jueves, 30 de septiembre de 2021

ABBA IMMORTAL

 


♣ABBA IMMORTAL
by John Waters
9 . 30 . 21
ABBA was never just a giddy pop band. Well, it was, too—a passable imitation of a giddy pop band, but that was the least of it.
They were sorcerers of sound and sentiment, who brought the human heart to life in a certain way at a certain moment by arranging twelve notes in particularly beguiling sequences, but mostly by resonating with the Zeitgeist of their time, which is to say the aftermath of the 1960s, otherwise “the 70s.” But then, as they came to grief on the icebergs of their disintegrating internal romances, coincidentally or otherwise, pop simultaneously seemed to begin to come to an end, vacating our heads, leaving them echoing with dislocated hooklines and strange jangly noises. For a long time, a “new story” appeared to be indicated but has failed to form itself. The “solution” may now be at hand.
ABBA, the greatest pop band of the 1970s—perhaps the greatest pop band, full stop—is reuniting after four decades. Yet the four figures on stage will not be the embodied entities we know as Agnetha, Anni-Frid, Björn, and Benny, all now in their seventies. Rather, they will be their “digital selves,” as Benny puts it: the avatars of ABBA (or “ABBAtars,” as they have inevitably been dubbed). In May 2022, holograms of the four band members' thirty-something incarnations—ABBA in its prime, digitally reconstituted using performance-capture from recent sessions with the band members in 2021—will perform a series of concerts at the “ABBA Arena,” a purpose-built venue at the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in London. It is the stuff of wild sci-fi imaginings. What will appear in London will not be “ABBA now” or “ABBA then” but both/and: ABBA always, an immortal ABBA. Is this a problem? No and yes.
On the one hand, no; it’s only pop, after all! But the “yes” part of the answer cannot be erased. We live in undemocratic times. Crucial matters concerning not merely our future conditions, but even our future natures are being decided over our heads. It would be ominous and dastardly if a much-loved pop band were to take us painlessly to the next stage. Might it be icily observed that there is no sneakier way of normalizing transhumanism than taking an ancient pop band in the exit lounge of life and making them the first arrivals in the pantheon of Eternity?
ABBA made music for sweethearts (with added sugar). When we were youngsters we almost always heard them in the same conditions: from the back seat of the car of an older couple who was giving us a lift to a dance. The couple always asked you what you thought of ABBA and the answer was always, by definition, non-committal. We liked ABBA but never said so, for to do so was to admit something about yourself that you wished to hide. We liked them in secret, longed to hear them as though by happenstance, on somebody else’s four-track. ABBA was guilty of being “commercial.” They might have come from a “progressive” country, but they were not themselves, in any sense whatsoever, “progressive.” They were pure pop—pop so pure it made you dizzy with its sweetness, and turned you into a sugar addict within a few bumps and saccharine bars.
In a fascinating article, Johan Hakelius discusses the Swedish pop explosion of the 1990s, when Sweden became the third most important pop-producing country in the world. “The roots of it,” he writes, “lie in the 1970s and the Swedish love of manufacturing. . . . Swedish pop is as reliable as a Swiss watch. It does everything it’s supposed to, but it rarely, if ever, changes any basic parameters.”
Hakelius writes that once he asked Björn Ulvaeus, one quarter of ABBA, how much unpublished material from his ABBA days remained in his bottom drawer. “None,” came the answer. “I want everything to be perfect. If it was, we recorded it. If it wasn’t, there was no point in keeping it.”
That, posits Hakelius, is the reasoning of an engineer, not an artist. Why keep a dud prototype? The triumph of Swedish pop, he suggests, is not a triumph for the creative spirit, but a triumph of Swedish engineering. It’s a bit of a cheap shot as well as an interesting thought. The second-best kinds of songs are always highly engineered; the best make it seem like they’re not.
In 1972, the year ABBA was formed, an English journalist named Roland Huntford published The New Totalitarians, in which he exposed the underbelly of Swedish “progressivism”: a near century as a one-party state under the Social Democrats, featuring crude anti-family policies and rampant state incursion into citizens' intimate lives. Huntford described a country governed by corporatism, in which personal freedoms and ambition had been sacrificed to political ideas that read on the page better than they play out in reality. “Modern Sweden,” Huntford declared, “has fulfilled Huxley’s specifications for the new totalitarianism. A centralised administration rules people who love their servitude.”
In this equation, ABBA functioned as both antidote and accomplice. In a 1999 TV documentary about the band, Anni-Frid recalled that ABBA received a lot of criticism from the Swedish press due to its non-involvement in politics of any kind. Yet there is a kind of odd symbiosis between the band and its nation; ABBA served to impose a gracing aspect on an otherwise dour picture. In his 2014 book, The Almost Nearly Perfect People: Behind the Myth of the Scandinavian Utopia, Michael Booth expresses puzzlement at the recurring trope whereby Swedes pronounce themselves the “happiest people in the world.” The reason is straightforward: This is how they are told to regard themselves by the state-directed media, responsible for bolstering Swedish self-esteem. ABBA has fulfilled something like the same function in speaking to the whole world.
