lunes, 25 de diciembre de 2017

'I Love Bollywood And Will Be Coming To India Soon': ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus

'I Love Bollywood And Will Be Coming To India Soon': ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus
ABBA fans, here's your perfect Christmas gift!

25/12/2017 9:10 AM IST




Bjorn Ulvaeus at the launch of the 'Abba: Super Troupers' exhibition, at the Royal Festival Hall, London.





My earliest memory of ABBA and their music was during the house parties my parents threw in the late 1970s and early 80s in Mumbai (Then known as Bombay). I remember my uncles and aunts in bell bottoms, midis and platform heels tapping their feet and grooving to Dancing Queen, Voulez Vous and Happy New Year that played on LP. Thirty five years later, meeting ABBA member Bjorn Ulvaeus was in many ways a surreal experience. In a freewheeling interview Bjorn opened up about the meteoric rise of ABBA, the reason behind the sudden breakup, his love for Bollywood and what lies ahead for one of the most popular groups ever in the music industry.

Q: Did you know you were so popular in India?

A: Oh I didn't know that! Not in the seventies at least. Much later I heard that our songs had been played a lot in your country. And I thought that is great news. It is fantastic isn't it. People ask me why is it that your songs have endured so long. I don't know the answer. I just know that it is amazing, yet it is an enigma. 'Didn't think we would win Eurovision & become so popular. It is a miracle'

Q: Everyone talks about the Eurovision 1974 which your band won. It has been quoted as your own 'unique Waterloo moment'. Did you ever think that ABBA and its kind of music would become so popular all over the world?

A: I didn't think that. I thought we will end up at number 6 or 7 or something like that. But I knew we had to look as outrageous as possible, and that is why we had those outfits. [Laughs] I thought, we have a strange song, which was not a typical Eurovision song, we have strange outfits, so people are going to remember us even if we end up at number 5 or 6 or even 7. So that was the strategy. I never thought we would win. It was fantastic. You know, it was one of those overnight things. I remember waking up early next morning thinking, 'My God! What is this? What just happened! You know, just yesterday we were this group from Scandinavia, and today we are everywhere. All over the globe'. And this happened overnight. It was a fantastic feeling. I will never forget that.



Q: But there must have been a journey to reach that peak that ABBA did. Clearly you did not want to be a one song wonder. How do four creative people collaborate and form an identity?

A: To be absolutely honest, we had not yet found our identity at that point. We were still fumbling around. Were we a glam rock group? But that did not work for us. Though once we recorded Mamma Mia and SoS, which turned out to be big hits, then we knew for sure, 'Ah we are a pop group. That's what we are. A pure pop group'. And from then onwards, there was no question about who or what we were.

'We were inspired by the Beatles. Gave 100% to each song'

Q: I understand you began with folk music and then hooked up with the Hep Stars before forming ABBA. So what were your musical influences while growing up?

A:Back then Swedish radio had one channel. That was the one main source apart from records (LPs) of the music that I heard. And Swedish radio played everything. Sometimes they even played Indian music. They also played German, Italian, ballads, English, folk music, American rock. I heard every thing, and so did Benny. So we grew up with a little bit of everything. But of course as teenagers we were very influenced by what was happening in America, with Elvis and the rock era 1956 onwards. And then we were influenced by pop music, the Beatles primarily. So they were, I could say, my biggest influence.

Q: Did the songs come to Benny and you instantly, in one session, or was it days of work writing each and every song and putting in the melody?

A: Before we won the Eurovision contest we were constantly in a hurry to write a song, get it finished, so that we could go out there and do gigs. We were doing all sorts of things just so that we could pay the rent. Then we said to ourselves, what are we doing? We should concentrate on songwriting. So we wrote away constantly. We would throw away ninety percent of what we wrote so that just the best remained. And what we got were really good songs. We would write so that each song told its own story. And because we spent so much time writing we toured very little. Which is why I think we have so many songs that are of such high quality. We gave 100% to each song, never giving up or stopping at 95% percent. We would not stop till we felt, 'Yes, this is it'.

Q: ABBA came into the music scene when rock and roll was on a high and stayed popular through the years despite punk, rap, trance and hip hop. What accounts for ABBA's freshness even today?

A: It's a miracle, it is a miracle isn't it! I really don't know why and how our songs are still popular today.

You know, we were just doing the best we could. Honestly our time perspective was limited. We had thought we might last one year or two years (after splitting), and then be forgotten. But the popularity has been incredible. I don't know why it has been the way it has, that people know our songs where ever you go. And like you said, even the young people know the songs and the words. Isn't that strange!


Q: Did you know in India and elsewhere in the world, young girls and boys used to role-play ABBA members while growing up, with a tennis racket as a guitar or a skipping rope in hand as a mic? Then there are bands that copy you and dress like you. Have you seen any of these?

A: I have seen photographs, but I have never seen a tribute band live. That would be kind of weird to have someone playing you live in front of you.

Q: 'Dancing Queen' has been written about as the most perfect song ever. But which is your favourite ABBA number?

A: Oh well, there have been several from various periods. I see it as three periods of creativity in our nine years together. In the first period we were sounding much younger, like we were writing for teenagers. The middle period is slightly more mature and the end period is quite mature. We tried to emulate the Beatles because from album to album they would always change, they would always develop. We wanted to do that as well.

Q: Personally, I have a strong affinity for the song 'The Winner Takes it All'. You wrote it during a tough personal time. With you writing the song and Agnetha singing it, was it a catharsis of sorts?

A: It was. Although the lyrics is fiction, there is of course something of what happened to me and Agnetha in it. I think definitely (it was a catharsis). I will never forget that day. It was so emotional. That morning when I came to the studio, I had the lyrics with me. We had already recorded the backing track like we always do. And that morning we did the vocals. It was very emotional. But we were quite professional about it. It was an amicable divorce. It was like, okay let us call it a day. It was almost like that. But I loved writing the ending. Happy endings are boring. There was a sort of melancholy in this one. A Nordic melancholy. Not quite Bollywood [Laughs]

Q: Aha. So you have watched Bollywood films?

A: Oh yes I have. I think they have got something so special. That is why they are so popular I guess. They are so vivacious, so happy. Doesn't Bollywood carry the soul of India, in some part at least.

Q: Well in some parts, yes. Back to ABBA. You spoke about three phases. How did you know when to evolve and more importantly when not to change?

A: We took our music very seriously. The rest of what was around us was just fun. But musically we constantly had our ear to the ground on what is happening. What are people listening to. We would try and identify new sounds and say, 'ah that is a new sound. We have to get that'. And that is the nature of pop music – to embrace, emulate and get inspired. Certainly not steal, but get inspired by what others were doing. And we did.

Q: The same goes for your costumes from Kimonos to catsuits. I visited the ABBA museum earlier this week and saw the costumes very closely. A lot of attention was paid to the clothes. Were they fashionable 40 years ago?

