lunes, 15 de abril de 2019

As Good As New: 40 Years Of ABBA's Voulez-Vous




Anniversary
As Good As New: 40 Years Of ABBA's Voulez-Vous
The Quietus , April 15th, 2019 07:50
In 1978, ABBA were on top of the world - No 1 hits, sell-out tours, a top-grossing movie, a set of Matchbox dolls: they had it all. So what happened when the inspiration ran dry? Matthew Barton investigates



"It's worse than ever," lamented Benny Andersson in 1978 during the recording of ABBA's sixth LP. "We have no idea when we'll be finished."

"I can tell from the look in Björn's eyes when he gets home how the day's work has been," Agnetha Fältskog famously told the press. "Many times [Benny and Björn] have been working for ten hours without coming up with one single note."

In 1978, ABBA were riding the crest of a very big, very lucrative wave: No 1 hit followed No 1 hit, like a string of perfect Scandinavian pop pearls, and multi-platinum albums followed sell-out tours and even a top-grossing movie; 'Take A Chance On Me', meanwhile, had just become their seventh UK No 1 hit. ABBA were the Midases of pop. By the end of the year, not only were complimentary ABBA perfumes on sale (Anna by Agnetha for the day, Frida by, well, Frida for the night) but ABBA: The Soap was also commercially available. You could even smell like your pop heroes.

But then… nothing. Most artists, of course, go through peaks and troughs of creativity. There's nothing quite as satisfying, for instance, as when your favourite artist pulls a late-career gem out of the bag after a period of indifferent endeavour. But what happens when a group experiencing their most extensive commercial success, is at the top of their game artistically, with inspiration seemingly at a premium - yet now feeling the increasing weight of public and critical expectation - suddenly finds the well running alarmingly dry?



ABBA had settled comfortably into the album-a-year cycle expected of mainstream commercial pop acts in the Seventies, and each new entry into their discography built exponentially on the last. Somewhere around early 1976, with the chart-topping success of 'Mamma Mia', they began to slough off the one-hit wonder tag that had hung, albatross-like, around their necks since the Eurovision-winning 'Waterloo', and became the pop group of their generation. A trove of glistening chart-topping hits followed - the radiant pre-disco of 'Dancing Queen' had followed the wistful 'Fernando' to the upper echelons, and was followed in turn by the chilly, spectral magnificence of 'Knowing Me, Knowing You'.

"Novelty" and "kitsch" are two words often erroneously associated with ABBA, and while some of their more homespun stage costumes would suggest otherwise, albums like 1976's Arrival and 1977's The Album highlighted ABBA for what they really were - a pair of extraordinary songwriters in keyboardist Benny Andersson and guitarist Björn Ulvaeus, two men with the keenest ear for melody in pop, and two markedly different singers in the soprano clarity of Agnetha Fältskog and alto decadence of Anni-Frid "Frida" Lyngstad, who, together, created harmonies of imagination and invention.

Blessed with a backing band of precise session musicians and a sympathetic engineer in Michael Tretow, their albums increased in sophistication and production values, and by 1978 not only were they the world's biggest pop group but they were making some of the world's leading pop music. So why did it go so wrong?


The album that became Voulez-Vous is an album of pulsating tensions - tensions within the group, tensions within the music, tensions between a desire to create and a fundamental lack of inspiration. Beneath the swish, pyramidic icy-blue album sleeve and pumping disco arrangements, it's an album that pastes a glossy sheen over songs that exhibit a stark dichotomy between vivacious lust and bereft heartbreak, songs that appear to demonstrate a tug-of-war between modern complexity and traditional values; it's a glittery jumpsuit-wearing Frankenstein's monster of surgically transplanted parts and filled-in blemishes.

Fundamentally, it's the album that enabled ABBA to continue to function as a pop group. 

When, in May 1978, ABBA inaugurated their own music studio, Polar Studios, in a disused cinema in Stockholm, panic was yet to set in. Polar was, at the time, one of the world's most modern and well-equipped studios: it boasted two 24-track consoles, separate rooms with different acoustics, distinct mixing consoles connected to each musician's headphones to allow for greater autonomy per artist, and according to Benny, "lots of open spaces and glass so you could have eye contact with all the musicians."

But, despite the open-plan architecture, Polar became, initially at least, a wall built between ABBA and the outside world. What was devised as an opportunity to create in the most comfortable environment possible became a force of constriction, isolation, and stifled creativity. It was a marker of their extraordinary success that they could install such a space, but the early signs were not positive.

It is perhaps 'Summer Night City', a song squeezed off the eventual track list like matter from a lanced boil, that best illustrates the problems that beset ABBA during the making of Voulez-Vous. 
A frenzied burst of manic disco, 'Summer Night City' is menacing where ABBA were once unthreatening, relentlessly minor chord where they once fashioned joyful choruses from sorrowful verses, it throbs and keens where they once soothed and soared. The uncharacteristically lusty lyrics, of "lovemaking in the park" and "scattered driftwood on the beach", of the "the strange attraction from that giant dynamo", were worlds away from the breezy simplicity of 'Take A Chance On Me'. But this, in the summer of 1978, was the only song they had in advanced enough a state to work with.



