In this song, Shania Twain takes a philanderer to task, telling him to cross her off his list the next time he needs some companionship. She even offers a suggestion: "Try the operator, maybe she'll be free." Twain wrote the song with Mutt Lange, her producer and husband at the time (they divorced in 2010).
"Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been Under?" was the first single from Shania's second album, The Woman In Me. It was her first song to chart on the Hot 100, and also her first single certified Gold. Her first album, released two years earlier before she met Mutt Lange, didn't get much heat outside her native Canada and didn't contain any songs she wrote. With Lange, she synched creatively and was able to deliver songs that suited her personality and came off as lively and fun. Lange had a track record writing and producing hits for rock and pop artists like Def Leppard and Bryan Adams. He famously produced AC/DC's landmark album Back In Black. His work on The Woman In Me proved that he could spin gold in country music as well. The next single, "Any Man Of Mine" was Twain's first #1 on the Country chart. Twain really blew up with her next album, Come On Over, released in 1997. Another collaboration with Lange, it sold a staggering 20 million copies in America and included the hits "That Don't Impress Me Much" and "You're Still the One."
This is far from the most famous song with boots. That honor would go to Nancy Sinatra, who had a huge hit in 1966 with "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'." Twain gave that song a shout-out on "Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been Under?" when she says, "C'mon boots!" which Sintra did on her song. These kind of interjections became a hallmark of Twain's songs.
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