A: I don't know if I could call that fashion. But we always used to end up with something that was fun. We were never image conscious in that respect. I always used to admire groups like Roxy Music band. There were so serious about what they look like and what they should look like. They were so slick. While ABBA was the poor country cousin (Laughs).

Q: On stage you looked like you were having such a lot of fun and throughly enjoying yourselves.

A: We did. We really did. Because we were sharing something with the world, which we ourselves were so proud of. We always had that feeling.

Q: The group had such fun creating music. But cracks were emerging within. When you announced your split, did your last recording and gave your last interview together, how did it feel the next day after ABBA didn't exist as a group?

A: It wasn't that dramatic. It was never like we said that we would never get together again. We actually said let us take a break. Because Benny and I wanted to do something and the ladies wanted to do their separate solo albums. We kind of felt that the energy was running out, which very often happens to groups. We felt we were not quite the same anymore in the studio. We were not having as much fun as we used to. We were not laughing as much as we used to. So we felt we should take a break.

Q: Coming back to the present. You have used technology a lot at the ABBA Museum, including the remote piano, the virtual stage, in which incidentally I tried performing as a fifth band member as well. So tell me about the whole concept?

A: Oh yeah you did? (Laughs). Right now we are in the middle of a very exciting project into virtual reality. The ABBA group is pioneering into virtual reality.

Q: We would love to hear the details. There has been a lot of buzz about ABBA coming together for a music tour in 2019?

A: Well yes. We were approached by Simon Fuller who is a global entrepreneur. He wanted to do something with our music. So now we are getting transformed into zeros and ones. We are making ourselves digital. Eventually the idea is to do a live show built on our music and make ourselves live, virtually, using holograms. So that is happening right now. They are actually putting our face muscles into libraries and converting them into zeros and ones. They will make every little muscle do whatever they want.


Q: Including adding grove and dance movements to your performance?

Bjorn: Yeah yeah. So that is going to happen in the spring of 2019. The 'digital' four of us are going to perform together. It involves people from the film industry, people from IT working together somewhere in San Francisco in front of screens right now. They are making sure they have everything, our faces and the movements. We have had helmets and we have been spaced by a thousand cameras capturing every little thing. So all our muscle movements are being stored in digital language.

Q: So have the four of you Agneta, Frida, Benny and you actually come together for the 2019 event?

A: Oh yeah, yeah. When we meet & jam it is just like old times.

Q: So the ABBA group has reunited?

A: (Laughs) We have been working together for this project. You are absolutely right.

Q: That is news! Are you rehearsing together like old times?

A: Yes we have been working together. And I must say here that we are the best of friends. We continue to be really good friends. And it is really strange because when we sit together, the four of us in a room, and it just takes a minute before we are back where we ended as a group. It is quite a feeling.

Q: Do you also jam together?

A: [Laughs]. We did, we did. We did some of that too.

Q: So where will this concert be held?

A: We are still discussing this. You never know, it could be Europe, it could be Australia or even Asia.

Q: Will the group be coming to India?

A: Of course, of course we will. I don't know exactly when but we will be coming. Or let's say 'they' will be coming.

Q: And are you also making a sequel to the movie Mamma Mia?

A: Oh yes, Mamma Mia 2 is being filmed right now. It is called 'Here We Go Again'. It is almost a Bollywood film. You know Mamma Mia has a kind of Bollywood feel to it. This will be a new story. Two stories actually. It is being filmed right now in London and the film is going to be released on 25th July next year (2018) globally.

Q: You talk about Bollywood so passionately. Have you visited India?

A: I have only spent two hours in Mumbai airport. It is a shame I haven't yet travelled in India. Where do you think I should go to?

Q: On a completely unrelated note. You have an interesting story about how you become one of the biggest advocates of the anti-cash movement or the digitisation of money? This is particularly relevant for us in India as we are caught up in a debate about cash versus digital currency in India.

Bjorn: Well I don't think bitcoins are the future, because there is too much shady business and too many possibilities for criminals. But I think cash will gradually be phased out. If you look at several countries, say South Africa, they have bypassed several traditional methods and they use the mobile phone for financial transactions. There is no reason why the rest of the world shouldn't follow. People are used to having bits of paper with them (cash) but it is really old fashioned. Come to think of it, it is actually strange to have pieces of paper physically changing hands. I don't think we need that. I am very interested to see which country does it (goes cashless) first. It could be Sweden or Norway. I am also interested to see what it does to criminals and tax evaders. I also think going digital is very important for the empowerment of women. So that payments go straight to a woman, bypassing the husband.

Q: It is very interesting you say this, because India is looking at digital very closely, where subsidies go directly to the person it is intended for, including women, so that they are economically empowered.

A: I am a strong advocate of the empowerment of women because I think it is the single most important thing to make ours a better world. There is nothing better you can do that to empower women to erase poverty and so much more. Its helps in everything. So I am going to work very much for that. And I think Agneta and Frida are two very strong symbols. They are independent, strong Swedish women. They can be an example for a lot of others.

Q: Finally, any message for your India fans?

A: I am so glad to have done this interview because I feel that I really need to go to India. I really do. I will come soon. So that you for giving me that [opportunity].

(The opinions expressed in this post are the personal views of the author. They do not necessarily reflect the views of HuffPost India. Any omissions or errors are the author's and HuffPost India does not assume any liability or responsibility for them.)

http://www.huffingtonpost.in/rupali-mehra/i-love-bollywood-and-will-be-coming-to-india-soon-abbas-bjorn-ulvaeus_a_23314754/

viernes, 15 de diciembre de 2017

Se exhibe en Londres exposición del grupo sueco ABBA

Se exhibe en Londres exposición del grupo sueco ABBA


El exintegrante, Bjorn Ulvaeus, inauguró la exposición de 'ABBA: Super Troupers', que compila vestuarios, cartas, fotos y objetos personales de uno de los grupos de pop más exitosos de la historia
15/12/2017 12:39 NOTIMEX / FOTO: NOTIMEX



LONDRES.

El exintegrante de ABBA, Bjorn Ulvaeus, inauguró la exposición de ABBA: Super Troupers, que compila vestuarios, cartas, fotos y objetos personales de uno de los grupos de pop más exitosos de la historia.

Durante la inauguración, el músico y compositor sueco confesó que nunca pensó que su éxito musical duraría tantos años cuando ganaron el concurso de Eurovisión en la ciudad inglesa de Brighton en 1974.

Pensé que solo iba a durar unos años. Eso es lo que esperaba y la verdad es que incluso al final cuando nos separamos, también pensé que duraría unos años. La gente tocaría una canción de repente y que eso sería todo”, señaló Bjorn.

El músico, de 72 años de edad, afirmó que inaugurar esta exposición 35 años después de la separación del grupo es “absolutamente increíble”.