In the Seventies, especially for a titanic pop act like ABBA, six months between singles was an eternity; a seven-week summer break from recording yielded no substantial new songs and, feeling the pressure from the international markets they had worked so tirelessly to break into, 'Summer Night City' was moulded, compressed, and tweaked like a scientific specimen over the course of a series of stressful week-long mixing sessions. Tretow recalled how they "tried every way imaginable to get something from the tape that simply wasn't there - in fact, there are other mixes that are even more compressed." A moody 45-second intro of strings, piano, and vocals was cut from the final release, and Björn described the finished product as "a really lousy recording overall. The song would have deserved a better treatment."

Finally, accompanied by a memorable video, it was panic-released in September 1978. Reviews were not complimentary. "The calculating Swedes have produced a piece of disco muzak," cried Record Mirror. "By no means as memorable as earlier stuff," said NME. As John Tobler recounted in Abba Gold: The Complete Story, inky Melody Maker got themselves into a lather over supposedly risqué lyrics, and gloated, "It was only a matter of time before they sidled into the Gibb Brothers' disco penthouse."

In reality, 'Summer Night City' has aged well. It certainly does have a foot in the Bee Gees' disco penthouse, with its disembodied gender-fluid harmonies and off-kilter synths, and, taken in the wider context of the ABBA canon, exhibits a bravery and courage in rejecting most of the things that made them so successful previously. It is decidedly un-ABBA-esque. 

While not an outright flop, the song failed to scale the heights of previous hits and became their first single to miss the UK Top 3 for three years. As recounted in Jean-Marie Potiez's Abba: The Book, the misfire of 'Summer Night City' and the lack of inspiration all threatened to derail the entire sessions: the few songs already completed were strongly disco-inspired - "the pulse of the Seventies," as described by Björn - but the general public seemed unprepared for a disco-fied version of the group.

Indeed, the lean towards disco music was causing tensions, too, within the songwriting team. "I have to say, I was just a little reluctant to us doing disco songs," said Benny, "simply because everybody else was doing it. My feeling was, 'Wouldn't it be more fun to do something that everybody else isn't doing'?" Björn, meanwhile, developed an acute interest in the sounds pervading the airwaves, from the Bee Gees and Donna Summer to Chic and Moroder. These club-infused flavours found their way into the album largely through the lead guitar work of Janne Schaffer, with Lasse Wellander helping guide more of the traditional material. The proliferation of guitars is one of the hallmarks of Voulez-Vous - where the guitars once added atmospheric melodic hooks, here they were woven into the fabric of the music.



According to Carl Magnus Palm in Bright Lights, Dark Shadows, perhaps the greatest tension during the making of Voulez-Vous was reserved for the disintegrating relationship of Björn and Agnetha after seven years of marriage. The album sessions, already exhausting and abortive, were fraught with miscommunication, rows, and unease. As Benny said, "It was very difficult before Agnetha and Björn separated. They were getting on very badly, it made things very difficult for the rest of us and created a lot of friction."

Conversely, Benny and Frida, amid this interpersonal chaos, married in October 1978 in a low-key ceremony. Not only were marital tensions affecting the group, but they were now a quartet of two distinct, incompatible halves - one blissful, one broken. 

The energetic sensuality of 'Summer Night City' had somewhat destroyed ABBA's musical image of family-friendly innocence – an image Agnetha described as "embarrassing" in an interview with Swedish newspaper Expressen in 1978, and the divorce, announced to much press fanfare the following January, somewhat destroyed the "happy couples" myth that, in some ways, was key to their mainstream appeal. ABBA were no longer the radiant collective of amiable, committed couples making pure songs about life and love; they were fragmented, disjointed players in a Bergman melodrama making unfamiliar, disconcertingly sexy disco music.



Where the similar personal tensions had fuelled the music of their Anglo-American counterparts Fleetwood Mac - the songs of Rumours pouring out like rivers of bile and beauty - ABBA found themselves at stumbling blocks every step of the way. A crisis meeting was held with manager Stig Anderson and, ultimately, they decided to carry on as a group.

But still, progress was slow. By the time of ABBA's successful Japanese sojourn in November 1978 (prompting 800,000 Japanese sales within a month), it became clear that a Christmas LP release was way out of reach and spring 1979 was eyed, perhaps optimistically at this point, as the target. 

The few songs worked on in late 1978 showcase the level of uncertainty, indecision, and misdirection plaguing ABBA at the time, but there's no denying that some of the old magic was returning. Perhaps Agnetha and Björn's decision to split had unblocked a creative synapse - the bewitching 'Angeleyes', despite dismissals from both Benny and Björn, is a delicious slice of Sixties-style girl group pop. Shimmering synths and percolating guitars provide the bed for some of ABBA's most unusual and octave-hopping harmonies; indeed, the vocal sessions were often a source of conflict - Frida described how Benny and Björn would push the vocals "almost beyond the limit of our voice ranges." Björn recalled how, for Benny, "it was almost an obsession - 'Do you think you could sing that an octave higher?' was a standing request from him when we were recording the harmony vocals." This can be heard in 'Angeleyes', where, Agnetha notes, "it makes for a quite special sound when my vocal part was an octave higher than Frida's."

