So Who Whos Gonna Come an Save You From Yourself Again

1995 single by Oasis

"Wonderwall"
Wonderwall cover.jpg
Single by Oasis
from the album (What's the Story) Forenoon Celebrity?
B-side
  • "Round Are Way"
  • "The Swamp Song"
  • "The Masterplan"
Released thirty October 1995 (1995-10-30)
Recorded May 1995
Studio Rockfield (Rockfield, Wales)
Genre Britpop[1]
Length
  • iv:19 (album version)
  • 3:48 (radio edit)
Label Creation
Songwriter(s) Noel Gallagher
Producer(s)
  • Owen Morris
  • Noel Gallagher
Oasis singles chronology
"Forenoon Celebrity"
(1995)
"Wonderwall"
(1995)
"Don't Expect Back in Anger"
(1996)
Music video
"Wonderwall" on YouTube
(What's the Story) Morning Glory? track listing

12 tracks

  1. "Hello"
  2. "Roll with It"
  3. "Wonderwall"
  4. "Don't Look Back in Anger"
  5. "Hey Now!"
  6. Untitled
  7. "Some Might Say"
  8. "Cast No Shadow"
  9. "She's Electric"
  10. "Morning Glory"
  11. Untitled
  12. "Champagne Supernova"

"Wonderwall" is a song by English rock band Haven. It was written past Noel Gallagher. The song was produced by Gallagher and Owen Morris for the band's second studio album (What's the Story) Forenoon Glory?, released in 1995. According to Gallagher, "Wonderwall" describes "an imaginary friend who'southward gonna come up and salve you from yourself".[2]

The song was released every bit the 3rd single from the album on 30 Oct 1995. "Wonderwall" topped the charts in Australia and New Zealand and reached the top 10 in 13 other counties, including Canada and the United States at No. 5 and No. eight, respectively, besides every bit No. 2 on both the UK Singles Chart and the Irish Singles Nautical chart. The single was certified sextuple platinum past the British Phonographic Manufacture and golden past the Recording Industry Clan of America.

It remains i of the band's nearly popular songs, and was voted No. 1 on the Australian culling music radio station Triple J's "20 Years of the Hottest 100" in 2013.[iii] Many artists have besides covered the song, such as Ryan Adams, True cat Power, and Brad Mehldau.[4] In October 2020, it became the first song from the 1990s to reach 1 billion streams on Spotify.[5]

Production history [edit]

The song was originally titled "Wishing Stone". Gallagher told NME in 1996 that "Wonderwall" was written for Million Mathews, his then-girlfriend and later wife.[six] [7] Withal, afterward Gallagher and Mathews divorced in 2001,[viii] he said the song was not nigh her: "The meaning of that vocal was taken away from me past the media who jumped on information technology, and how practise you lot tell your Mrs it's not about her once she'due south read it is? It's a song about an imaginary friend who'southward gonna come up and save you from yourself."[two] The song'due south concluding title was inspired past George Harrison'due south solo album Wonderwall Music.[9]

The song was recorded at Rockfield Studios in Wales, during a ii-week recording of the Morning Celebrity anthology in May 1995. Morris produced the song in a half-day along with Gallagher, using a technique known equally "brickwalling" to intensify the audio of the song.[one] Liam Gallagher served equally pb vocaliser on the song after Noel had given him a choice between "Wonderwall" and "Don't Look Dorsum in Anger", another single from the album, with Noel singing lead vocals on the latter.[seven] All of the band'due south members except bassist Paul "Guigsy" McGuigan contributed to the recording, with Noel playing bass instead of McGuigan. This determination displeased Liam, who told Morris, "That's non Haven."[10]

"Wonderwall" is written in the fundamental of F minor and is gear up in common time with a moderate trip the light fantastic groove. Gallagher's vox ranges from an E3 to an F four in the song.[eleven]

Live performances [edit]

Noel Gallagher debuted the vocal on UK television backstage at Glastonbury, and it was circulate on Channel 4 on 24 June 1995. The song was not performed by the band during their headline performance the night before. In August 2002, Noel changed the arrangement of his live performances of the song to a style he admitted was heavily influenced by Ryan Adams' encompass. That arrangement has persisted through his most recent alive performances of the vocal, only prior to the band'due south 2008 tour, the original arrangement was used for live performances by the full ring with electric guitars and Liam on vocals. During the 2008 tour, the band returned to performing the vocal in a semi-acoustic form, in an organisation closely resembling the anthology version. This song was also performed during the 2012 Summer Olympics closing ceremony by Liam Gallagher and his post Oasis ring Beady Centre.

