"Dependin' on You" was co-written by Michael McDonald and Patrick Simmons.[1] Simmons was the primary writer of the song.[2] Unlike the previous singles from Minute by Minute, "What A Fool Believes" and "Minute by Minute" where McDonald takes the lead vocal, Simmons is the lead vocalist on "Dependin' on You."[3][4]Nicolette Larson and Rosemary Butler provide backing vocals.[4][5]
Reception
Cash Box said of the single "Dependin' on You" that it has "brass flourishes," "an infectious piano and bass boogie beat."[6]Billboard praised the "arresting" hook and the use of the horns, saying that the song "is closer in spirit and tone to 'What A Fool Believes' than the jazz flavor of the album's title track."[7]Record World said that it "features call & response vocals over a double time beat" giving it "instant, unlimited appeal."[8]
Ultimate Classic Rock critic Michael Gallucci rated "Dependin' on You" to be the Doobie Brothers' all-time 9th greatest song.[3] The staff of Billboard also rated the song as the Doobie Brothers' 9th greatest, rating it higher than the previous two singles from the album and saying that it is "a more genuine synthesis of Doobies old and new [than the prior two singles]" and that "Simmons’ gruff(er) vocal roughens up the track’s yacht rock polish, and McDonald’s insistent piano hook blends with [Jeff] Baxter's biting solos, straight out of Steely Dan’s Can’t Buy a Thrill playbook, to give the song a bit more muscle.[9]
On the other hand, Rolling Stone critic Stephen Holden, who classified it as a Cubano number, considered the song to be "no better than second-rate lounge fare."[2]Hartford Courant critic J. Greg Robertson called the song "soppy."[10]
The single release reached #25 on the Billboard Hot 100, not quite as high as "What a Fool Believes," which reached #1, or "Minute by Minute," which reached #14.[11] It also reached #37 on the BillboardAdult Contemporary chart.[11] In Canada, it reached #33 on the Canada RPM Top 100 Singles chart.[12]
"Dependin' on You" has been in the Doobie Brothers' live concert repertoire into the 2020s.[17] A live performance from 1996 benefit concert was released on the Doobie Brothers' live album Rockin' Down the Highway: The Wildlife Concert.[18]Sun Herald critic Tim Islbell praised the way Danny Hull's saxophone playing interacts with Simmons' guitar playing on the track.[19]