Mucha gente le pregunta “¿qué se siente ser el centro de una exposición, ser una pieza de museo cuando aún estás vivo?. Es raro, pero te acostumbras”, comentó durante la inauguración.

Bjorn explicó que cuando la directora artística del Southbank Centre, Jude Kelly, se acercó para “preguntarnos sobre esta exposición dijimos que sí porque es un ángulo muy interesante”, el tratar de vincular las canciones con los eventos de los años 70.

Te acercas mucho a la realidad de Gran Bretaña en los 70. No tenía idea que era tan triste”, aseguró Bjorn ante la risa del público.

La exposición vincula los éxitos musicales de ABBA como Waterloo, Super Trouper, Dancing Queen y Mamma Mia entre otros, con eventos políticos, sociales y musicales de la historia de Gran Bretaña.

La segunda de nueve salas recrea un hogar británico en 1973 con un televisor cuyas noticias reflejan la crisis económica de ese año que desembocó en paros laborales y jornadas de trabajo de tres días.

Los curadores de la exposición en el centro cultural Southbank Centre, a orillas del río Támesis, se dieron a la tarea de recrear la suite Napoleón del Grand Hotel en Brighton donde el cuarteto celebró la noche que ganó el concurso de Eurovisión en 1974.

Los cuatro integrantes, Agnetha, Bjorn, Anni-Frid (Frida) y Benny conquistaron al mundo con las letras de sus canciones, su música pegajosa y originales vestuarios, en un fenómeno musical que prevalece a más de 40 años de su primer éxito.

Otra de las salas contiene los Estudios Polar de grabación con los ecualizadores y micrófonos de la época, así como los audífonos de piel que usaron las vocalistas Agnetha y Frida durante la grabación del video Gimme, gimme, gimme.

En una carrera musical que abarcó 10 años, ABBA solo estuvo de gira durante tres meses y el resto del tiempo se dedicó a hacer videos para mantenerse en contacto con sus fans a nivel mundial.

Su separación definitiva, aunque nunca se hizo oficial, está recreada en la penúltima sala que contiene un comunicado de prensa de 1982 en el que se informa que Frida se muda a Londres.

El Museo ABBA en Estocolmo facilitó algunas de las piezas, como por ejemplo los kimonos originales que usó el grupo durante su gira promocional en Japón.

La capa blanca y dorada que usó Frida durante una gira en Australia en 1977, donde el grupo actuó bajo una lluvia torrencial, también es parte de esta exposición que abre al público a partir de este día y hasta el 29 de abril de 2018.

http://www.excelsior.com.mx/funcion/2017/12/15/1208114

jueves, 14 de diciembre de 2017

Abba star Bjorn Ulvaeus: Eurovision is less about the music now

13th December 2017
Abba star Bjorn Ulvaeus: Eurovision is less about the music now



Abba congratulate each other after winning the Eurovision Song Contest (PA)

Abba’s Bjorn Ulvaeus has said Eurovision – the contest the band famously won – is less about the music now and that he cannot watch the whole event because it is too long.

The Swedish pop group were catapulted to worldwide success after scooping the Eurovision Song Contest with their song Waterloo when the event was held in Brighton in 1974.

Ulvaeus, 72, who has unveiled a new, immersive exhibition at London’s Southbank Centre on the rise of the Swedish pop band, said the event had become less about the music and more about everything else.


“It’s fun, it’s spectacular,” he told the Press Association.

Britain's Eurovision singer Lucie Jones (Charlie Clift/BBC/PA)Britain’s Eurovision singer Lucie Jones (Charlie Clift/BBC/PA)
“Musically, it’s never really been very good. But I think that people are more concentrated on perhaps melody and music earlier, than they are now.

“Now it’s about the whole package, performing, dancing, doing everything. It’s great fun. I usually watch it, not the whole thing, it’s too long. I watch excerpts of it.”

Asked if he had any tips for the UK, which this year fielded singer Lucie Jones in the contest, he added: “Our recipe was trying to write as good a song as we can. It was as simple as that.

“We had two songs to choose from. One was more typical of Eurovision at that time. Waterloo was completely different from anything else that had been before but it was also risky.

“We chose it because it was more fun to perform. Take risks!”

Abba: Super Troupers opens at the Southbank Centre on Thursday and runs until April 29 next year.


http://www.yourlocalguardian.co.uk/leisure/showbiz/15770471.Abba_star_Bjorn_Ulvaeus__Eurovision_is_less_about_the_music_now/

ABBA's Björn Ulvaeus compared himself to Charles Dickens

ABBA legend Björn Ulvaeus compares himself to Charles Dickens
ABBA star Björn Ulvaeus claims he has quite a lot in common with novelist Charles Dickens.
By JACK TEAGUE WITH DOMINIQUE HINES
PUBLISHED: 08:55, Thu, Dec 14, 2017 | UPDATED: 09:53, Thu, Dec 14, 2017





ABBA's Björn Ulvaeus compared himself to Charles Dickens
The singer/songwriter made the comparison to the Victorian literary legend at the opening of an exhibition about his chart-topping band in London yesterday.

Björn, 72, read a review about the new Dickens movie, The Man Who Invented Christmas, staring Dan Stevens, and he revealed: “It said about the young Dickens, he was a young chap startled by his sudden success and with absolutely no confidence that it would last and I saw myself directly in that.

“This was me back in 1974 when we won the Eurovision Song Contest. I thought it would last a few years. For me to be standing here after all those years is absolutely incredible.”

In the past three decades the members including Agnetha Fältskog, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad have enjoyed a revival with the release of their greatest hits ABBA Gold, the musical and movie Mamma Mia and an ABBA Museum in Stockholm.


ABBA have experienced a revival in recent years
It said about the young Dickens, he was a young chap startled by his sudden success and with absolutely no confidence that it would last and I saw myself directly in that.
Björn Ulvaeus

The exhibition, showing original costumes, gold discs, awards and memorabilia, is at the Southbank Centre.

Tickets are from www. southbankcentre.co.uk.
https://www.express.co.uk/celebrity-news/892167/ABBA-legend-Bjorn-Ulvaeus-compares-himself-Charles-Dickens-music-swedish
----------------------------------------------------------------

ABBA el grupo más exitoso de todos los tiempos volverá
By Administrador


Grupo ABBA/AP


La banda tendrá una exposición que se podrá visitar hasta el 28 de abril de 2018 en el Southbank Centre de Londres



El grupo musical sueco Abba resucitará en Londres gracias a una exhibición que promete, bajo el nombre ‘Abba: Super Troupers’, “traer a la vida” a la banda trazando una ruta a través de su música, sus procesos creativos y su “irrefutable”influencia.


La muestra, organizada por el Southbank Centre y la empresa Entertainment Exhibitions International, en colaboración con el Museo de Estocolmo, recrea la llegada a la fama del cuarteto y la resistencia de su legado a través de los años.


