Mind Your Own Business (song)

"Mind Your Own Business"
Single by Hank Williams
B-side "There'll Be No Teardrops Tonight"
Released July 1949
Recorded March 1, 1949
Studio Castle Studio, Nashville
Genre Country, blues, rock and roll
Length 2:47
Label MGM
Songwriter(s) Hank Williams
Producer(s) Fred Rose
Hank Williams singles chronology
"Wedding Bells"
(1949)
"Mind Your Own Business"
(1949)
"You're Gonna Change (Or I'm Gonna Leave)"
(1949)

"Wedding Bells"
(1949)
"Mind Your Own Business"
(1949)
"You're Gonna Change (Or I'm Gonna Leave)"
(1949)

"Mind Your Own Business" is a 1949 song written and originally performed by Hank Williams.

Background

"Mind Your Own Business" was recorded on March 2, 1949, at Castle Studio in Nashville. During the same session, Williams also recorded "You're Gonna Change (Or I'm Gonna Leave)", "My Son Calls Another Man Daddy", and "Honky Tonk Blues". He is backed by Dale Potter (fiddle), Don Davis (steel guitar), Zeke Turner (lead guitar), Clyde Baum (mandolin), Jack Shook (rhythm guitar), and probably Ernie Newton (bass).[1]

Content

In the song, the narrator admonishes a local busybody for snooping and gossiping. While the delivery is light and breezy, the song's lyrics were likely inspired by the singer's own tempestuous relationship with wife Audrey Williams and the buzz it created. The opening lines seem to reference this: "If the wife and I are fussin', brother that's our right/'Cause me and that sweet woman's got a licence to fight..." His delivery is measured, laconic, and dry.[2] The day before, Hank had cut several duets with his wife Audrey, who by all accounts had limited singing talent. Introducing it in October 1949, he told his radio audience that it was a "little prophecy in song", and indeed it would prove to be.[2]

The song is similar in tone and structure to Williams' first Billboard hit "Move It on Over", with the singer couching his moral indignation in humor, allowing the subject matter to resonate with the public. "Mind Your Own Business" went to #6 on the C&W Best Seller list where it stayed for two weeks.[3]

Cover versions

References

  1. Escott, Colin & 2004 332.
  2. 1 2 Escott, Colin & 2004 106.
  3. Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944–2006, Second edition. Record Research. p. 387.
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