What's Your Mama's Name (song)
"What's Your Mama's Name" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Tanya Tucker | ||||
from the album What's Your Mama's Name | ||||
B-side | Rainy Girl | |||
Released | February 1973 | |||
Format | 7" | |||
Recorded | January 5, 1973 | |||
Genre | Country | |||
Length | 3:03 | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Writer(s) | Dallas Frazier and Earl Montgomery | |||
Producer(s) | Billy Sherrill | |||
Tanya Tucker singles chronology | ||||
|
"What's Your Mama's Name" is a song written by Dallas Frazier and Earl Montgomery, and recorded by American country music artist Tanya Tucker. It was released in February 1973 as the first single and title track from the album What's Your Mama's Name. "What's Your Mama's Name" was Tucker's fourth hit on the country chart and her first number one. The single stayed at number one for a single week and spent a total of fourteen weeks on the chart.[1] On the Billboard Hot 100 pop chart, it reached number eighty-six.
Lyrical story
The song tells, in flashback, of a man named Buford Wilson. The story begins at least 30 years beforehand, when the young man travels to Memphis, Tennessee in search of a woman with whom he'd had a previous relationship in New Orleans. He spends the next decade asking people about the woman's whereabouts, and is generally ignored. Now described not as a "young man," but as "a drunkard," he has an encounter with a young, green-eyed girl. As told in the song's refrain:
“ | What's your mama's name, child? What's your mama's name? Does she ever talk about a place called New Orleans? Has she ever mentioned a man named Buford Wilson? | ” |
Wilson is arrested for enticing a child - after he had offered her a nickel's worth of candy if she revealed the identity of her mother - and is jailed for a month of labor. The final verse describes how, about a year before the present, Wilson, now a "wayward soul" subsidized by the county, is found dead in Memphis, wearing a ragged coat. Inside the coat's pocket is a "faded letter" stating, "You have a daughter, and her eyes are Wilson green," showing that Wilson's intent was not predatory, but to simply find his lost daughter and to reconnect with her mother, his lost love.
Chart performance
Chart (1973) | Peak position |
---|---|
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[2] | 1 |
US Billboard Hot 100[3] | 86 |
Canadian RPM Country Tracks | 1 |
References
- ↑ Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Record Research. p. 357.
- ↑ "Tanya Tucker – Chart history" Billboard Hot Country Songs for Tanya Tucker.
- ↑ "Tanya Tucker – Chart history" Billboard Hot 100 for Tanya Tucker.
Preceded by "Come Live with Me" by Roy Clark |
Billboard Hot Country Singles number-one single May 19, 1973 |
Succeeded by "Satin Sheets" by Jeanne Pruett |
RPM Country Tracks number-one single May 26, 1973 |
Succeeded by "Dirty Old Man" by George Hamilton IV |