Para tratar de resumir la vida de uno de los grupos más importantes del siglo XX, se han reunido objetos personales de los integrantes de Abba -Agnetha Faltskog, Bjorn Ulvaeus, Benny Anderson y Anni-Frid Lyngstad– como vestimentas, cartas, bocetos, fotografías e instrumentos, entre otros muchos enseres.


Además, se podrán ver películas breves que relatan el ascenso del grupo desde que triunfaron en el festival de Eurovisión en 1974, aupados por el tema “Waterloo”, hasta su disolución en 1982, tras solo diez años de carrera.



Esta efímera trayectoria no impidió a los creadores de temas como “Mamma Mia!” o “Dancing Queen” lanzar ocho discos al mercado y convertirse en uno de los grupos con mayores ventas de la historia y más queridos para el público.

En la exposición, que abrirá este jueves 14 de diciembre, también se podrá disfrutar de la voz del líder del grupo británico Pulp, Jarvis Cocker, que hará las veces de narrador -a través de grabaciones- en las visitas guiadas.

“Me encanta Abba. A ti te encanta Abba. Mi amor por el grupo comenzó cuando mi hermana trajo el disco ‘Arrival’ en 1976 y lo escuchó sin parar durante los siguientes seis meses”, expresó Cocker en una nota remitida a los medios.



La muestra explorará algunos de los escenarios más importantes en la carrera de los de Estocolmo, incluyendo reproducciones del hotel en Brighton (Reino Unido) donde celebraron la victoria en Eurovisión, el estudio de música Polar Music, creado por la banda, o una discoteca de los años setenta.

Todo ello para dotar de contexto a uno de los grupos que popularizó la música pop en la década de 1970 y que tiene el honor de poder competir de tú a tú con Los Beatles, Michael Jackson o Elvis Presley.


Pese a ello, Abba solo giró tres meses en sus diez años de vida, por lo que la exposición llega para tratar de acercar el día a día del grupo al público.

Las primeras clases de canto de Frida, los inicios de Agnetha al piano y garabatos de Benny antes de comenzar la aventura de Abba, son algunas de las piezas únicas que la exposición permitirá ver.


Además, “Abba: Super Troupers” -nombre en honor al penúltimo disco de la banda- repasará la relación de los suecos con el Reino Unido.

El éxito de Abba en este país será revisado, desde recuerdos de su actuación en Eurovisión, hasta souvenirs creados por fans, así como cartas en las que se pidió a la Policía Metropolitana de Londres que reprodujese el vídeo del tema ‘Super Trouper’ en la plaza londinense de Picadilly Circus, propuesta que fue rechazada.


La exposición se puede visitar hasta el 28 de abril de 2018 en el Southbank Centre de Londres, ubicado en el centro de la capital británica.

Con información El Universal


http://canal44.com/2017/12/abba-el-grupo-mas-exitoso-de-todos-los-tiempos-volvera/

miércoles, 13 de diciembre de 2017

Abba: Super Troupers The Exhibition










Here we go again: ABBA exhibition takes visitors back to 70s


LONDON (AP) — ABBA’s Bjorn Ulvaeus says a new London exhibition about the Swedish pop group took him right back to the 1970s — and he realized some things haven’t changed. Abba: Super Troupers includes reconstructions of the hotel room in England band members stayed in after winning the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest, a 70s’ […]...










Abba's Björn Ulvaeus: I had no idea 1970s Britain was so gloomy
Band member speaks at preview of London exhibition that lovingly recreates scenes from era of band’s sensational success
Ulvaeus in the exhibition’s replica of the Brighton hotel suite where Abba celebrated their 1974 Eurovision win.
Ulvaeus in the exhibition’s replica of the Brighton hotel suite where Abba celebrated their 1974 Eurovision win. Photograph: Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters
Mark Brown Arts correspondent
Wednesday 13 December 2017 16.29 GMT Last modified on Wednesday 13 December 2017 23.16 GMT
View more sharing options
Shares
521
There were endless strikes, power cuts, three-day weeks, TV programmes that finished at 10.30pm and Noel Edmonds. “You get very close to the reality of Britain in the 70s,” said Abba’s Björn Ulvaeus. “I had no idea it was so gloomy.”

Ulvaeus was speaking at the first preview of a new immersive Abba show at the Southbank Centre, which aims to tell the sensational success story of the band, as well as put it in the social and political context of 1970s Britain.

Groups of no more than 16 will be taken through nine rooms recreating important moments from the band’s history. Narrated by Jarvis Cocker, the show contains more than 120 archive objects as well as, of course, loads of music.


Sign up for the Sleeve Notes email
Read more
“It is the opposite of all those huge technically advanced virtual reality exhibitions that most of those pop groups have,” said Ulvaeus. “This is much more intimate, it’s warm, it’s full of a sense of humour.”

Abba burst on to the scene when they won the Eurovision song contest in Brighton in 1974 with Waterloo, beating Olivia Newton John’s UK entry. “The Abba”, as the TV commentator called them, were a much needed light in dark, difficult times.

Ulvaeus said the exhibition, a collaboration with the Abba Museum in Stockholm, made him realise how “impossibly gloomy” Britain was. “We were here for one or two days, now and then, so we didn’t quite know about this.”

It was particularly interesting to see news footage of the debate around whether to go into Europe, he said. “It was striking … how the Brits were hesitant about Europe back then, in the very same way as they are now, which is really sad I think.


Abba museum in Stockholm: ‘overwhelmed by satin and sequins’
“It was spooky. It’s the same thing again for some reason, trying to stay away from Europe. It’s like losing, not losing a friend because you’re still there, but somehow you don’t want to be in the team and I think that’s sad.”

Advertisement

For some visitors the London exhibition will be nostalgic. There is a recreation of a chilly 70s front room with depressing news reports on the telly, candles for when the lights go out, a copy of Look-In, and a Peters and Lee record that someone hasn’t put back in its sleeve.

An unnecessarily rancid nightclub toilet is lovingly reproduced with puerile graffiti on the cubicle walls, cigarette ends, unspooled toilet roll and vomit stains.

The show’s producer, Paul Denton, said the nightclub was there because it was where so many people enjoyed the music. “Abba only toured for three months in 10 years, which is unheard of for a band today.”

Other rooms in the show include the Brighton hotel suite – the Napoleon Suite – where Abba celebrated the Eurovision song contest win, a bottle of Cinzano on the dressing room table.

There is the Polar music recording studio where Abba made records from 1978 and where visitors can now demonstrate how brilliantly they too can sing Dancing Queen.

For diehard Abba fans, room eight may be particularly hard to bear: the split. Denton and his team have created a Swedish apartment full of half-unpacked boxes, just like the opening scene in Abba’s melancholic One of Us.