'Angeleyes', like the menace of 'Tiger' from Arrival, takes the seed of Laura Nyro's bad-boy warning in 'Eli's Comin'' and swaps out the R&B/soul noir for blue-eyed Wall of Sound Spector pop. Recorded around the same time, the dolorous disco of 'If It Wasn't For The Nights' resituates ABBA's predilection for melancholy yearning (notice the motif of "staring at the wall" from 'Ring Ring' recurring here) to the modish glamour of the clubs; a sumptuous string arrangement wraps around funk guitars and buried horns, while the strident yet resigned chorus, sung with abandon, is the Voulez-Vous version of the downbeat style perfected on songs like 'S.O.S.' and 'Knowing Me, Knowing You' - where minor chord verses bloom into majestic choruses and where beauty emerges from loneliness and sadness. It is almost like a forebear of Robyn's brand of sad electropop. Lyrically, it details Björn's despair in the death throes of his marriage - "those lyrics were written during a period when I was feeling really depressed," he said. "I was down as hell". This hit-that-never-was was initially slated as the album's lead single, and was even premiered on Japanese TV some six months before the album release, but in time was shelved in favour of a markedly different song.


'Chiquitita,' which developed in the final weeks of 1978, is a clear evocation of the creative indecision that marks Voulez-Vous. 'If It Wasn't For The Nights' and especially 'Summer Night City' had been so boldly different for ABBA that 'Chiquitita', a classic ballad in the mould of 'Fernando', smacks of cold feet about their possible new direction. There's no way you can deny that it's a definitive, truly beautiful ABBA song, with its soaring harmony vocals and warm melody, those crunchy mid-verse piano chords and rollicking coda betraying Benny's classical roots. But taken within the context of the album, where ABBA seemed to be reaching for a new kind of modernity, it sounds comparatively regressive. There was continued tension between a hunger to move forward and a loyalty to their traditions, between Björn's desire for disco dalliances and Benny's reluctance to follow the pack. "It's hard to try and achieve something that is outside of your own tradition," said Benny. "It's so European to be 'square.'" In short, there was a lack of commitment and an absence of clear vision. 


By early 1979, with less than a side in the can, they decamped to the Bahamas in the pursuit of more creative inspiration and reluctantly accepted that outside stimulation might have been necessary to move this strange, uncooperative beast of an album along.

'Voulez-Vous' is the song that finally propelled the album sessions. In February 1979, ABBA took the decision to record at Miami's Criteria Studios, where the Bee Gees had created much of their music, and they made use of an expert disco backing band in Foxy, who were fresh off a US R&B No 1 hit with 'Get Off', and a producer/engineer in Tom Dowd, who had worked on music by Otis Redding, Aretha Franklin, and Dusty Springfield, and had worked on 'Layla', 'I Shot the Sheriff', 'Sailing', and 'The First Cut Is The Deepest'.

'Voulez-Vous', then, is the sound of American R&B and funk done the Scandinavian way; it is a mysterious, elegant morsel of disco, burbling with sexual tension and dark majesty. "What I had in mind before I even had the title was a kind of nightclub scene, with a certain amount of sexual tension and eyes looking at each other," said Björn, and the 'Lady Marmalade'-referencing title accentuates the taut eroticism. 


It's a Chic-esque tapestry of guitars, trombones, and tenor saxes; the vocals are aloof and enigmatic, and the production is modern and sleek. Where the disco of 'Summer Night City' had a layer of eccentric foreboding, and the disco of 'If It Wasn't For The Nights' stiffened against the European melodies of classic ABBA, 'Voulez-Vous' took this contemporary inspiration to the nth degree. Working outside of their Stockholm enclave had proved a boon to their creativity in an unimaginable way. Benny and Björn deserve kudos here for recognising that their working methods weren't working, and this is a prime example of a top pop act swallowing its pride and trying anything to get the wheels moving again. The desire to create was ultimately stronger than the lack of creativity, and if it meant hunting it down in unfamiliar locations, so be it.

Writing in the Bahamas and recording in Miami, working in different environs and with new people, had solidified a resolve that brought ABBA back to Stockholm with fresh impetus. Within two months, the rest of the material emerged in a tidal wave like the ABBA of old. But that isn't to say that it was all of a piece - indeed, the general chaos surrounding the making of Voulez-Vous translated into chaotic music, music that was at odds sometimes even within the same song, let alone the same album. But finally, inspiration was there.

The sonic palette of the record became an edgy, curious mix of disco beats, funk guitars, string arrangements, and traditional pop. The songs are a grab-bag of styles and sounds that make strange bedfellows yet somehow, texturally, complement each other.



'Does Your Mother Know' is a Rod Stewart-inspired glam curio that was laced with disco zest during the sessions, an anomalous Björn lead vocal atop an underrated and expert dynamic mix; 'As Good As New' welds a buttoned-up baroque string arrangement by Rutger Gunnarsson to Janne Schaffer's disco funk guitar, the polarities tensing along a propulsive disco beat; the schmaltzy peace anthem 'I Have a Dream' (working title: 'Take Me In Your Armpit'), like 'Chiquitita', is more 'ABBA of yore', a simple, syrupy schlager with accompaniment from the International School of Stockholm Choir - like a cosy mulled wine at a Christmas market; the Bahamas-birthed 'Kisses Of Fire', meanwhile, bristles with sexual energy ("I'm at the point of no returning" was not your typical ABBA lyric), a dreamy introduction segueing into a power-pop chorus and a peculiar synth-accented midsection. There are, of course, perverse shades of Fleetwood Mac in Björn enlisting Agnetha to sing his lyrics about a sparkling new love affair ("I've had my share of love affairs, but they were nothing compared to this.") And what of perhaps the two weirdest songs in the entire ABBA canon? The deconstructed disco of 'The King Has Lost His Crown' merges an unorthodox, jazzy verse replete with electric piano that wouldn't be out of place on a mid-Seventies Steely Dan record with an angular, camp chorus that is surely one of ABBA's most unusual. 'Lovers (Live A Little Longer)', meanwhile, crystallises ABBA's newfound abundant sexuality, an offbeat funk experiment with a bewildering chorus unlike anything else in their catalogue. Descending chords, strings, and synths converge to create something oddly alluring but distinctly jarring.

