Introduction

Elvis Presley / One Broken Heart for Sale / RCA Red Vinyl 45 W - Etsy Finland

“One Broken Heart for Sale” is a popular song recorded by Elvis Presley. It was released in 1963 as part of the soundtrack for the film It Happened at the World’s Fair. The song was written by Walter Scott and Bill Giant, and it quickly became one of Presley’s most popular hits.

The song is a ballad about a man who is heartbroken after his girlfriend leaves him. He puts his heart up for sale, hoping to find someone who will love him again. The song is a classic example of Presley’s ability to blend pop, country, and blues influences, and it has been covered by many artists over the years.

“One Broken Heart for Sale” is a timeless song about love and loss, and it continues to be popular today. It is a reminder that even when we are heartbroken, there is always hope for the future.

Video

Lyrics

Who wants to buy a heart
One broken lover’s heart
One broken heart for sale

Well, excuse me if you see me crying like a baby
Since she rejected me
There’s nothing left to save me

Who wants to buy a heart
One broken lover’s heart
One broken heart for sale

She would not listen to the things my heart was saying
She turned and walked away
And told me I was playing

Some guys have all the luck
And my heart hasn’t any
I think I’ll paint a sign
For sale for a penny

Who wants…

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BROTHERS BY HEART — THE UNBREAKABLE QUIET FORCE BEHIND ALABAMA. Long before the bright arena lights, platinum records, and roaring crowds, there were simply two young men from Fort Payne learning the rare art of understanding one another without many words. Jeff Cook didn’t need long speeches — his guitar spoke for him. Randy Owen carried the melodies, the stories, and the voice that millions would one day recognize. Together, they created a balance that never chased the spotlight — it quietly earned the world’s respect. Their connection was never dramatic or loud. It was steady. Reliable. If Randy lifted the song with emotion, Jeff grounded it with calm precision. When the endless miles of the road weighed heavy, they didn’t complain — they endured. Night after night. Year after year. Fame arrived quickly, but ego never followed. That’s why Alabama never felt like just another band. They felt like something deeper — like family. And when illness later pulled Jeff Cook away from the stage he loved, Randy Owen didn’t step back or move on. He stepped closer. Not as a lead singer guarding a legacy, but as a brother protecting a lifetime bond. No grand speeches. No dramatic announcements. Just quiet loyalty. Many groups fall apart when the spotlight fades. Alabama never did. Because the real strength of the band was never the crowd, the charts, or the applause. It was two men who always understood when to lead, when to support, and when to simply stand side by side. And a brotherhood like that doesn’t disappear when the music stops. It only grows stronger in the silence.