On the TV is the band’s last performance in the UK with a toe-curlingly awkward interview with Noel Edmonds on the Late Late Breakfast Show.

The Southbank Centre show is the finale of its year-long celebration of Nordic arts and culture. “It has been a fascinating journey,” said the artistic director, Jude Kelly. “It would have been impossible to celebrate Nordic culture without thinking about Abba.”

Ulvaeus said he never imagined Abba – who split up 35 years ago – would last like it has. “It is kind of weird, but you get used to it.”

He said he was exposed to his younger self in some form every day, which meant he seemed to him to be that “other guy, from way back then. But I’m proud of what he did, I wouldn’t be where I am today if it hadn’t been for him.”

• Abba: Super Troupers is at the Southbank Centre, London, 14 December-29 April.

Since you’re here …
… we have a small favour to ask. More people are reading the Guardian than ever but advertising revenues across the media are falling fast. And unlike many news organisations, we haven’t put up a paywall – we want to keep our journalism as open as we can. So you can see why we need to ask for your help. The Guardian’s independent, investigative journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce. But we do it because we believe our perspective matters – because it might well be your perspective, too.

Unrivalled, in-depth journalism that has become essential to me. Incredible coverage of my homeland news with an eye I hardly find in the local media. Time has come for me to support.
Roland P, France
If everyone who reads our reporting, who likes it, helps fund it, our future would be much more secure. For as little as £1, you can support the Guardian – and it only takes a minute. Thank you.

https://www.theguardian.com/music/2017/dec/13/abba-bjorn-ulvaeus-1970s-britain-gloomy


--------------------------------------------


Waterloo Station: ABBA exhibit explores band's 1970s rise
By Associated Press
PUBLISHED: 15:22 GMT, 13 December 2017 | UPDATED: 15:57 GMT, 13 December 2017


e-mail
LONDON (AP) - ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus says a new London exhibition about the Swedish pop group took him right back to the 1970s - and he realized some things haven't changed.

Abba: Super Troupers includes reconstructions of the hotel room in England where band members stayed after winning the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest with "Waterloo," a '70s recording studio and a typically drab British living room of the era.

Ulvaeus said Wednesday that a television set in the exhibit "showed footage from 1973-74, how the Brits were hesitant about Europe back then, in the very same way as they are now, which is really sad, I think."

Bjorn Ulvaeus, former band member of the group ABBA, poses for photographers in a recreation of the Brighton hotel suite, where the group celebrated their 1974 Eurovision Song Contest Victory. The photo call is to promote the exhibition 'ABBA: Super Troupers', in London, Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2017. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP) +6
Bjorn Ulvaeus, former band member of the group ABBA, poses for photographers in a recreation of the Brighton hotel suite, where the group celebrated their 1974 Eurovision Song Contest Victory. The photo call is to promote the exhibition 'ABBA: Super Troupers', in London, Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2017. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP)

He said Britain's departure from the European Union was "like losing - not losing a friend because you're still there - but somehow you don't want to be in the team, and I think that's sad."

The exhibition at London's Southbank Centre features items from the ABBA museum in Stockholm and private archives, including costumes, handwritten notes, photos and musical instruments.

It sets the rise of the spangly Swedish superstars "against the shifting socio-economic and political conditions of the time" - a period when Britain was beset by strikes, power shortages and financial crisis.

At a preview of the show, Ulvaeus said it brought back old memories. But he said the four members of ABBA would never reunite for live concerts, because it "would be such hassle."

"It would be enormous. And it would take such... you cannot imagine the tension and the attention from everyone," he said.

"So it would be like robbing yourself of, perhaps, two or three years out of your life when I could be paddling on my surf ski in the archipelago of Stockholm instead."

The exhibition opens Thursday and runs to April 29. Fittingly, the nearest train and subway station is Waterloo.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/ap/article-5175623/Here-ABBA-exhibition-takes-visitors-70s.html

----------------------------------------------
ABBA show recreates ‘dingy’ 70s Britain as Björn Ulvaeus says: ‘I didn’t think we’d last’ Björn Ulvaeus opens ABBA- Super Troupers at Southbank Centre (Vic Frankowski) Adam Sherwin 23 hours Wednesday December 13th 2017


The school report for a seven-year old Björn Ulvaeus shows a B-minus grade for singing. But 380 million record sales later, the future ABBA star’s early vocal limitations did not prevent him from striking a popular chord. The 1953 report card, signed by Björn’s mother, is one of 120 archive objects which go on display today in ABBA: Super Troupers, an “immersive” exhibition charting the Swedish hitmakers rise to fame, at the Southbank Centre. Featuring original costumes, handwritten notes and sketches, the show, narrated by Jarvis Cocker, presents ABBA as a colourful escape from a “dingy and desperate” 1970s Britain, riven by strikes, a furious debate over Europe and governed by a Tory Prime Minister unable to command a Commons majority. Visitors are transported on a journey through nine rooms recreating significant moments from ABBA’s heyday.



Met Police banned ABBA from shooting video The Brighton hotel Napoleon suite where the band celebrated their 1974 Eurovision triumph, includes the hand-written music manuscript of Waterloo, a Contest scoresheet and Agnetha Fältskog’s famous knitted hat. A room recreating a 1970s nightclub disco, including period toilet cubicles, contains a letter from the Met Police responding to ABBA’s request to film a Super Trouper video at Piccadilly Circus. The Police refused permission because the band wished to use circus animals. A room full of half-unpacked boxes illustrates the band’s 1982 dissolution following the breakdown of the marriages between Ulvaeus and Agnetha Fältskog and Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad. Just 16 visitors at a time are allowed into the compact exhibition.

The final room, in which visitors are strapped into airplane seats, includes clips of ABBA parodies from French & Saunders and Alan Partridge. Ulvaeus: ‘I thought we’d only last a few years.’ Speaking at its launch, Ulvaeus said: “People ask what it’s like to be a museum piece while you’re still alive. It’s kind of weird but you get used to it. I’m proud of what we did. I thought we’d only last a few years.” Ulvaeus said the “warm, intimate” low-tech show, a contrast to rival VR experiences, perfectly evoked the era. “I had no idea it was so gloomy,” he said.

Jude Kelly, the Southbank Centre’s Artistic Director, criticised snobs who dismissed ABBA as “throwaway pop culture.” She said: “If you think about what charts our lives it is often popular music. Dancing Queen is the song that still makes people go wild and gets self-conscious English people dancing all night.” :: ABBA: Super Troupers 14 December 2017 – 29 April 2018, Spirit Level, Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall


https://inews.co.uk/culture/music/abba-show-recreates-dingy-70s-britain-bjorn-ulvaeus-says-i-didnt-think-wed-last/

lunes, 11 de diciembre de 2017

Benny Andersson: “I have no idea why Abba’s music is still so popular”


Benny Andersson: “I have no idea why Abba’s music is still so popular”

Benny Andersson on Brexit, quitting drinking and becoming a father at 16
Interviews › Letter To My Younger SelfDecember 11, 2017
By Adrian Lobb@adey70
I was an ordinary 16-year-old with no real clue what to do with my life. I didn’t know that I should be a musician or a composer. I am a self-taught guy, but I could already find my way around the piano. Then I got this offer from a rock band, The Hep Stars, who had lost their organ player. So I just slipped into it. I would tell my younger self, just keep on doing what you are doing. You don’t have to worry so much. Take it as it comes and everything will sort itself out.