For all its disjointedness, the album boasts many classic catalogue moments – who can resist that moment in the made-for-12" mix on 'Voulez-Vous' where the arrangement hollows out and the "a-ha"s punctuate that perfect rubbery bassline; or the first chorus of 'As Good As New', which thrums along with a string and rhythm section like a proto-'Hounds Of Love'; even the elongated "believe" in 'I Have A Dream' is pure ABBA-esque ear candy. Then what about the manipulated vocaliser in 'The King Has Lost His Crown' that builds into a climactic final chorus, or the skittering synth pulses in the midsection of 'Kisses Of Fire' that preface the camp drama of "losing you!"; Agnetha's cry of "I'm exploding!" on 'Lovers'; or the dynamic "take it easy" post-chorus of 'Does Your Mother Know', borrowed from the discarded 'Dream World'. These moments leap out like glittering strobe lights at Alexandra's, the Stockholm club where the neon-hued album cover was shot. (Although in Ingmarie Halling and Carl Magnus Palm's ABBA: The Backstage Story it is revealed that the photo session was regarded a "total fiasco from start to finish," at least according to photographer Ola Lager - it wouldn't be Voulez-Vous without some pandemonium, would it?)

Voulez-Vous, then, is a pivotal point in the ABBA oeuvre. It marks something of a tipping point between their blockbuster commercial heyday and the monolithic artistic triumphs that followed at the dawn of the Eighties. Simply put, it is arguably their most important record in a) enabling them to continue as a group and b) allowing the production of the albums that followed. It's the sound of a group torn between the elements - torn between following the trends of the day and setting their own agenda, between the traditional European music that had been their bread and butter and the quest for modernity, between shutting out the rest of the world, creating in isolation, and seeking inspiration outside of their comfort zone - literally. By latching onto disco trends, it was both firmly of its time and incredibly out of place with what else was coming out of the contemporary music scene of the late Seventies; but it is telling that Sid Vicious, Pete Townshend, and Elvis Costello all professed a love for ABBA.



While perhaps not their best work, Voulez-Vous was crucial in laying the foundations for arguably ABBA's two greatest records, 1980's Super Trouper and 1981's The Visitors, austere synth-pop classics with a depth of emotion that influenced an entire generation. On those records, that insular cottage industry of the Polar Studios was completely fundamental to their success. On Voulez-Vous, at a time of all-encompassing pressures, it was uncomfortable, punishing, and stifling. And that's why it's so interesting - it says a lot about what happens when chartbusting groups hit artistic walls. It says a lot about the fight to find inspiration, a lot about how the love of music and drive for creativity can override the destruction of personal relationships, a lot about what it means for artists who must struggle through difficult moments, through creative sludge, to achieve their greatest triumphs. There's both an angular stiffness and a footloose abandon about the music, which is probably no surprise considering its tense and troublesome gestation. It's an example to follow for artists who find themselves at what appear to be consistent dead-ends. Forty years on, Voulez-Vous shows that sometimes dead-ends can become crossroads, if you keep plugging away.



https://thequietus.com/articles/26335-abba-voulez-vous-anniversary-review

viernes, 12 de abril de 2019

One of history's most successful musicals began as a small experiment

- It is absolutely and absolutely amazing and incredible. Emotionally, it is very difficult to understand that so many people across the globe have seen 'Mamma Mia!'. It is a miracle, and I had never counted on it in my wildest imagination, says Björn Ulvaeus, when Ekstra Bladet interviews him in the basement under the ABBA museum in the Swedish capital

- The musical itself was thought of as a small experiment from the start. It came from that I was curious to investigate whether you could write a musical backwards. "Mama Mia!" was the very first musical where one started with the songs and then added a story. No one had done that this way before, and now everyone tries with a song catalog to do the same, says Björn Ulvaeus.


ABBA-Björn: Det er et mirakel




Fredag d. 12. apr. 2019 - kl. 06:01 53
En af historiens mest succesfulde musicals begyndte som et lille eksperiment

Björn Ulvaeus og de øvrige tre i ABBA kan i år fejre 45-års jubilæum for deres gennembrudshit 'Waterloo'. Foto: Ritzau Scanpix
Björn Ulvaeus og de øvrige tre i ABBA kan i år fejre 45-års jubilæum for deres gennembrudshit 'Waterloo'. Foto: Ritzau Scanpix
STOCKHOLM (Ekstra Bladet): Musikforestillingen, der kombinerer ABBA’s megahits med en forviklings- og udviklingshistorie om kærlighed og venskab, er en af verdens mest succesfulde.

På verdensplan er den blevet set af flere end 65 millioner og har indtjent mere end to milliarder dollars.

- Det er helt og aldeles fantastisk og utroligt. Følelsesmæssigt er det meget svært at forstå, at så mange mennesker over hele kloden har set 'Mamma Mia!'. Det er et mirakel, og jeg havde aldrig i min vildeste fantasi regnet med det, siger Björn Ulvaeus, da Ekstra Bladet interviewer han i kælderen under ABBA-museet i den svenske hovedstad

- Selve musicalen var fra starten tænkt som et lille eksperiment. Det udsprang af, at jeg blev nysgerrig efter at undersøge, om man kunne skrive en musical baglæns. 'Mamma Mia!' var den allerførste musical, hvor man begyndte med sangene og derefter tilførte en historie. Ingen havde gjort det på den måde før, og nu prøver alle med et sangkatalog at gøre det samme, siger Björn Ulvaeus.



