"Your Daddy Don't Know (What Your Mama's Gonna Do Tonight)" is a song by the Canadian rock band Toronto, from their 1982 album Get It on Credit.[1]
The song was written by Geoffrey Iwamoto and Michael Roth, and was the only song on the album not written or cowritten by any member of the band.[2] Iwamoto and Roth were a songwriting duo whose other noteworthy song, "My Heart Is Still Young", was recorded by Jennifer Rush and Paris Black. The song has been interpreted as being about a stripper, or about a woman planning to cheat on her husband; the band's keyboardist Scott Kreyer claimed in interviews to not know what the song was actually about.[3]
Impact
The band's biggest chart hit, it peaked at #5 in the RPM charts in Canada,[4] and at #77 on the Billboard charts in the United States.[5] In 1983, it was used as the soundtrack to a Labatt Blue beer commercial.[6]
Despite its popular success, the song has received mixed reception from critics; Evan Cater of AllMusic refers to the album as a "debacle" and does not single out "Your Daddy Don't Know" as an exception to his negative assessment of the album's quality,[7] while Greg Burliuk of the Kingston Whig-Standard named it as a highlight of the album[8] and later wrote that the lack of a single of equivalent strength was one of the biggest problems with the band's followup album Girls' Night Out.[9] When the song began receiving radio airplay in the United States, Scott Benarde of the South Florida Sun Sentinel called it "far from the best the album offers", and opined that it "really sounds like a rip-off of a couple of Rick Springfield tunes".[2]
In 2002, the song was recorded by the New Pornographers, with Neko Case on lead vocals, for the film soundtrack Fubar: The Album, which featured contemporary Canadian bands recording covers of 1980s Canadian rock hits.[11]
^Greg Burliuk, "Time is ripe for Toronto to spread into the United States". Kingston Whig-Standard, September 20, 1983.
^The chart for the week of September 4, 1982 is currently missing from the RPM archives; however, the song is at #6 in the week of August 28 and #9 down from #5 in the week of September 11.