The early 1960s was a great time to turn 16. I was listening to all the music from the UK. The Beatles, The Stones, The Kinks, The Who – those were the days! The Beach Boys could make such good recordings as well. Brian Wilson is one of my heroes, but it was definitely Lennon and McCartney who inspired me to write music. I was 19 when I wrote my first No 1. It was called Funny Girl. I still think it is a good song. Rubbish lyric but good melody. I thought maybe this is something I should spend my life trying to do. I haven’t had a reason to regret that yet.

My parents thought I needed a real job. In the 1960s, being in a rock band was not considered a real job. We were the biggest band in Sweden from 1965 to 1969 but they’d still say: ‘What are you going to do after The Hep Stars?’ There were a couple of years before Abba where all four of us needed to work to put food on the table and pay the rent. And I come from circumstances where we didn’t have much money in my family. So music has been good to me, but I know what it’s like to struggle.

Benny Andersson and his son Ludvig in 2014
Benny Andersson and his son Ludvig
I was very young when I became a father [he was 16 when son Peter was born]. Even if I thought I was a mature 16-year-old and was ahead of my friends at school, it wasn’t an ideal situation. It wasn’t great when I was out touring. I regret that. But it works now and has done for many years. Now my son is 53 and my daughter is 51. They say, ‘We are happy you did what you did. Because it means being able to live a decent life’. They don’t complain, but I don’t know. My younger son [Ludvig] is 35 and I was with him the whole time he was growing up. I loved being hands on. We do everything together. Now we are working on the next Mamma Mia! movie. My wife gets envious because she doesn’t see him as much as I do.

Abba came together organically. Björn met Agnetha and got engaged and at almost the same time I met Frida. They were solo artists, I had my band and Björn had his. Then Björn and I made a record called Lycka, which means ‘happiness’. For one song we asked our wives to come in for backing vocals and all of a sudden, wow. They sound good, we don’t! Björn said we should try to write pop music and sing in English. That was 1972 and we wrote People Need Love, which they do. It became a hit. After that, to make people realise us guys from the North Pole exist, we decided to enter the Eurovision Song Contest. All of a sudden, we had an audience that was not just in Sweden. That felt really good.



I have known Björn for 51 years and it is like having a brother. That friendship has been very important. We still talk every week. We are not very much alike. I am who I am, he is who he is, which is one of the reasons we are still such good friends. Relations within Abba have always been good, we are all good friends. We have met through the years to talk about things. We are good. Absolutely.

If you drink too much, too often, for too long, you get into trouble. I decided 16 years ago that I have to give it up. And I think it is probably the best decision I have made in my life. We wouldn’t be talking now. All of a sudden, you are fighting fit every hour of the day. It is the best thing I have done.

None of us thought when we quite in 1982 that our music would still be around 35 years later
I was never political as a teenager, but I am now. That comes with age. You realise everything is important. I am engaged, I have opinions and support people who share my opinions. I think The Big Issue is a great initiative, for example. We have street papers in Sweden as well. Top of my list is gender equality [Andersson has donated to the Feminist Initiative Party]. But it is pretty messy today with Brexit, Catalonia and Donald Trump at the wheel in America. The UK leaving the EU is like losing a friend. It is like your friend turning around and saying: “I don’t like you any more.” It feels bad for us. But let’s wait and see if it actually happens.

I don’t understand why Abba’s music is still so popular. I should hope it has to do with the quality of the songs. We were really thorough. None of us would have thought when we quit in 1982 that our music would still be around 35 years on but there is still as much life in the records as there was then. We were lucky. The music was kept alive by Muriel’s Wedding, which was a really good film. Then Erasure recorded a few tracks and had a big success. Then Abba Gold was released. And there must be millions of kids out there that don’t know about Abba but know the songs from Mamma Mia! There are a lot of things that this young guy could have a reason to look forward to. I am very proud of what we achieved with Abba, the music of Chess and we also wrote a musical in Sweden called Kristina, about Swedish immigration to North America in the 19th century. That was a huge success here – it is more of an opera really.

ABBA
Ending Abba didn’t feel any different, I just kept on doing what I liked to do. It felt good. I wanted to try to write music for the theatre and then Tim Rice showed up with an idea for a musical about chess. I said that was boring enough to get our teeth into! I formed a little band because I wanted to go back to my roots in Swedish folk music. We are now a 16-piece band, Benny Anderssons Orkester. We tour every two years, bring a dancefloor and play for four hours. I still get the buzz.

Benny Andersson’s new album Piano is out on Deutsche Grammophon


https://www.bigissue.com/interviews/letter-to-my-younger-self/benny-andersson-i-no-idea-abbas-music-still-popular/

ABBA's Benny Andersson remembers the song that sparked his love for piano

Monday December 11, 2017
ABBA's Benny Andersson remembers the song that sparked his love for piano





Audio: http://www.cbc.ca/radio/popup/audio/listen.html?autoPlay=true&mediaIds=1113857091967


ABBA's Benny Andersson remembers the song that sparked his love for piano
What might a Quentin Tarantino R-rated Star Trek film look like?
A brief history of lip syncing
Actress Shohreh Aghdashloo on playing her most powerful role yet
ABBA, Angel Olsen and more: music from today's episode
FULL EPISODE
You may know Benny Andersson as a member of pop music royalty. Once a part of the Swedish pop group ABBA, Andersson has gone from belting out "Dancing Queen" to writing and recording rock, orchestral and fiddle albums. ABBA broke up back in the '80s, but Andersson never stopped making music.

His latest album, Piano, is a collection of his past work, stripped down so all you hear is his beloved piano. It was hearing an Elvis Presley song that sparked his passion for the piano when he was young.

Today, Andersson joins Tom Power to talk about why it's important for him to keep creating and what it's like to reunite with ABBA after so many years.



http://www.cbc.ca/radio/q/monday-dec-11-2017-benny-andersson-shohreh-aghdashloo-and-more-1.4440006/abba-s-benny-andersson-remembers-the-song-that-sparked-his-love-for-piano-1.4440047

sábado, 9 de diciembre de 2017

Instagram: Benny with Scorpions






Ein Herz Fuer Kinder Gala 2017


La gran gala "Ein Herz für Kinder" se emite todos los años a principios de diciembre en ZDF. La campaña "Un corazón para niños" fue lanzada por el periódico "Bild" en 1978.
"Un corazón para los niños" y muchas estrellas

En la Gala de este año se presentó Benny acompañando au n coro de niños.