Ekstremt nervøs
Han fortæller, at han på trods af ABBA's store succes og deres mange verdenskendte hits ikke var sikker på, at folk ville forstå og værdsætte musicalen.
- Det var egentlig bare et eksperiment, og jeg anede ikke, hvordan det ville gå. Jeg havde faktisk forberedt mig på, at folk ville sige: 'Hvad fanden er det her for noget. Hvorfor er det ikke historien om ABBA. Hvorfor fanden gjorde han det?', siger Björn og fortsætter:

- Jeg var helt ekstremt nervøs, første gang, den skulle spilles foran et publikum i teatret. Og det er altså helt sandt. Jeg anede simpelthen ikke, hvilke reaktioner jeg kunne forvente. Så det var en kæmpe, kæmpe lettelse da jeg efter 10-15 minutter så, hvordan folk reagerede, og hvor sjovt de havde det. Det virkede heldigvis rigtig godt.


https://ekstrabladet.dk/flash/udlandkendte/abba-bjorn-det-er-et-mirakel/7590960


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google translate

ABBA-Björn: It's a miracle


Friday, April 12 2019 - kl. 06:01 53
One of history's most successful musicals began as a small experiment

This year Björn Ulvaeus and the other three in ABBA can celebrate the 45th anniversary of their breakthrough hit 'Waterloo'. Photo: Ritzau Scanpix
This year Björn Ulvaeus and the other three in ABBA can celebrate the 45th anniversary of their breakthrough hit 'Waterloo'. Photo: Ritzau Scanpix
STOCKHOLM (Ekstra Bladet): The music performance that combines ABBA's megahits with an intriguing and developmental history of love and friendship is one of the world's most successful.

Worldwide, it has been seen by over 65 million and has earned more than two billion dollars.

- It is absolutely and absolutely amazing and incredible. Emotionally, it is very difficult to understand that so many people across the globe have seen 'Mamma Mia!'. It is a miracle, and I had never counted on it in my wildest imagination, says Björn Ulvaeus, when Ekstra Bladet interviews him in the basement under the ABBA museum in the Swedish capital

- The musical itself was thought of as a small experiment from the start. It came from that I was curious to investigate whether you could write a musical backwards. "Mama Mia!" was the very first musical where one started with the songs and then added a story. No one had done that this way before, and now everyone tries with a song catalog to do the same, says Björn Ulvaeus.


Extremely nervous
He says that despite ABBA's great success and their many world-renowned hits, he was not sure that people would understand and appreciate the musical.
- It was really just an experiment, and I didn't know how it would go. In fact, I had prepared for people to say, 'What the hell is this for something. Why is it not the story of ABBA. Why the hell did he do it? '

- I was extremely nervous, the first time it was to be played in front of an audience in the theater. And that is absolutely true. I simply didn't know what responses I could expect. So it was a huge, huge relief as after 10-15 minutes I saw how people reacted and how much fun they had. Fortunately, it worked really well.

ABBA legend Björn Ulvaeus together the two Danish "Mamma Mia!" - leading roles in the upcoming re-establishment of the hugely popular musical, Matilde Zeuner Nielsen and Annette Heick. Photo: Johan Paulin
ABBA legend Björn Ulvaeus together the two Danish "Mamma Mia!" - leading roles in the upcoming re-establishment of the hugely popular musical, Matilde Zeuner Nielsen and Annette Heick. Photo: Johan Paulin


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Viernes 12 de abril 2019 - kl. 06:01 53
Uno de los musicales más exitosos de la historia comenzó como un pequeño experimento.

Este año, Björn Ulvaeus y los otros tres en ABBA pueden celebrar el 45 aniversario de su gran éxito 'Waterloo'. Foto: Ritzau Scanpix
Este año, Björn Ulvaeus y los otros tres en ABBA pueden celebrar el 45 aniversario de su gran éxito 'Waterloo'. Foto: Ritzau Scanpix
ESTOCOLMO (Ekstra Bladet): La interpretación musical que combina los megahits de ABBA con una historia intrigante y evolutiva de amor y amistad es una de las más exitosas del mundo.

En todo el mundo, ha sido visto por más de 65 millones y ha ganado más de dos mil millones de dólares.

- Es absolutamente increíble y absolutamente increíble. Emocionalmente, es muy difícil comprender que tantas personas en todo el mundo han visto '¡Mamma Mia!'. Es un milagro, y nunca lo había contado en mi imaginación más salvaje, dice Björn Ulvaeus, cuando Ekstra Bladet lo entrevista en el sótano del museo ABBA en la capital sueca.

- El musical en sí fue pensado como un pequeño experimento desde el principio. De ahí tenía curiosidad por investigar si se podía escribir un musical al revés. "Mama Mia!" Fue el primer musical donde uno comenzó con las canciones y luego agregó una historia. Nadie lo había hecho de esta manera antes, y ahora todos intentan con un catálogo de canciones hacer lo mismo, dice Björn Ulvaeus.



