Hello all you Ray Stevens fans on this Labor Day 2021!! I don't mind holidays...but sometimes I get in such a pattern that when the holidays roll around my routine gets messed up. I'm something of a news hawk and when holidays roll around, like today, cable news channels tend to slack off on news reporting and instead fill the airwaves with "special programming" or clips from earlier in the year.
Some may ask if "Great Escape" is appropriate for Labor Day. Some may think it isn't...since the sentiments expressed in the song is a desire to get away from the job and get back to the tranquil life at home. However, in my way of thinking, Labor Day can be celebrated several ways. Some choose to celebrate it as a day when all workers/laborers get recognized for the work they do. Some companies go a step further and are closed on Labor Day as a sort of thank you. Then there are those who feel that Labor Day should be a federally mandated holiday where all workers/laborers should get the day off as a thank you rather than have it left up to each individual business to decide. I've worked in places where we had to work on Labor Day...but yet those who worked in 'Administration' got the day off...and I believe that is the big reason why so many workers get outraged when having to work on Labor Day (or any holiday, for that matter). It never made any sense back then and it still doesn't make any sense why clerical workers/corporate employees get nearly all holidays off but the non-Administration workforce doesn't.
As all of us know, Ray Stevens has made music his life's work. He's been active in the music industry, as a professional recording artist, since 1957...still a teenager at the time. He's also worked as a record producer, music arranger, musician, songwriter, song publisher, music video performer, and for many years was a landlord of multiple properties on Music Row before selling off the last of his properties a few years ago and settling down with the CabaRay showroom in West Nashville. Ray's labor of love is making music and performing. Buddy Kalb, a long-time associate of Ray's and someone who's written songs with or for Ray Stevens since the late '70s, wrote a song about a singer/songwriter dedicated to his craft called "It's My Job". Ray performed it on an episode of his CabaRay Nashville television show but he's never recorded it in his studio as far as we know. So, in closing on this Labor Day 2021, here's Ray Stevens singing "It's My Job"...it sounds as if it was written just for Ray...and perhaps it was...
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