Released: April 2, 2007

Songwriter: Neil Thrasher Wendell Mobley Michael Dulaney

Producer: Lee Brice Doug Johnson

[Verse 1: Lee Brice]
She got her daddy's tongue and temper
Sometimes her mouth could use a filter
God shook his head the day he built her
Oh, but I bet he smiled
She loves and lives her life, unruly
Tears up that dirt road up in a dually
Dangerous, absolutely
And in a little while
She'll be rounding that corner on three wheels
Ain't slowing down, yelling, "Come on, jump in"
Always up to something, crazy, got nothing on her

[Chorus: Lee Brice]
She ain't right
She ain't right
She ain't right
But she's just right for me

[Verse 2: Lee Brice]
She says she wants to meet my momma
I said, "I don't think you ought a
Be like mixing oil and water"
But by midnight, she had
Momma on the coffee table, dancing
Coming unwound
Good God, I swear, can't take her anywhere
What's the girl going to do next?

[Chorus: Lee Brice]
She ain't right
She ain't right
She ain't right
But she's just right for me

[Bridge: Lee Brice]
Every once in a while, she gives me that smile
And says, "I just don't see somebody like you
Loving somebody like me"

[Chorus: Lee Brice]
She ain't right
Oh, She ain't right
She ain't right
She ain't right
She ain't right
She's just right
She's just right
She's just right for me
She's just right
She's just right
She ain't right
She's just right for me

Lee Brice

Lee Brice (born Kenneth Mobley Brice, Jr., June 10, 1979) is an American country music singer and songwriter, signed to Curb Records. Brice has released four albums for the label: Love Like Crazy, Hard to Love, I Don’t Dance and Lee Brice. He has also released eleven singles, of which four were written by his cousin, Michael Cericola, and have charted at number one on Billboard Hot Country Songs and Country Airplay: “A Woman Like You”, “Hard to Love”, “I Drive Your Truck”, and “I Don’t Dance”. He has also charted within the top 10 with “Love Like Crazy”, “Parking Lot Party”, “Drinking Class”, and “That Don’t Sound Like You”. “Love Like Crazy” was the top country song of 2010 according to Billboard Year-End, and broke a 62-year-old record for the longest run on the country chart.