Disquisitional reception [edit]

Pan-European magazine Music & Media wrote, "A swirling rock vocal that slowly builds to epic proportions. Nicely chiming audio-visual guitars and psyched-up strings support Liam Gallagher's trademark declamatory and plaintive vocals. Non the easiest song for EHR, but a sure grower."[12]

Music video [edit]

The original music video to the song conceived past Johanna Bautista was filmed by director Nigel Dick at Unit 217B in Woolwich, London, on 30 September 1995.[xiii] The filming of the promotional video took place during the brief period when bassist Guigsy quit the band due to nervous burnout, and was replaced by Scott McLeod, who appears in the video along with the four other members of the band.[14] The song won British Video of the Year at the 1996 Brit Awards.

A second video depicts the band sitting downwardly throughout the video with some getting upward and leaving before returning. The video ends with Noel, Alan White and Scott McLeod leaving their seats, leaving Liam and Paul "Bonehead" Arthurs in their seats.

There are two versions of the video: one posted online past Vevo that has reached over 416 million views,[fifteen] and 1 posted by the ring themselves that has reached 406 million views[16] for a total of 822 million views, making it the most pop Haven video online.

Cover art [edit]

The sleeve artwork was inspired by the paintings of the Belgian surrealist René Magritte, and was shot on Primrose Loma in London past Michael Spencer Jones. The hand property the frame is that of art managing director Brian Cannon. The original idea was to accept Liam in the frame before Noel vetoed that idea whilst the shoot was taking place.[17] Instead, a female effigy was deemed necessary, so Creation Records employee Anita Heryet was asked to stand up in as encompass star for the shot.[18]

Chart and sales operation [edit]

"Wonderwall" reached the No. 2 spot in both Ireland and the United kingdom in Oct and November 1995.[xix] [20] In the UK, the song was held off the top spot past "I Believe" past Robson & Jerome. "Wonderwall" finished at No. ten on the yr-stop chart for 1995[21] and at No. 26 on the 1990s decade-end in the Britain.[ citation needed ] The track has sold 3.6 million copies in the UK every bit of April 2022, certifying the vocal sextuple platinum and making it Oasis' biggest-selling song in their homeland.[22] [23]

In the United States, the song peaked at No. 1 on the Modern Rock Tracks chart for a then-unprecedented ten weeks and reached No. eight on the Billboard Hot 100 in March 1996, condign their only top-10 hit on the latter chart.[24] [25] "Wonderwall" also proved to exist a major hit in Australia and New Zealand, claiming the No. i spot in both countries.[26] [27] In Canada, the vocal reached No. five on the RPM 100 chart and topped the RPM Alternative 30 ranking.[28] [29]

Awards and accolades [edit]

  • The American magazine The Hamlet Phonation 's Pazz & Jop critics' poll ranked "Wonderwall" at No. xi on its annual twelvemonth-stop poll in 1995. The post-obit year, "Wonderwall" was ranked at No. four, tied with Lurid'due south "Common People".[thirty] [31]
  • In the Grammy Awards of 1997, the band received a nomination for Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Grouping, and Noel Gallagher picked upwards an additional nomination for Best Rock Vocal, winning neither.[32]
  • In May 2005, "Wonderwall" was voted the best British vocal of all time, in a poll of over 8,500 listeners conducted by Virgin Radio.[33]
  • In August 2006, "Wonderwall" was named the 2nd-greatest song of all time in a poll conducted by Q Magazine, finishing behind some other Haven song, "Live Forever".[34]
  • In 2006, U2's guitarist The Edge named "Wonderwall" one of the songs he near wishes he'd written.[35]
  • In May 2007, NME magazine placed "Wonderwall" at No. 27 on its listing of the 50 Greatest Indie Anthems Ever.[36]
  • On 28 June 2007, NME stated that Alex James, bassist of Blur, who had been long-standing rivals with Oasis, said: "Wish I'd written it. He's got a great voice, Liam (Gallagher)".[37]
  • In July 2009, "Wonderwall" was voted at No. 12 in the Hottest 100 of all time inaugural poll, conducted past Australian radio station Triple J. More than one-half a million votes were cast.[38]
  • In February 2014, the song was voted No. 36 of The 500 greatest songs of all time, according to NME.[39]
  • In March 2016, "Wonderwall" was voted the greatest British vocal of all fourth dimension by Radio X listeners.[40]
  • In September 2021, Rolling Stone placed the song at No. 95 on its list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.[41]

Rails listings [edit]

All tracks are written by Noel Gallagher, except where noted.