Huntford had attempted to parse the paradoxes of Sweden’s apparently contradictory combinations of progressivism and post-patriarchal paternalism, prudishness and sexual liberation. It was a mistake, he decided, to say that the Swedes were particularly freewheeling or emancipated. Since the 1960s Sweden pushed sexual emancipation as though an element of economic policy, but as Huntford observed, sexual license, like the preceding obscurantism, was culturally and politically motivated. Freedom was not the point. The state became concerned with personal morality as a weapon of social change. “The English,” he observed, “are no less sexually liberated. But what distinguishes Sweden is that morality has become the concern of the government, where elsewhere it is something independent, growing out of changes in society.”
Sex became a safety valve for releasing built-up tensions wrought by the high-control society. The energies that might have gone into political dissent went into sexual adventuring. In every other area, freedom had been supplanted by the requirements of the collective. But eventually even sexual freedom began to atrophy. As Huntford observed: “By eradicating ritual and taboo, the excitement has been dissipated, and the function of sex as a surrogate for political tension therefore handicapped.”
Correcting this became a function of culture. In some ways ABBA's emergence might be seen as a (perhaps) unconscious urge to superimpose romance on what had become the clinical functionality of sex. In Sweden, Huntford noted, control and distribution of culture was remarkably centralized. The state provided most of it, and was seen to do so. “In music, the State is sole impresario, and private concert agencies are illegal.”
In such a schema, ABBA, wittingly or otherwise, would have been invaluable to Sweden and its government as the progressive revolution approached its zenith. The band projected a smiling, exultant face and emanations under different headings of exuberance and well-being—a good-looking foursome comprising two smiling happy couples singing songs to intoxicate the world’s sweethearts with the idea that love was easy and fun, even if a little throwaway.
It is notable that the patterns discernible in Sweden in the 1970s have now become commonplace in Europe and America, with the COVID operation increasingly an accelerant. People are told what to think, and otherwise not encouraged to. The state knows best, especially about the citizens’ most intimate affairs.
Booth tries to drill into the conundrum of Swedish hyper-collectivism/hyper-individualism. In Sweden, self-sufficiency and autonomy is all; debt of any kind, be it emotional, a favor, or a borrowed fiver, is avoided at all cost. Booth cites historian Henrik Berggren seeking to refute the idea that Sweden is anti-individualist. On the contrary, Berggren claims, by making people dependent on the state but independent of other humans, the Swedish system liberates the individual in ways that conventional democratic-capitalist societies do not. Sweden's “statist individualism” creates love without ulterior motives. “Wives don't stick around because their husband keeps the joint bank account pin code in a locked drawer in his desk, and husbands don't hold their tongues because their wife's father owns the mill. Authentic love and friendship is possible only between individuals who are independent and equal.”
So Booth asks, eyebrow raised, are the Social Democrats in effect “über cupids”? He gives the idea a half-moment’s thought before binning it.
Everything I read about the Swedish Social Democratic government of the last century suggested an organisation that was driven by one single, overarching goal: to sever the traditional, some would say natural, ties between its citizens, be they those that bound children to their parents, workers to their employers, wives to their husbands, or the elderly to their families. Instead, individuals were encouraged . . . to “take their place in the collective” . . . and become dependent on the government.
In a country steeped in dullness, full of people pretending to be happy, the conditions were perhaps ideal to create a hothouse capable of forcing out a form of constructed joy such as ABBA. From the gray asphalt of Stockholm ABBA grew as four flowers from the cracks, bringing light and color and sweetness to the gloom of progressive collectivism—or perhaps four variegated poppies in the chimney of Sweden’s technologization of itself.
And so there is no more obvious and immediate candidate for pop immortality, no more complete combination in a single combo of desiring, beauty, sweetness, innocence, knowingness, love and its loss. Which raises those inevitable ethical questions: Is the introduction to human culture of edgy concepts like avatars, cyborgs, transhumanism, and posthumanism appropriately effected with a download and a bunch of gigs? Ought such matters not be treated with gravity rather than glitz? Should something so potentially earth-shaking, not to say controversial, be rendered misleadingly palatable by giddy pop songs? Might ABBA, perhaps innocently, be paving the way for a new, dark, digital world?
Perhaps we might dust down a copy of Huntford’s The New Totalitarians, since what was then an experimental domestic condition now eyes up the entire world. Sweden in 1972, according to Huntford, was “a spiritual desert.” But this seemed to have “no ill effect on the Swede. His contentment depends entirely on material possessions.”
The Swedish experience suggests that the choice before us is between technological perfection and personal liberty. The Swedes have chosen perfection. But it would be wrong to suppose that only they would do so. It is wrong to be deceived by their historical peculiarities. Much of what they have done is different only in degree from what has happened in the West. Others can be similarly moulded, if with somewhat more trouble. The Swedes have demonstrated how present techniques can be applied in ideal conditions. Sweden is a control experiment on an isolated and sterilised subject.
Or, I hear a voice piping up from the back, maybe we should just lighten up? It’s only a few pop concerts, after all. Trouble is, once the sweetened pill is swallowed, there is no going back. And where we go one, we go all.
John Waters is an Irish writer and commentator, the author of ten books, and a playwright.