Extremadamente nervioso
Él dice que a pesar del gran éxito de ABBA y sus muchos éxitos de renombre mundial, no estaba seguro de que la gente pudiera entender y apreciar el musical.
- Realmente fue solo un experimento, y no sabía cómo sería. De hecho, me había preparado para que la gente dijera: '¿Qué diablos es esto para algo? ¿Por qué no es la historia de ABBA? ¿Por qué diablos lo hizo? ", Dice Björn y continúa:

- Estaba extremadamente nervioso, la primera vez que se jugaba frente a una audiencia en el teatro. Y eso es absolutamente cierto. Simplemente no sabía qué respuestas podía esperar. Así que fue un alivio enorme, ya que después de 10-15 minutos vi cómo reaccionaba la gente y cuánta diversión tenían. Afortunadamente, funcionó muy bien.

La leyenda de ABBA, Björn Ulvaeus, junto a las dos "Mamma Mia!" Danesa, protagonistas de la próxima reincorporación de la popular musical, Matilde Zeuner Nielsen y Annette Heick. Foto: Johan Paulin
La leyenda de ABBA, Björn Ulvaeus, junto a las dos "Mamma Mia!" Danesa, protagonistas de la próxima reincorporación de la popular musical, Matilde Zeuner Nielsen y Annette Heick. Foto: Johan Paulin


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Rock: Abba, Swedish Quartet, in New York Debut




Rock: Abba, Swedish Quartet, in New York Debut

12 DE ABRIL DE 2019
OCT. 4, 1979 By JOHN ROCKWELL
This is a digitized version of an article from The Times’s print archive
ONE way of looking at Abba, the Swedish rock quartet that sold out Radio City Music Hall in its New York debut Tuesday night, is that it has turned itself into a deliberate caricature of what the world thinks Swedish people must be — beautiful, blond and coldly perfect. Clearlythe world has responded to the group's records with glee: Abba makes the claim, however unsupported, of having sold more records than any other act in the history of music.
Abba is an acronym for Agnetha Faltskog, Bjorn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson and Anni‐Frid (nicknamed Frida) Lyngstad. The music they make on records is an extension of what was once known as “Euro‐pop.” It lacks the drive and passion of real rock‐and‐roll, substituting busy textures of electronic keyboards and strings, guitars, percussion and the soaring, multitracked harmonies of the two women. The music is often just as clever and complex as the British progressive‐rock bands, but is saved from their fussy pretensions by the hummable charm of the tunes and the innocent trivia of the lyrics (sung in lightly accented English).
Only once in its career did the group assay a sterner idiom, in its next‐to‐last album. But the climax of that album, “I'm a Marionette,” which suggests darker things about women and performers and specifically about the women performers in Abba, went unsung Tuesday night.
Abbe hasn't toured much. But the fact remains that for all its success around the world, it has never really “broken” in the United States, and touring is generally considered a necessity to sell lots of records here. Perhaps for that reason, Abbe is only now mak ing its first United States tour.
Any complicated, lush, studiocrafted sound translates perilously to live performance. When in addition the performers seem rather stiff onstage, the result can sound crude and look tedious, as the Bee Gees proved recently at Madison Square Garden.
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Abba solved most of those problems very well. Augmenting its own singing and playing with six instrumentalists and three backup singers, it created reasonable approximations of its records. The ballads lost a little sheen, but the rockers were toughened up a bit — not enough to make them really convincing, to be sure, but to some advantage.
In addition, the sets and lighting looked spiffy, both in themselves and within the context of Radio City Music Hall. Mr. Ulvaeus and the two women arrayed themselves in a succession of costumes that made them look posi tively pneumatic; Spandex has rarely served the cause of ogling so well. Yet for all their cavortings, the impression was never other than sanitized: they are marionettes, women and men alike, and seemingly proud of it.
Of perhaps they're not; the trouble with Abba is that whatever their own emotions may be has absolutely nothing to do with their music and their performance. It's all a big, smooth‐running, sparkly bright pop‐music machine, both the actual music and the stiffly unnatural between‐songs patter.
But finally, it never pretends to be otherwise, and those tunes really are captivating. As long as one doesn't find oneself wishing for more, or realizing the group's obvious limits, it can provide a sweetly innocent good time. And the crowd, which was full of people both younger and older than one normally encounters at a rock concert, gave every sign of being contented.
A version of this archives appears in print on October 4, 1979, on Page C17 of the New York edition with the headline: Rock: Abba, Swedish Quartet, in New York Debut.

https://www.nytimes.com/1979/10/04/archives/rock-abba-swedish-quartet-in-new-york-debut.html

domingo, 7 de abril de 2019

MAMMA MIA! Celebrates 20 Years in London




photo: jeffmo69 
Novello Theatre



MAMMA MIA! Celebrates 20 Years in London

by BWW News Desk Apr. 8, 2019

On Saturday 6 April, Mamma Mia! celebrated its 20th birthday in London. The current cast were joined on stage for the Finale of Dancing Queen by 13 former 'Dynamos', including the original 'Donna', Siobhan McCarthy, and the original 'Rosie', Jenny Galloway. Producer Judy Craymer paid tribute to the original 'Tanya', Louise Plowright, who sadly passed away in 2016.

The original 'girl power' musical, produced by Judy Craymer, directed by Phyllida Lloyd and written by Catherine Johnson, who all appeared on stage at the end of the show, was created around the songs of ABBA's Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus, who joined the ladies and cast on stage at the curtain call. Talking to the ecstatic audience, Björn described Judy, Phyllida and Catherine as 'three angels'.