UK single
No. Title Length
one. "Wonderwall" 4:18
ii. "Round Are Way" 5:42
three. "The Swamp Song" 4:xix
4. "The Masterplan" 5:23
Total length: 19:52
US single
No. Title Length
i. "Wonderwall" 4:14
2. "Round Are Way" 5:41
3. "Talk Tonight" 4:11
4. "Rockin' Chair" 4:33
5. "I Am the Walrus (Live Glasgow Cathouse June 1994)" (Written by Lennon–McCartney) 8:14
Full length: 26:53

Personnel [edit]

  • Liam Gallagher – vocals, tambourine
  • Noel Gallagher – backing vocals, audio-visual and electric guitars, bass,[10] pianoforte
  • Paul "Bonehead" Arthurs – mellotron[42]
  • Alan White – drums

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Release history [edit]

The Mike Flowers Pops version [edit]

"Wonderwall"
MikeFlowersPopsWonderwallcover.jpg
Single past the Mike Flowers Pops
from the anthology A Groovy Identify
B-side
  • "Son of God"
  • "Theme from Memory Man"
Released eighteen Dec 1995 (1995-12-18) [96]
Genre Easy listening
Length ii:40
Characterization London
Songwriter(s) Noel Gallagher
Producer(southward) Adrian Johnston
Mike Roberts
The Mike Flowers Pops singles chronology
"Wonderwall"
(1995)
"Light My Fire" / "Please Release Me"
(1996)

British ring the Mike Flowers Pops released an easy listening version that reached No. 2 on the U.k. Singles Chart—just as the Oasis original had washed two months earlier—during Christmas 1995. On New year's Mean solar day 1996, information technology earned a Silverish certification from the British Phonographic Industry for sales greater than 200,000 copies. This embrace likewise peaked within the height ten on the charts of Kingdom of denmark, Ireland and Sweden.

Noel Gallagher mentioned that when BBC Radio 1 premiered the song, they jokingly claimed that they had plant "the original version of Wonderwall". Gallagher, who had been in America at the time, was surprised to be asked by one of his record company'due south executives if he had really written the vocal.[97]

The Mike Flowers Pops encompass was used in the 1997 moving picture The Jackal, and as well in the 1999 film Superstar.

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Cover versions [edit]

Ryan Adams' version, first performed in 2001, and later released in 2003 on Beloved Is Hell pt. one EP, was well received past Noel Gallagher.[111] Information technology was featured in The O.C. episode "The Heartbreak". It was featured in the final scenes of the Smallville Season three episode "Velocity" and the first season of the Israeli documentary series Couchsurfers. In an interview with Spin, Gallagher said "I recall Ryan Adams is the only person who e'er got that song correct."[111]

Paul Anka covered the song on his swing album Rock Swings, released in 2005 and was used as figure skater Paul Fentz'due south backing track during his 2018 Winter Olympics performance in Pyeongchang, South Korea.[112]

American rapper Jay-Z often has his crowds sing "Wonderwall" after his song "Jockin' Jay-Z",[113] which includes a reference to Noel Gallagher's criticism of the rapper's involvement in the typically rock-axial Glastonbury Festival in 2008. It launched a state of war of words betwixt Jay Z and Oasis, with Oasis' rhythm guitarist Jewel Archer describing Jay Z's actions as akin to an "eight-yr-erstwhile girl."[114] After Oasis broke up, Jay Z afterward claimed he would similar to work with Liam Gallagher.[115]

Mashups [edit]

"Wonderwall" was featured in the popular mashup "Boulevard of Broken Songs" mixed by Party Ben in late 2004, which also contained parts of both Travis's "Writing to Reach You" and Dark-green Day's "Boulevard of Broken Dreams". In late 2006, Gallagher defendant Light-green Day of 'ripping off' "Wonderwall", proverb "If you mind, you'll find it is exactly the same organisation every bit "Wonderwall". They should take the decency to wait until I am expressionless [before stealing my songs]. I, at to the lowest degree, pay the people I steal from that courtesy".[116]

Neil Cicierega'southward mashup albums Mouth Silence and Oral fissure Moods feature tracks that are mashups of "Wonderwall" titled "Wndrwll" and "Wallspin", the one-time a humorous remix featuring "Everywhere You Look" and the latter a mashup with "Yous Spin Me Round (Like A Record)".[117] [118]

In popular civilization [edit]

"Wonderwall" is the team vocal of Minnesota United FC of Major League Soccer, sung after every home victory. The overarching fan organization is MNWonderwall.[119] Wonderwall is also played afterwards all Manchester City F.C. home games.[120]

Run across also [edit]

  • List of best-selling singles in Commonwealth of australia
  • List of number-one singles in Australia during the 1990s
  • List of RPM Rock/Alternative number-1 singles (Canada)
  • Listing of number-ane singles in 1996 (New Zealand)
  • Number one modern rock hits of 1995
  • Number one modern stone hits of 1996

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wonderwall_%28song%29

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