Abracadabra (Steve Miller Band song)

"Abracadabra" is a song by American rock group the Steve Miller Band, written by Steve Miller. The song was released as the first single from the 1982 album of the same name that year. In the U.S., it spent two non-consecutive weeks at  on the Billboard Hot 100, the biggest hit of Steve Miller's career to date, as well their last US top 10 hit.

The song was interpolated in the Eminem song "Houdini", which debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Origins
The song is said to have been inspired by the American singer Diana Ross, whom Miller had met when they each performed on the same episode of the pop music television show Hullabaloo in the 1960s. The lyrics "Round and round and round it goes, where it stops nobody knows" are a reference to the spinning wheel segment from The Original Amateur Hour.

Speaking on The Howard Stern Show in June 2016, Miller said at first his record company Capitol Records did not see the potential hit it would become. "Capitol didn't believe in it and didn't want to release it. I had a different deal with Phonogram in Europe. When it came out in Europe, I cancelled my American tour because it was   everywhere in the world, except the States." After seeing its success overseas, Capitol released it in the U.S. and it also climbed to.

Upon release, Billboard said the song "mixes sly lyric, soulful vocal, and Miller's guitar wizardry."

Commercial performance
The song became a worldwide hit, charting in ten countries and topping the charts in six. In the U.S., the song was  on the Billboard Hot 100 for two non-consecutive weeks, becoming the band's third number one hit in the U.S. along with "The Joker" and "Rock'n Me". It was knocked off the top by Chicago's "Hard to Say I'm Sorry", only to return to  two weeks later. A similar occurrence happened in 1976, when "Rock'n Me" knocked Chicago's "If You Leave Me Now" out of the  spot.

The song also showed substantial longevity, spending fourteen weeks in the top ten of the Hot 100 chart. It was the  song on the Billboard Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1982. "Abracadabra" is listed at  on Billboard Hot 100 60th Anniversary chart.

Alternate versions
The UK single version has never yet appeared on CD. It is 3:33 and is an exclusive edit where the chorus is edited back in at 3:06 and repeats to fade. The non-UK single version of the song appears on several Steve Miller Band compilation albums such as Young Hearts as well as on the Time-Life compilation Sounds of the Eighties: 1980–1982 and on a CD of songs hand-picked by Guy Fieri titled Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives: Road Songs That Rock. Capitol issued an alternative version on a promotional 12" single (Capitol Records #SPRO 9797) for radio airplay; it featured a slightly slower tempo, removal of the second verse and first chorus, and a slightly earlier fade than the LP version. A live version of the song was released on Steve Miller Band Live! in 1983.

Music video
The music video features magicians in a white room performing tricks and other illusions with a female assistant. Since Miller himself was touring Europe at the time and unavailable for the shoot, he appears in the video only in a series of photos. He is seen wearing sunglasses or having his eyes covered with a black bar juxtaposed next to images of a beautiful enchantress, "The Abracadabra Girl". Her face, physique and actions form the focal point of the video, dramatising the lyrics. She appears in different guises and attitudes; stage magician, juggler of scarves, playful sorceress with white mouse on her shoulder, seductress in a top hat and spandex. At times she is seen reclining, tossing her hair, making fireworks burst from the hat with tap of her wand amid more stills of Steve Miller.

Two young male magician/jugglers are also featured in the video, sometimes shirtless. They perform tricks and make the young witch disappear. She then turns into an older female sorceress, performed by another actress, who gestures dramatically then dances a tango in hot pants. The video begins and ends with the Abracadabra Girl placing a ball on a spinning umbrella, suggestive of the line "round and round and round it goes, where it stops nobody knows".

Various special effects are employed in the video, such as collage, extreme colours and computer created magical effects. Somewhat primitive now, at that time, the early days of MTV and music videos, such effects were fresh and innovative. The video has since become iconic as has the mysterious girl, whose image is interwoven with the song. Peter Conn served as the video's director.

7" 45 RPM
Side one Side two
 * 1) "Abracadabra" (single version; note: UK 7" version is an exclusive edit – see above for details)
 * 1) "Baby Wanna Dance" (North American release)
 * 2) "Never Say No" (European release)

North American release
Side one Side two
 * 1) "Abracadabra" (album version)
 * 1) "Macho City" (album version)

European release
Side one Side two
 * 1) "Abracadabra" (album version)
 * 1) "Never Say No" (album version)

Cover versions and samples

 * Eagles of Death Metal covered the song on the 2019 cover album Eagles of Death Metal Presents Boots Electric Performing the Best Songs We Never Wrote alongside Shawnee Smith.
 * Filipino singer and current Journey frontman Arnel Pineda covered the song along with Whitesnake's Joel Hoekstra, Billy Sheehan, Lenny Castro, Van Romaine and Ollie Marland.
 * Sugar Ray covered the song on their 1999 album 14:59.
 * Rapper Eminem interpolated the song for his 2024 single "Houdini".

Depictions in popular media
"Abracadabra" was used in the season 12 episode "The Witches of Langley" of the animated television series American Dad! during a musical montage when Steve and his friends take up witchcraft to gain popularity at school. The song also featured in the British sitcom Not Going Out episode "Magic" when Lee and Lucy are rehearsing their magic act. It was also used in the 2013 film The Incredible Burt Wonderstone and in an audition scene in the 2021 film Sing 2.