slowly kills you". In exchange for the 'pretty house' and the 'pretty garden' we'll "take the quiet life. A handshake of carbon monoxide." Talking Heads similarly question whether the payoff has been worth it in 'Once in a Lifetime' which deals with the sacrifice of youthful dreams and ideals in favour of conventional notions of success and happiness and its resulting mundanities: "same as it ever was". We have worked hard and as a result have 'everything' yet nothing we ever really wanted in the first place: "You may find yourself behind the wheel of a large automobile. You may find yourself in a beautiful house with a beautiful wife. You may ask yourself, well how did I get here?"
Less a sympathetic sing-a-long but rather a lyrical showing off from MGMT in 'Time to Pretend' as rockstars who have swapped the daily grind to "live fast and die young". "Yeah, it's overwhelming. But what else can we do. Get jobs in offices and wake up for the morning commute". Talk about rubbing our noses in it!
Right, best be off to bed. Work in the morning.
This week's play (work?!) list:
