"Lucky Strike" is a song by American pop rock band
Maroon 5, and is the fourth track on their fourth studio album Overexposed (2012). The song was released on January 20, 2014, in
Belgium, as the album's first and only promotional single.[4] It was written by band frontman
Adam Levine with producers
Ryan Tedder and
Noel Zancanella.
The song received generally positive reviews from
critics, and is generally regarded as one of the best tracks on Overexposed. Following the release of the album, the song peaked on many different charts, including number two on the
singles chart in South Korea and number nine on the US
Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles.
"Lucky Strike" is a
funk song that features
dubstep and
soul influences.[7][5][8][6] The song's
instrumentation consists of
piano and guitar accompanied with Levine's vocals.[9][6] "Lucky Strike" is written in the key of
B minor, in common time (4/4), with a
tempo of 144 beats per minute.[9][10] Levine's vocal range spans from the low note of
A4 to the high note of
B5.[9] According to Robert Copsey of
Digital Spy, the song contains the same "bells-and-whistles template" that is present in the band's previous single "Moves Like Jagger".[11] Chuck Arnold of People shared the same opinion as Copsey and described the song as "lightning-paced".[12] Lyrically, the song discovers the theme of
sexual intercourse that can be seen through the lines, "Your body rockin', keep me up all night/One in a million, my lucky strike".[13]
Live performances
"Lucky Strike" is the fifteenth most performed song live by Maroon 5,[14][15] being played 252 times by the band.[15] The song was debuted live on the
Overexposed Tour, and was played at many shows on the tour.[16][17][18][19][20]
It was played very few times on the
Red Pill Blues Tour,[24] and has been played only semi-often since then.[14]
Critical reception
Adam Markovitz of Entertainment Weekly labeled "Lucky Strike" and "
Payphone" as the best tracks on Overexposed and described the former as "a funk-spiked strut".[5] Suzanne Byrne of
RTÉ.ie wrote that "Lucky Strike" alongside "
Daylight", "The Man Who Never Lied" and "
Love Somebody" are all worthy of a single releases (Daylight and Love Somebody were later released as singles).[25] Digital Spy's Robert Copsey named the track together with "
One More Night" and "Ladykiller" as the most worthy for
download.[11] Chris Payne of Billboard wrote that on the song "Maroon 5's guitars finally come out to play in the opening bars here. Though not a rock song per se, it still packs the energy of the band's earlier, more band-based material."[26] Cameron Adams of Herald Sun described "Lucky Strike" as "uncharacteristically clubby".[27]
Contact Music's Alex Lai wrote that Levine has exchanged his "angelic vocals for singing in favor of more universal hooks" on the album, pointing out Lucky Strike specifically.[28] Evan Sawdey of
PopMatters called the song a "danceable carbon copy" of "Second Chance" (Gimme Some, 2011) by
Peter Bjorn and John. According to him, "Lucky Strike" imitates the latter "down to the guitar tone" and replaces the original by also adding additional dance beats.[29] The song was compared to the electronic duo
3OH!3 by a writer from The Triangle.[30]
Commercial performance
Upon the release of Overexposed, due to strong digital downloads "Lucky Strike" debuted on the South Korea
Gaon International Chart at number two on June 24, 2012, with sales of 53,090 copies.[31] The next week it fell to number four and sold an additional 39,392 copies.[32] Following the release of the album, the song peaked at number nine on the BillboardBubbling Under Hot 100 singles chart.[33]
The song has received over 100 million streams on
Spotify.[34] As of November 2022, the song has 110.5 million streams.[35]
Personnel
Based on the liner notes of Overexposed, A&M Octone Records.[36]
Maroon 5
Adam Levine – lead and backing vocals, rhythm guitar, songwriting, production
^"Online download – 2014". Gaon Chart (in Korean). Korea Music Content Industry Association. To view sales from 2014, select "2014 년". Archived from
the original on June 10, 2013. Retrieved September 5, 2014.
^"Online download – 2014 Month End Chart - September". Gaon Chart (in Korean). Korea Music Content Industry Association. To view sales from September "2014년 1월", "2014년 2월", and "2014년 3월", respectively. Archived from
the original on June 10, 2013. Retrieved September 12, 2014.