Me Wise Magic

"Me Wise Magic" is a song by Van Halen that appears on the rock band's 1996 compilation album Best Of – Volume I and became the band's 13th No. 1 Billboard Mainstream Rock Track, maintaining the No. 1 position for 6 weeks during the autumn of 1996. It was the first of two highly anticipated tracks recorded by the band with its original lead vocalist and songwriter, David Lee Roth. Together with the other new song on the compilation album, "Can't Get This Stuff No More", it's the last song recorded by the original line-up, consisting of Roth, Michael Anthony and the Van Halen brothers.

"Me Wise Magic"
Single by Van Halen
from the album Best Of – Volume I
ReleasedOctober 22, 1996
RecordedJuly–August 1996
Studio5150 Studios
GenreHeavy metal, hard rock, psychedelic rock
Length6:09
LabelWarner Bros.
Songwriter(s)Eddie Van Halen, Michael Anthony, David Lee Roth, Alex Van Halen
Producer(s)Glen Ballard
Van Halen singles chronology
"Humans Being"
(1996)
"Me Wise Magic"
(1996)
"Can't Get This Stuff No More"
(1997)

Composition

After Warner Bros. Records notified David Lee Roth that a Van Halen greatest hits album was coming, Roth contacted Eddie Van Halen asking for more details. The singer and the guitarist got in touch again, and two weeks later Eddie, realizing "Humans Being" was the only new track on the compilation, asked Roth if he would record two new songs. Eddie first wrote a song for Roth "that he didn't particularly care for." Eventually when checking all the new songs along with Eddie and producer Glen Ballard, Roth narrowed down to a shuffle, "Can't Get This Stuff No More," and a pop song, "Me Wise Magic". Roth was at first bothered by the darker introduction, but eventually came to like the song. Eddie's nickname for the demo was "The Three Faces of Shamus," for its three sections with "completely different vibes going on.[1]

Roth discarded Ballard's sketch lyrics and wrote his own, and denied the suggestion to get help from songwriter Desmond Child. In June 1996, Roth arrived at 5150 Studios with Eddie without the guitarist having warned band members Michael Anthony and Alex Van Halen about the singer's return.[2] Eddie Van Halen's guitar playing on the song features a whammy bar that raises and lowers chords while still keeping them in tune. This effect was achieved by recording with a modified Peavey Wolfgang signature model, featuring a TransTrem tremolo system.[1]

The lyrics to "Me Wise Magic," written by David Lee Roth, were based on an initial set of lyrics by the song's producer Glen Ballard, which Roth insisted on rewriting to suit his own unique style. Written in first-person, "Me Wise Magic" presents a series of questions and statements about self-awareness, religious belief and superstitions - alternating between the points of view of God and a human being.

Release

A promo CD of "Me Wise Magic" was distributed to radio stations prior to the release of Van Halen's Best of Volume I. Its artwork features a stylized image of Buddha, reflecting the song's lyrics (specifically the lyric, "a Buddhist riff for your inner ear.") "Me Wise Magic" became an instant radio hit - Van Halen's third #1 hit with Roth - and twelfth of a record-setting 14 Billboard #1s during the 1980s and 1990s. Reviews were also positive.[3]

The return of Roth to Van Halen made media headlines, with MTV going as far as to play a celebratory "welcome back" commercial for the charismatic Roth. Weeks after an appearance at the 1996 MTV Video Music Awards caused a public and media sensation, Van Halen parted ways - for a second time, acrimoniously - with Roth.[4]

A planned video for "Me Wise Magic" was never filmed. The first proposal, of a concept video with a Voodoo theme, was discarded by Roth, who also rejected a performance video where he would be in a big screen behind the three other members.[5] However, in lieu of a video, MTV created a montage of Van Halen and Roth clips set to the song, which they ran with a Van Halen TV special.[6]

Chuck Klosterman of Vulture.com ranked it the 104th-best Van Halen song, calling it "the other new track from the fleeting ’96 Roth reunion, and supposedly the good one, which is depressing news for anyone about to listen to the bad one."[7]

References

  1. "Eruptions"; Steven Rosen, Guitar World (December 1996)
  2. Dodds, Kevin. Edward Van Halen: A Definitive Biography. p. 203.
  3. Inc, Nielsen Business Media (19 October 1996). "Billboard". Nielsen Business Media, Inc. via Google Books.
  4. https://www.billboard.com/music/van-halen
  5. Christe, Ian (2007). Everybody Wants Some: The Van Halen Saga. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-470-53618-6.
  6. mtvnews, MTV News Staff 09/02/2010. "The 2010 VMA Countdown: Van Halen Get The Band Back Together (For A Few Hours)".
  7. Klosterman, Chuck (October 6, 2020). "All 131 Van Halen Songs, Ranked From Worst to Best A look back at the band's formidable legacy". Vulture.com. Retrieved October 11, 2020.
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