Introduction

I Got Lucky is a song recorded by American singer and actor Elvis Presley for his 1962 film Kid Galahad. It was written by Fred Wise, Dolores Fuller, and Ben Weisman. The song was released as a single in 1962 and peaked at number 2 on the Billboard Hot Singles chart.

I Got Lucky - Elvis Presley - tải mp3|lời bài hát - NhacCuaTui

The song is an upbeat rock and roll number with a catchy melody and Presley’s signature vocals. The lyrics are about a man who is grateful for his good fortune in life. He sings about how he has been lucky in love, career, and health. The song is a positive and optimistic message about the power of luck.

I Got Lucky is a popular song that has been covered by many artists, including Dean Martin, Jerry Lee Lewis, and The Beach Boys. It is a classic example of Presley’s early rock and roll sound and is considered one of his best songs.

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Lyrics

Never found a four leaf clover
To bring good luck to me
No rabbit’s foot, no lucky star
No magic wishing tree

But I got lucky, yes, I got lucky
(I got lucky, lucky when)
When I found you, oh oh, yeah

Got no rainbow around my shoulder
No horseshoe on my door
But I got you to hold me tight
And who could ask for more

Oh, I got lucky, yes, I got lucky
(I got lucky, lucky when)
When I found you
(When I found you)

I always walk around
With all my fingers crossed
I’m afraid the love I found
Just might get lost

So won’t you tell me that you love me
Hurry up and name the day
And then I’ll know that my good luck
Is really here to stay

Oh, I got lucky, yes, I got lucky
(I got lucky, lucky when)
When I found you
(I found you)

I always walk around
With all my fingers crossed
I’m afraid the love I found
Just might get lost

So won’t you tell me that you love me
hurry up and name the day
And then I’ll know that my good luck
Is really here to stay

Oh, I got lucky, yes, I got lucky
(I got lucky, lucky when)
When I found you
(I found you)

Oh, I got lucky, yes, I got lucky
(I got lucky)
When I found you

 

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“On February 5, 2024, just after 2 a.m., Toby Keith quietly passed away in Moore, Oklahoma, in the presence of his family. Stop for a moment and truly imagine the quiet of that night—the man whose voice had traveled from tiny honky‑tonk bars to military bases across the globe, whose songs had filled stadiums with pride and emotion, was resting exactly where his story began. The water tower down the street still reads “Home of Toby Keith,” a silent testament to decades of music, devotion, and the journeys that made him one of country music’s most recognizable voices. Born Toby Keith Covel in Clinton in 1961 and raised in Moore, he first discovered his voice while balancing oil field work by day and nightly performances. His breakthrough came in 1993 with “Should’ve Been a Cowboy,” a song that would become a generational anthem and the cornerstone of his enduring career. Even after achieving 20 No. 1 hits, numerous awards, and a posthumous induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2024, Toby never lost sight of home. He carried his fame with humility, always returning to the town that had shaped him. In his final months, as he battled stomach cancer, Toby continued to show up. In December 2023, he performed three sold-out “rehab shows” in Las Vegas, a prelude to a tour his body would never complete. His last recording, a duet with Luke Combs covering “Ships That Don’t Come In,” held a deeper poignancy, speaking of journeys that never return. Even at the end, Toby’s music was never about perfection—it was about presence, authenticity, and giving one more song, one more night, one more memory. And in the final act, he closed his eyes at home in Oklahoma—the place that had echoed in every note he ever sang.