martes, 21 de septiembre de 2021

Ludvig Andersson, reveals details about the ABBAtars

 Ludvig Andersson, who is the producer for ABBA Voyage and Benny Andersson´s son, reveals details about the ABBAtars in an exclusive interview with Musikguiden

Ludvig Andersson, reveals that the "ABBAtars" are based on data produced by 160 infrared cameras that filmed the ABBA members - but also younger actors to make it as authentic as possible.
He believes the audience will be amazed at the technology that enables the four members of Abba to appear in the form of avatars during the performance.
– Wow, how great that you can do it! But if you stand there for 100 minutes and think about it, then we’ve done something wrong. As with any art, it is also about reaching into the heart and soul of the audience.
"A 75-year-old's body does not move like a 32-year-old's, and you can not get away with that," Ludvig Andersson explains to Musikguiden.
Agnetha Fältskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson were filmed in bodystockings for five weeks before work. And that the “ABBAtars” are based on the model of the members from 1978 is possibly due to a little vanity, reveals Ludvig Andersson:
– It had mainly to do with the fact that some of them thought they had beautiful hairstyles back then – and it wasn’t Frida and Agnetha.
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Drygt 800 animatörer, 100 byggarbetare samt ljus- och ljudkonstnärer arbetar i detta nu på att få föreställningen "Abba Voyage" klar inför premiären i maj 2022. En av föreställningens producenter och Benny Anderssons son, Ludvig Andersson, avslöjar i en exklusiv intervju med Musikguiden att "abbatarerna" är baserade på data framtagen av 160 infraröda kameror som filmade dels ABBA-medlemmarna – men också yngre skådespelare för att få det så autentiskt som möjligt. "En 75-årings kropp rör sig inte som en 32-årings, och det kan man inte komma undan", förklarar Ludvig Andersson till Musikguiden
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jueves, 16 de septiembre de 2021

Today Bjorn !