"Un corazón para los niños" es una organización de ayuda internacional.

BILD "Un corazón para los niños" es una organización de ayuda internacionalmente activa, fundada en 1978 por Axel Springer. Con más de 294 millones de euros, el club ha ayudado desde entonces. Rápido y sin burocracia: cuando los niños necesitan ayuda.
La organización de ayuda BILD apoya, hospitales para niños, jardines de infantes, comedores populares, escuelas y familias. Niños gravemente enfermos que no pueden ser tratados en su país de origen, la asociación permite operaciones y terapias que salvan vidas. Además, "Un corazón para los niños" brinda ayuda inmediata en áreas de guerra y desastres.



video yotube channel Nina Rios



Sobre el regreso de Abba, Benny volvió expresar: "Mucha gente me pide un regreso de ABBA y puedo decir que esperamos volver en la primavera de 2019, pero no en persona, sino de forma digital".


















The day I met Benny Andersson

David Myhr - Soundshine
The day I met Benny Andersson




Posted: December 8th, 2017 | Author: David | Filed under: post |
Alright folks… breaking news… I met Benny!!!

Please let me begin by apologising for the radio silence here on my news blog since the release of my ELO flavoured film song “Spellbound” which by the way turned into my career-peak (so far!) on Swedish radio. I can assure you that exciting things are in the pipeline for 2018 given that I have now finished the recordings of my second solo album (more about the recordings here). It’s about time considering my solo debut album Soundshine came out in 2012. Please register to the news-letter here on the side to stay updated! (Very few e-mails per year, I promise!).

What now causes me to break the silence (except from the fact that I’ve recently mostly been posting updates on my Facebook artist page) is the fact that I finally got to meet my life-long hero Benny Andersson of ABBA fame! It happened exactly a week ago, on Dec 1, 2017, at the12th Art of Record Production Conference, hosted by the Royal College of Music, Stockholm, Sweden.






A little over three years ago I experienced the handshake of my life. (Feel free to read my 4000 words long post about the day I met Paul McCartney). Even though it’s obviously impossible to beat, there are still a few hands I would really like to shake before I (or they) die. Now that both Tom Petty and David Bowie very sadly are out of the question (see my Petty tribute here, my Bowie tribute here) I can only wish for Jeff Lynne (read about my near-Jeff experience here). But also, of course, my Swedish heroes from the world phenomenon that is ABBA!

Whenever a Swede goes abroad we talk (proudly) of IKEA and of course ABBA. After all, they are indisputable true legends of music history in the BIG league. Loved by (almost) everybody! They sold over (unbelievable!) 400 million records worldwide and were the beginning of the Swedish music export phenomenon. As for me personally, not only did I grew up with ABBA, but they have always been present in my life one way or another. I remember hearing Waterloo on the radio as a child in the 70’s. I loved the piano outro of Chiquitita already before I became obsessed by the Beatles. With the help of Andy Sturmer of Jellyfish as a producer, when I was in the Merrymakers, we borrowed inspiration from ABBA’s “Money Money Money” for the intro of “April’s Fool”. And through the years in the music business the ABBA stories have always been around. But most of all, ABBA has been a part of my professional life as a musician for the last 16 years. As a sideline I’m a Benny impersonator in the Swedish tribute (eight-piece) band Super Trouper who has offered hundreds of shows in Sweden and the Nordic countries. See below for a picture with me (and the other three “ABBAs”) in my wig and my platform shoes.

But I have also been a “Benny” stand-in in the internationally successful production ABBA The Music playing together with members of the original ABBA band like Janne Schaffer, Lasse Wellander, Uffe Andersson, and Roger Palm. In this context I have toured the US (including shows at the legendary Hollywood Bowl in front of 16,000 people), Spain (World Expo in Zaragoza 2008), Cyprus, Holland, Belgium etc.

So the thought of meeting Benny has always been somewhat of a fantasy of mine. It hasn’t seem completely unlikely that it could happen one day considering we live in the same city and he’s out and about, I visit his studio every now and then, and that I know quite a few people who works with, or has worked with, him.

The first time I spotted Benny and his wife was at Malmö airport as a kid back in 1979. But I’ve also more or less bumped into him at a restaurant in Stockholm, at the Swedish Grammy awards, outside of his studio (where I’ve brought students through the years, see below). I’ve visited one of his summer houses at a party hosted by Tommy Körberg and so on. I also saw Björn and Benny salute an enormous crowd in Hyde Park in 2009. But again, I have never got the chance to exchange a few words and shake his hand until a week ago!



It happened on the day I was about to present a paper (“Observing melody in solo songwriting”) at the ARP conference (mentioned above) talking about methodologies from my on-going research project in the melody writing process. Benny was invited as a secret guest for a “celebrity interview”. Word got out (thanks to my assistant supervisor, friend and academic role-model Joe Bennett!) that “Benny is in the building” and I searched my way to the lobby of the Royal College of Music in Stockholm where the conference was taking place. It turned out Benny had come an hour too early and was told to come back in a while. So I thought I’d better stick around. And suddenly, the god of melodies himself walk into the building!

I recently had the honour of exchanging a couple of e-mails with Benny from my position as a senior lecturer at The School of Music at Luleå University of Technology (LTU) (see my staff profile here). LTU awarded Benny an honorary doctorate in 2012, Philosophical Faculty. So I could refer to that as my “ice breaker”, presenting myself briefly, and greeted him with a hand shake. Selfie-obsessed as I am, obviously it would be great to have a picture of this moment as well, so I asked him if he was okay with me taking a photo. He said it was no problem and jokingly asked “Shall I comb my hair?”. I answered that we looked great and took the picture. See my Facebook post here and Instagram post here.

A little later I put my self in the centre of the first row (where else?) when the “celebrity interview” took place. The interview was conducted by music researcher and former artist in his own right Göran Folkestad (who I got to know personally over a piano later in the evening singing “Oh Darling!” together after a couple of beers).
After so many years of reading about it, like for instance in this fine interview from Dagens Nyheter, or seeing it on TV (for instance in the talk show Skavlan not long ago), finally I was about to hear about melody making from Benny Andersson himself. An incredible opportunity that I feel very blessed to have experienced with my own eyes!
In the interview Benny talked about how it all began for him. How music came into his life since his father and grandfather was playing the accordion (with him playing along). His grandfather never complained about Benny’s playing and partly thanks to that eventually he got really good at it. He also talked about how his wise mother got a piano for him and his sister back in 1956. He said: “–Once that piano came into the house. I started playing. Tried to… And since that first day I’ve been sitting at the piano, I could say, nearly every day. For 60 years. Because I like it. You know… It’s like… I have a connection… or maybe music has the connection with me.”
Folkestad started to ask very interesting questions about his compositional process. Considering my own interest in the subject, and how many times I’ve talked in my songwriting classes about Benny’s work methods (sit by the piano and work, work, work, until the ideas show up), it was almost unreal that he now not only sat there in front of me talking about it. But also offered a demonstration on the piano!
He was saying: “–Because when I play something that I don’t ’know what it is, like in the composing process, it’s like… mostly rubbish. I can’t explain why that is. I can give you an example of how it is, but…”
Fokestad (and the audience): “–Yeah, please do!”
Benny: “–Yeah, well… Shall I?”
And since you made your way all down here in this blog post I am now very happy to be able to offer you to see exactly what I saw! Enjoy!


