Your Mama Don't Dance

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"Your Mama Don't Dance"
Your Mama Don't Dance by Kenny Loggins and Jim Messina US single side-A.png
Side A of the US single
Single by Loggins and Messina
from the album Loggins and Messina
B-side "Golden Ribbons"
ReleasedNovember 1972
Recorded1972
Studio Columbia (Los Angeles)
Genre Rock and roll, blues rock
Length2:48
Label Columbia
Songwriter(s) Kenny Loggins, Jim Messina
Producer(s) Kenny Loggins, Jim Messina
Loggins and Messina singles chronology
"Peace of Mind"
(1972)
"Your Mama Don't Dance"
(1972)
"Thinking of You"
(1973)

"Your Mama Don't Dance" is a hit 1972 song by the rock duo Loggins and Messina. Released on their self-titled album Loggins and Messina , it reached number four on the Billboard pop chart [1] and number 19 on the Billboard Easy Listening Chart [2] as a single in early 1973.

Contents

Overview

Jim Messina on the inspiration for
"Your Mama Don't Dance"
"My stepfather...from Arkansas...was not much of a mover or...groover. [But] my mom...loved music. She loved Elvis Presley & Ricky Nelson. She loved [R&B] music. My stepfather was more of an Ernest Tubbs, Hank Snow, Johnny Cash kind of guy. There was not a whole lot of connection or understanding with me wanting to do music, other than from my mom.

So...the line: 'Your mama don't dance & your daddy don't rock & roll',came from me thinking about how my mother wasn't really doing what she loves to do [because] my stepfather was not into rock & roll. He thought the Beatles were just...screaming, long-haired idiots...So I grew up having to put up with that [but] it was [just] a fun lyric [with no intended] social significance whatsoever other than my own experience of a kinda funky household." [3]

This song, whose refrain and first verse is done in a blues format, deals with the 1950s and 1960s lifestyle concerning the generation gap, where the parents oppose the Rock and Roll Revolution of the younger generation, which includes the rebelliousness against the old society that monitors curfews on dating; as well as being arrested for making love with a girl in the back seat of a car during a drive-in movie, which happens during the bridge section of the song.

When released as a single, it was the duo's biggest hit as well as their only Gold single.

"Your Mama Don't Dance" was covered in 1973 by Australian band the Bootleg Family Band, which made the top 5 in Australia. It was also covered in 1985 by the rock band Y&T.

Elvis Presley included the song in a medley of rock n' roll songs on his 1974 album Elvis Recorded Live on Stage in Memphis .

Poison cover

"Your Mama Don't Dance"
Yourmamadontdancepoison.jpg
Single by Poison
from the album Open Up and Say...Ahh!
B-side "Tearin' Down the Walls"
ReleasedFebruary 1, 1989
Recorded1988
Genre
Length3:00
Label Enigma/Capitol
Songwriter(s) Kenny Loggins, Jim Messina
Producer(s) Tom Werman
Poison singles chronology
"Every Rose Has Its Thorn"
(1988)
"Your Mama Don't Dance"
(1989)
"Unskinny Bop"
(1990)

In 1988, the glam metal band Poison recorded a cover of "Your Mama Don't Dance." It appeared as the ninth track on their second album Open Up and Say...Ahh! by Capitol Records and was released as the album's fourth single. The Poison version reached number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 39 on the Mainstream rock charts and has since gone Gold in the US. The song also charted at number 21 on the Australian charts and number 13 on the UK Singles chart. [7] The single's B-side is "Tearin' Down the Walls".

Critical reception

Cash Box said "Take a classic Loggins & Messina rock/blues song, and play. It’s an instant hit." [8] Reviewer of Record Mirror was disappointed by this single. He found it ″completely naff″ when contrasted with "Every Rose Has Its Thorn", the band's previous ″quite listenable hit″. [9] Jerry Smith from British music newspaper Music Week also expressed an opinion that this "ordinary slice of good-time rock'n'roll" is "highly unlikely to enhance their reputation as wild, heavy rockers". [10] Pan-European magazine Music & Media described the song as "energetic version" of traditional 12 -bar with a vague doo-wop edge. [11] In 2017, Billboard and OC Weekly ranked the song number six and number five, respectively, on their lists of the 10 greatest Poison songs. [12] [13]

Personnel

Loggins & Messina version

Poison version

Charts

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