Bjorn with Frank Briegmann Ceo of Universal Music
Instagram. "Universal Inside punktet mit Helene Fischer, Abba und einem Umzug
Am 16. September lud das Team von Universal Music zu einer Digital Edition von Universal Inside. Chairman & CEO Frank Briegmann hatte dabei gleich mehrere Highlights im Gepäck, darunter die Vertragsverlängerung mit Helene Fischer und ein Gespräch mit ABBA-Mitbegründer Björn Ulvaeus, aber auch die Bestätigung, dass Universal Music 2023 auf den Umzug in ein neues Hauptquartier zusteuert. (Foto: Universal Music)

 

sábado, 11 de septiembre de 2021

Who is Svana Gísla



Ekki hægt að segja nei við ABBA

Smartland Mörtu Maríu | Frami | mbl | 11.9.2021 |

Ekki hægt að segja nei við ABBA

Svana Gísla er aðal­fram­leiðandi ABBA Voya­ge-tón­leik­anna sem fara fram í London á næsta ári. Svana er frá Akra­nesi en flutti til Lund­úna fyr­ir rúm­lega 20 árum staðráðin í því að vinna sig upp í tón­list­ar­brans­an­um. ABBA á sér stór­an sess í hjört­um marga og seg­ir Svana nýju tón­leikaröðina stærsta tón­list­ar­verk­efni sem hef­ur verið sett á svið. 

„Ég er búin að vera í London í yfir 20 ár. Búin að vinna mig upp í þess­um bransa síðan ég var 20 og eitt­hvað. Ég kem af Akra­nesi en flutti til London mjög ung,“ seg­ir Svana sem fór út til þess að vinna. „Mig langaði alltaf að búa í London af ein­hverri ástæðu. Langaði að vera í mús­ík­brans­an­um og var búin að vera í allskon­ar mús­ík þegar ég var í skóla og bara vann mig upp ein­beitt og ákveðinn eins og ís­lensk­ar kon­ur eiga kyn til.“

Auk þess að fram­leiða verk­efni í tón­list­ar­geir­an­um starfar Svana sem fram­leiðandi í kvik­mynda- og sjón­varps­brans­an­um. Hún hef­ur unnið með stór­stjörn­um áður en til þess að kom­ast á þann stað sem hún er núna á þurfti hún að leggja mikið á sig. „Þetta er nátt­úru­lega bara bransi eins og all­ur ann­ar bransi. Ég er búin að vinna eins og vit­leys­ing­ur síðustu 23 árin að koma mér áfram í þess­um iðnaði.“

Ekki hægt að segja nei við ABBA

Svana vann með Dav­id Bowie en þegar hann féll frá ákvað hún að vinna ekki aft­ur í tón­list­ar­brans­an­um. Í stað þess ætlaði hún að ein­beita sér frek­ar að sjón­varpi og kvik­mynd­um. „Þegar ABBA sím­talið kom þá var erfitt að segja nei við því,“ seg­ir Svana. 

