In 1980, John Travolta was riding high off the success of Saturday Night Fever and Grease when he slipped into cowboy boots for a new role, backed by a gritty honky-tonk hit that helped propel its soundtrack to the top of the charts.
Urban Cowboy seemed like an unlikely bookend to Travolta’s hugely successful run as a box office star. However, its message of love, resilience, and ambition struck a chord with audiences, helping turn the film and its soundtrack into a cultural phenomenon.
The breakout hit from the film soundtrack was the song “Lookin’ For Love,” performed by Johnny Lee. The track quickly became a barroom favorite and helped bring the film’s honky-tonk spirit to audiences far beyond the theater.
However, the story behind the song is a perfect mix of being in the right place at the right time, a killer hook, and lyrics that pull at the heartstrings. It’s the kind of lightning-in-a-bottle moment that turns a simple track into a lasting classic.
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According to Rolling Stone Australia, Lee led the house band at the Houston, Texas bar Gilley’s. Named for country superstar Mickey Gilley, the bar became the backdrop for Urban Cowboy, giving the film the authentic atmosphere needed to sell the story of Bud Davis (Travolta), who finds escape there from his troubled marriage to Sissy (Debra Winger).
The Eagles manager, Irving Azoff, approached Lee and asked him if he wanted to be a part of a movie soundtrack he was working on. Lee agreed, but didn’t have any idea that his song would be the track that propelled its popularity.
“I knew [‘Lookin For Love’] was a hit,” Lee said in a vintage interview shared on his Instagram page. “I didn’t know if it was going to be a hit.”
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“What the Urban Cowboy movie did was give it the exposure that it needed. A lot of young people who would have said, ‘I don’t like country music,’ came to see John Travolta in the movie, all this music hits them, and they say, ‘hey, I like that.'”
In a twist of fate, the song that became Lee’s signature tune was found in a cardboard box. He said in an interview, “I found that song in a cardboard box in Houston, Texas, written by Patti Ryan, Wanda Mallette, and Bob Morrison. Two schoolteachers from Gulfport, Mississippi, who never had a song recorded before in their lives.”
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Lee continued, “That got their idea for that song from a classroom of second-grade children. There were thousands of cassette tapes in boxes. But within the first 15 to 20 songs, I pulled out a song called ‘Lookin’ For Love’ and fell in love with the lyrics.”
“Lookin’ For Love” would help propel the Urban Cowboy soundtrack to the No. 1 spot on Billboard’s Country Charts. The song stayed on the charts for 37 weeks, peaking at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles and at No. 5 on the pop charts reported the Sun Herald.