Filmed from the first row by myself. His highly fascinated disciple. It was kind of silly really. On the very day I’m supposed to talk about the process of melody writing Benny shows up! Talk about a humbling experience. He summed up the process in nine words: “–You have to get rid of all the rubbish!”.
And who did you think ask the first question from the audience once the interview was over? Good guess!
David Myhr: ”–OK, can I go? First row… sorry for taking the spot… First of all I want to thank you for coming and testify that I think you’re wrong saying you’re not an artist* because I’ve been a Benny impersonator for twenty years as a sideline and there’s a lot of head-shaking going on.”
Benny: ”–Yeah, yeah, but that was in the 60’s! I was an artist then!”**
DM: ”–But my question is, being a Beatles fan, I always read about what John did, what Paul did. They both spoke about it in separate interviews. And I’m very curious about , having read your interview in Dagens Nyheter, that you always when you compose melodies, there is never lyrics included in the process. So, I was wondering – how did you work together in general? And if there’s a specific example it would be fantastic.”
Benny: ”–Well, do you mean during the days with ABBA?”
David: ”–Yeah, exactly”
Benny:
”–We were sitting together. I was hammering along on the piano and Björn on the guitar. And we kept on doing that until something came up. You know. And sometimes there would be a lyric line like ”Money Money Money ” because it sits with (humming the main theme). That we tried to get rid of that actually! He wrote like three lyrics. And I said no, it’s not good. Money money… But the thing… there was a song called ”Money’, and there was a song called ‘Money Money’. So we had to all it ‘Money Money Money’.
Yeah but we worked tightly together. Then at the time. Then that changed a bit. It actually started with ’Chess’ I think.
Since then I’ve been doing the music on my own. He always writes the lyrics. If he wants to. I always ask him first. Yeah…”
David: ”–Thank you!”
*) he actually suggested during the interview he’s just a songwriter/arranger/producer and together with ABBA live a ”backing musician” and not an ”artist”
**) In the 60’s Benny was in the biggest group of Scandinavia: Hep Stars!
In the pictures below you see me with Benny’s sound engineer and “right hand” since back in the 80’s, the sound engineer wizard Bernard Löhr (who by the way we once hired to mix The Merrymakers “Spinning My Mind Away”). He made a very interesting keynote speech the same morning. You will also find a couple of pictures from Benny’s studio Rixmixningsverket , a studio which house engineer Linn Fijal has been kind enough to show me and my students from The School of Music at Luleå University of Technology a number of times. In the small picture we see how the grand piano was miked during the recording of Benny’s new (beautiful!) album Piano.
It’s a worn-out cliché to say it. But what else is there to say, so here I go: Thank you for the music, Benny!
ps Feel free to check out my simple and very stripped-down version of one of ABBA’s many genius melodies: “Happy New Year”

http://www.davidmyhr.com/2017/12/08/day-met-benny-andersson/


martes, 5 de diciembre de 2017

Benny habla de lo que significa ser padre a la edad de 16 años.

Knowing Me, Knowing EU: ABBA’s Benny Andersson reveals his Brexit sorrow




ABBA legend Benny Andersson says that Brexit is like 'losing a friend' – and he discusses what it was like becoming a father at the age of 16
Interviews › Letter To My Younger SelfDecember 5, 2017
By Adrian Lobb@adey70
Mamma Mia, here we go again! Just when we thought we’d heard every important opinion about Brexit, up pops ABBA legend Benny Andersson.

In this week’s Big Issue, Andersson says that the UK leaving the EU ‘is like losing a friend’.

“I was never political as a teenager, but I am now,” he says. “That comes with age. You realise everything is important.

Alan Partridge vs Malcolm Tucker: The Great Big Brexit Grudge Match

“I am engaged, I have opinions and support people who share my opinions. I think The Big Issue is a great initiative, for example. We have street papers in Sweden as well.

“It is pretty messy today with Brexit, Catalonia and Donald Trump at the wheel in America. The UK leaving the EU is like losing a friend. It is like your friend turning around and saying: ‘I don’t like you any more.’ It feels bad for us. But let’s wait and see if it actually happens.



In this week’s Letter To My Younger Self, the 70-year-old hitmaker also discusses becoming a father at the tender age of 16.

“Even if I thought I was a mature 16-year-old and was ahead of my friends at school, it wasn’t an ideal situation,” he says. “It wasn’t great when I was out touring. I regret that. But it works now and has done for many years.

Benny Andersson and his son Ludvig in 2014
Benny Andersson and his son Ludvig
“Now my son is 53 and my daughter is 51. They say, ‘We are happy you did what you did. Because it means being able to live a decent life.’ They don’t complain, but I don’t know. My younger son [Ludvig] is 35 and I was with him the whole time he was growing up. I loved being hands on.

“We do everything together. Now we are working on the next Mamma Mia! movie. My wife gets envious because she doesn’t see him as much as I do.


https://www.bigissue.com/interviews/letter-to-my-younger-self/knowing-me-knowing-eu-abba-benny-reveals-his-brexit-sorrow/

Östermalms aprilnummer med Björn Ulvaeus

Östermalms aprilnummer med Björn Ulvaeus
Apr 18, 2016


sábado, 2 de diciembre de 2017

Torshälla Magazine with Frida

Town of Torshälla has released a free online magazine about their 700th anniversar

link https://www.eskilstuna.se/download/18.350186b15f772e4e7a9c263/1512047291133/Torshälla%20runt%206%202017%20webb.pdf



















































----------------------------------------------------

Frida en la Escuela  secundaria año 1961

link: https://www.eskilstuna.se/download/18.369be3c31580a19562d1e2c1/1477665485231/Annifrid%20Lyngstad%20-%20praktiska%20realskolan%20vt%201961.pdf



















Frida 1956



ABBAregistro News and more...
ABBA Voyage

ABBA in Stockholm

ABBA in Stockholm
todo sobre ABBA Voyage - all about ABBA Voyage click on the image

1974

1974

2016

2022

2022

2024

All photos of Instagram

Stockholm

Björn at Stockholm

2025

ABBA Voyage 2022

3rd Anniversary