Það eru bara nokkr­ir dag­ar síðan að ný lög af vænt­an­legri plötu ABBA hljómuðu fyrst og tón­leik­arn­ir voru kynnt­ir. Verk­efnið hef­ur þó verið mun leng­ur í bíg­erð. „Ég rek allt fyr­ir­tækið og ég er búin að vinna í þessu í rúm fjög­ur ár. Ég vinn hlið við hlið með ABBA. Þetta er stærsta tón­list­ar­verk­efni sem hef­ur nokk­urn tím­ann verið sett á svið.“


Björn, Benny, Agnetha og Anni-Frid verða ekki á sviðinu á hverju kvöldi eins og á hefðbundn­um tón­leik­um. Svana seg­ir að upp­lif­un­in eigi þó eft­ir að vera eins og á al­vöru tón­leik­um. „Þú átt eft­ir að upp­lifa tón­leika með ABBA þannig að þau eru á sviðinu í „digital­formi“. Við erum að byggja okk­ur eig­in tón­leika­höll,“ seg­ir Svana en allt var gert til þess að skapa hinu full­komnu tón­leika­höll fyr­ir verk­efnið. Hún lýs­ir upp­lif­un­inni sem nýrri vídd á milli raun­heima og sta­f­ræna heims­ins. 

Rúm­lega fjög­urra ára vinna að koma í ljós

Svana seg­ir að þau hafi lagt mikla áherslu á að halda verk­efn­inu leyndu í all­an þann tíma sem tók að und­ir­búa verk­efnið enda vildu ABBA, Svana og sam­starfs­fé­lag­ar stýra allri um­fjöll­un. Hún seg­ist vera vön að þegja yfir leynd­ar­mál­um enda sé það stór hlut­ur af starf­inu. „Ég er mjög vön því en það er erfitt að reka fyr­ir­tæki af þess­ari stærð á þeim hraða og með því magni sem við erum búin að gera án þess að geta talað op­in­ber­lega um hvað við erum að gera. Við erum mikið búin að senda þagna­skyldu­samn­inga, það er svona bók­hald um það á hverj­um ein­asta degi. Það hjálp­ar rosa­lega til núna að geta talað hreint og beint um það sem við erum að gera.“

Fyrstu tón­leik­arn­ir fara fram í maí á næsta ári. Svana von­ast til þess að kom­ast í viku frí eft­ir það en hún seg­ir að verk­efni eins og þetta reki sig ekki sjálft. „Ég á ekki eft­ir að kom­ast í al­gjört frí en kannski viku, það væri gott.“ Svana reyn­ir að koma til Íslands á sumr­in en hef­ur ekki komið til Íslands í tvö ár og spil­ar kór­ónu­veirufar­ald­ur­inn þar inn í.

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google translate

No puedes decirle que no a ABBA

mbl.is


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Smartland Marta María | Frami | mbl | 11.9.2021 |

No puedes decirle que no a ABBA

Svana Gísli es la productora principal del concierto ABBA Voyage que tendrá lugar en Londres el próximo año. Svana es de Akranes, pero se mudó a Londres hace más de 20 años, decidida a abrirse camino en el negocio de la música. ABBA tiene un gran lugar en el corazón de muchos y dice que la nueva serie de conciertos de Svana es el proyecto musical más grande que se ha realizado.

"Estoy en Londres desde hace más de 20 años. Trabajo en este negocio desde que tenía 20 años y algo así. Vengo de Akranes pero me mudé a Londres a una edad muy joven ", dice Svana, que salió a trabajar. "Siempre quise vivir en Londres por alguna razón. Quería estar en el negocio de la música y había estado en todo tipo de música cuando estaba en la escuela y simplemente me abrí camino concentrada y determinada como lo son las mujeres islandesas.


Además de producir proyectos en el sector de la música, Svana trabaja como productora en la industria del cine y la televisión. Ha trabajado con superestrellas antes, pero para llegar a donde está ahora, tuvo que esforzarse mucho. "Naturalmente, este es un negocio como cualquier otro negocio. He trabajado como un tonto durante los últimos 23 años para avanzar en esta industria ".


No puedes decirle que no a ABBA

Svana trabajó con David Bowie, pero cuando falleció decidió no volver a trabajar en el negocio de la música. En cambio, planeaba centrarse más en la televisión y las películas. "Cuando llegó la llamada de ABBA, fue difícil decirle que no", dice Svana.