The London cast of Mamma Mia! currently stars Sara Poyzer as Donna, Kate Graham as Tanya, Ricky Butt as Rosie, Richard Trinder as Sam, Neil Moors as Harry, Stephen Beckett as Bill, Lucy May Barker as Sophie, Alec Porter as Sky, Charlotte O'Rourke as Ali, Leah St Luce as Lisa, Damian Buhagiar as Pepper and Eamonn Cox as Eddie, with Caroline Deverill playing the role of Donna Sheridan at certain performances.

Also in the cast are Chloe Ames, Chloe-Jo Byrnes, Adam Clayton-Smith, Adam Davidson, Luke Hall, Lauren Hampton, Jack Heasman, Jennifer Hepburn, Stuart Hickey, Zoe Humphryes, Mark Isherwood, Tyler Kennington, Robert Knight, Chanel Mian, James Willoughby Moore, Natasha O'Brien, Dean Read, Beth Relf, Annie Southall and Katy Stredder.

To date, Mamma Mia! has been seen in 50 productions in 16 different languages grossing more than $4 billion at the box office. In 2011, it became the first Western musical ever to be staged in Mandarin in the People's Republic of China. MAMMA MIA! is also currently playing a German-language tour in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, a Dutch-language production in Utrecht and a Mandarin-language production in China. Upcoming productions include a UK and International Tour and productions in Korea, Berlin and Denmark.

MAMMA MIA! originally opened in London at the Prince Edward Theatre on 6 April 1999, before transferring to the Prince of Wales Theatre in 2004, and then to the Novello Theatre in 2012.

Photo Credit: Jeff Moore and Dave Benett
https://www.broadwayworld.com/westend/article/Photo-Flash-MAMMA-MIA-Celebrates-20-Years-in-London-20190408









viernes, 5 de abril de 2019

ABBA's Björn Ulvaeus says group plan to reunite this year and will release album


ABBA's Björn Ulvaeus says group plan to reunite this year and will release album


F-ABBA REUNION
The 73-year-old pop icon has denied plans to make an ABBA biopic as he gives his first in-depth interview about the band's shock reunion after 35 years

By Dan Wootton, Executive Editor
Updated: 5th April 2019, 7:07 pm


WHEN I found out ABBA were reuniting, I let out a little yelp in the middle of a news conference at The Sun.
The leaders of North and South Korea had met for historic talks that morning, but as a superfan of the world’s biggest ever pop group, this news was momentous in its own way.

Björn Ulvaeus is bringing the Mamma Mia! The Party experience to London's O2 and chats about ABBA reunio

The prospect of an ABBA comeback had long been dismissed as impossible. In fact, our front page the next day combined both ­bombshell reunions with the now-iconic headline: Mamma Mia: Korea We Go Again!

While no longer together romantically, the thought of Agnetha Fältskog and Björn Ulvaeus, and Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad back working together in a studio in Stockholm was enough to send me on a pilgrimage to the Swedish capital synonymous with their name.

So for my birthday this year, I dragged three friends to sing Thank You For The Music with me at ABBA The Museum, party until the early hours in the immersive Mamma Mia! The Party — a theatrical and dining experience based on their music — and spend far too much money buying enough memorabilia to last a lifetime. (ABBA Monopoly, anyone?)

Then something special happened. An email drops into my inbox. Björn — one of the driving forces behind ABBA today — has heard I’m in town celebrating my birthday and wants to take me for breakfast. Tomorrow.


Abba's best songs as they make new music after 35 years the band split
I’m over the moon, obviously, and expecting a large entourage and the type of demands that come with today’s superstars. But I get a firm response. Björn wants to come to your hotel. No fuss and certainly no special treatment.

So I pulled on my newly purchased ABBA slogan T-shirt (“It might look like I’m listening to you, but in my head I’m listening to ABBA!) and await the arrival of one of the greatest pop masterminds of all time — and one of the most famous men in Sweden.

Björn, 73, lives just north of the hotel I am staying at in the centre of Stockholm. He’s driven himself and arrives alone. Within minutes, I’m asking about that moment when the band first reunited in Benny’s studio on an island in the middle of the city.

“That was so perfect in a way,” he smiles. “It was like going into the studio 40 years ago. Suddenly when we were standing there, the realisation came: This is kind of natural but weird at the same time. It’s been 35 years.”

ABBA are not interested in the Bohemian Rhapsody-style treatment of their life in film.

Björn says: “No, not while still being alive at least. I would hate to see myself. If someone is writing my part then I would have to be involved myself with inventing lines for myself.”

He has been asked to judge every talent show, including X Factor and The Voice, but says: “I don’t know, I’m in two minds. Sometimes they produce spectacular things. But then again, I love the idea of especially a group growing together organically.

“Finding each other organically and then something happens – because I’m part of such a band.

“The Beatles were the same and the Stones.”

The iconic ABBA harmonies “came back naturally” too, more than three decades on.

“The ladies are a tone lower which is completely natural, that’s what happens,” he explains. But the quality, the timbre, and the story-telling qualities, all of that is still there.

“It’s amazing, they started singing and, wow, it’s ABBA. It’s a fantastic sound. It’s inside Benny and I and all the ladies to feel what is right for ABBA and what is wrong.”

Wow. This is genuinely soul-enhancing for me to hear. As for any post-relationship awkwardness, it’s clear that has long since dissipated. Björn sees his ex Agnetha “quite often”.

