Oscar Wilde (1854 – 1900), writer

- Blue Monday -- Randy Newman (this really sums up the work week)
- Nine to Five -- The Kinks (Ray Davies once again captures most of our lives Monday through Friday)
- Working Poor -- Horse Feathers (I just discovered them this weekend from a Paste Magazine CD sampler, I haven’t figured out the lyrics yet, but the sound is perfect for the title)
- Work Song -- Nellie McKay (Every day's another loss/Need the pay so please the boss/Through the sludge they mingle by the mile/Every worker looks ahead/Ah the kiddies must be fed/So they trudge along in single file –the lyrics say it all)
- Working Class Hero [#] -- John Lennon (Lennon didn’t pull any punches and tells us what we really are)
- Welcome to the Working Week -- Elvis Costello (A punchy tune that is apropos to a Monday)
- Rush Hour Blues --The Kinks (What life would be like for a celebrity to if they had to work nine to five)
- Just Us Kids -- James McMurtry (Reminded me of conversations when I was a teenager)
- It’s Just Work for Me -- Ry Cooder (Captures the hopelessness of making a buck doing things you really don’t want to do)
- We Can't Make It Here -- James McMurtry (What outsourcing has done for all of us)
- I Can't Wait to Get off Work -- Tom Waits (A working palooka who is looking forward to punching out)
- When Work Is Over -- The Kinks (Drinking helps us to forget/a double scotch helps us to forget who we are)
- Tired -- Willie Nelson (What we have to look forward to)
- Salt Of The Earth -- The Rolling Stones (Raise a glass and feel proud you are enriching backstabbers, political pigs who are all nicely dressed and who disguise their contempt for you)
- God's Away on Business -- Tom Waits (The only explanation why the world is the way it is)
- Hard Work -- John Handy (A classic jazz song)
- Mr. Pinstripe Suit -- Big Bad Voodoo Daddy (I like the title)