“We have two kids together and, let’s see, five grandchildren,” he says. “It’s Christmas, it’s birthdays. I see her all the time. So that was normal.”

Suddenly when we were standing there, the realisation came: This is kind of natural but weird at the same time. It’s been 35 years

Björn Ulvaeuson ABBA
Initially, the re-formed ABBA recorded two songs together, but now there is a whole album on the way.

“So the world has heard,” he smiles, knowingly. “I heard that too.” The first tracks were meant to be released at Christmas, but it is technology holding up the release.

ABBA have partnered with Pop Idol mastermind Simon Fuller to launch intricate hologram versions of the band from at their peak — dubbed the “ABBA-tars” — that will perform in a new music video and then tour the world.



The Sun crashes the stage and dances with ABBA in Stockholm ahead of the quarter- finals match against Sweden
Björn says: “Simon Fuller came to us with the idea of the digital humans. The heads will be from 1979. The voices will be from now. It’s taking too bloody long, it is the digitisation of ourselves which is taking much longer than we thought.

“It’s such hard work, it’s literally copies of ourselves and you will not see it’s not a human being. You see the clothes and every pore is taken care of — every hair, everything. So you can go as close as you want to and it looks like a real human being.

“They create the heads first — that’s a library of face muscles and everything else, so then they can create the rest much quicker. What we’re aiming for now is to finish that video so we can show the world this is what it is and I hope that will be this autumn.”

So ground-breaking is the concept, Björn can’t find the word to describe it, saying: “It’s like a hybrid of everything. It’s more than a show, different to a concert. So let’s call it an experience. The ABBA-tars will talk to the audience.”

Björn says there is no chance of ABBA ever performing together again

Will he go and watch? He thinks for a moment, then muses: “I could. That’s going to be weird.”

However, for anyone hoping for a live performance with the four human members, that remains out of the question.

“We never said we would never record again. We said we would never perform again,” Björn says firmly. “I definitely stand by that — there’s no bloody way. It would be such a hassle.

“I mean we had this incredible offer ages ago, to go on a tour for a year and doing all kinds of promotions and you made a lot of money, yes. But it would have taken ten years out of our life with stress. At that point we thought no, all four of us.”

BJÖRN has been in London for the past few weeks working on Mamma Mia! The Party, auditioning the cast and collaborating with Great British Bake Off’s Sandi Toksvig on the script.

He says: “We fell in love the first time we met – I love her, she’s so great and so intelligent. And so she was the first one I wanted to have once we knew it was actually happening.”

He lived in the UK after ABBA split between 1984 and 1990.

As well as celebrating 20 years of the musical on the West End, he is intimately involved in transforming a large space at London’s O2 Arena that used to be a nightclub into the Mamma Mia! The Party experience.

He says: “They ripped everything out, so it’s like an empty shoebox and inside that, as we speak, we’re building Nikos Taverna. We’ve made a fountain and everything. Everything will feel like a holiday in Greece.”

Having been in Stockholm, I even loved The Party experience despite not being able to understand a word of the Swedish script.

I want to know more about the reunion. Björn says he and Benny spent about two months writing the new ABBA songs. There’s something about their traditional approach, without the whizzbang technology available to songwriters today, that made them work hard to come up with hits.

“I thought the other day about song-writing that maybe people settle for less now because it sounds so good from the outset,” he says. You can have a whole symphony orchestra, whereas we were two guys without the best voices in the world in a room with a stand-up piano and an acoustic guitar.

"You have to make that exciting, so the melody has to be really good. We never settled. It’s never good enough, you know, we really felt, this is it. And you can feel that, it’s strange. And every note is in the right place in a song.”

The band’s priority was always making magical songs, rather than making megabucks on the road. “I mean life on the road is antisocial,” he argues.



Our Dan put on his favourite ABBA shirt when he went to meet Björn




“All four of us had like domestic careers before and we knew everything begins a song — that’s the most important thing of this whole business. Don’t ever forget that, touring is bulls**t. Benny and I worked office hours for months to write three songs.”

MOST READ IN TV & SHOWBIZ
Björn is attempting to reunite the band once more publicly to open Mamma Mia! The Party in London this autumn. He says: “I hope they’ll come, I really do. I’m working on it to make it easy for everyone. I think coming into that room together will be wow.”

For Björn, it will be a rare showbiz moment in a very low-key life that he leads in Sweden, where his family always bring him back to earth. He laughs: “One of my grandchildren, I was singing something the other day and she said, ‘You don’t have a very good voice, Grandad.’”

Millions of ABBA fans like me all over the world know that couldn’t be further from the truth.


https://www.thesun.co.uk/tvandshowbiz/8802480/abba-bjorn-ulvaeus-interview


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more info: abba the new songs on Facebook/

ABBA THE NEW SONGS is an unofficial page on facebook where you can find EVERYTHING about those new songs ABBA is working on! chronologically! event by event! each time some news about the new songs and the Digital project come up you will find it JUST HERE !!! So ... take a look! and celebrate this waiting with us! We are working hard to bring you the best and the most up-to-date information !!!
ABBA THE NEW SONGS es una página no oficial en facebook en donde encontrarán TODO sobre esas nuevas canciones en las que ABBA está trabajando! Cronológicamente, evento por evento! cada vez que alguna noticia sobre las nuevas canciones y el proyecto Digital surja, la encontrarán justo aquí! Así que den un vistazo para celebrar esta espera con nosotros! Estamos trabajando para llevarles la mejor y la más actualizada información!
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