Hace solo unos días que se tocaron por primera vez nuevas canciones del próximo álbum de ABBA y se anunció el concierto. Sin embargo, el proyecto lleva mucho más tiempo en marcha. "Dirijo toda la empresa y he estado trabajando en esto durante más de cuatro años. Trabajo codo a codo con ABBA. Este es el proyecto musical más grande que jamás se haya realizado ".



Björn, Benny, Agnetha y Anni-Frid no estarán en el escenario todas las noches como en un concierto tradicional. Svana dice que la experiencia será como un concierto real. “Experimentarás conciertos con ABBA para que estén en el escenario en 'forma digital'. Estamos construyendo nuestra propia sala de conciertos ", dice Svana, pero se hizo todo lo posible para crear la sala de conciertos perfecta para el proyecto. Ella describe la experiencia como una nueva dimensión entre el mundo real y el mundo digital.


Más de cuatro años de trabajo por verse

Svana dice que pusieron mucho énfasis en mantener el proyecto en secreto durante el tiempo que llevó prepararlo, ya que ABBA, Svana y sus colegas querían dirigir toda la cobertura. Dice que está acostumbrada a guardar silencio sobre los secretos, ya que eso es una gran parte del trabajo. “Estoy muy acostumbrado, pero es difícil dirigir una empresa de este tamaño a la velocidad y con la cantidad que hemos hecho sin poder hablar públicamente sobre lo que estamos haciendo. Hemos enviado muchos acuerdos de confidencialidad, existe este tipo de contabilidad todos los días. Ahora ayuda mucho poder hablar honestamente sobre lo que estamos haciendo ".


El primer concierto tendrá lugar en mayo del próximo año. Svana espera tener una semana libre después de eso, pero dice que un proyecto como este no funciona por sí solo. "No me voy a ir de vacaciones completas, pero tal vez una semana, eso sería bueno".

https://www.mbl.is/smartland/frami/2021/09/11/ekki_haegt_ad_segja_nei_vid_abba/





sábado, 4 de septiembre de 2021

ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus hilariously rates his former ABBA outfits out of 10



Which outfit is your favourite?
TIK TOK video


Last week, after much anticipation, ABBA burst back onto the scene, announcing a brand new album, a unique concert experience and releasing two new singles.


Alongside their return, ABBA have been increasingly active across social media, in particular the video sharing app Tik Tok.


Benny Andersson has posted multiple videos behind the piano, and now Bjorn Ulvaeus has shared a video onto the ABBA Tik Tok account of himself rating his iconic outfits he has worn throughout the glory days of ABBA.


Turns out there were a few iconic outfits that Bjorn isn't such a fan of looking back - which is understandable!


https://www.thebreeze.co.nz/home/must-see/2021/09/abba-s-bjorn-ulvaeus-hilariously-rates-his-former-abba-outfits-o.html


viernes, 3 de septiembre de 2021

London practice behind new Olympic Park arena for ABBA’s virtual comeback tour

 London practice behind new Olympic Park arena for ABBA’s virtual comeback tour

3 SEPTEMBER 2021 ·BY RICHARD WAITE


The first images have been made public of plans for a new 3,000-capacity venue on the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park designed by Stufish Entertainment Architects, which will host ABBA’s virtual comeback tour


The London and Hong Kong-based entertainment and concert specialist has drawn up proposals for a mainly timber temporary theatre on a car park site in Barbers Road, next to Pudding Mill DLR station, east London.


In November the Swedish pop legends will release their first new album for 40 years, ABBA Voyage, ahead of a ‘revolutionary’ set of concerts at which virtual avatars of the band will play their greatest hits.


According to the promoters, the ‘breathtaking’ London arena will create ‘the perfect setting for ABBA Voyage, offering a live music experience like no other’


They said: ‘The venue is built around ABBA’s timeless music and never-before-seen concert, so you can have the time of your life in general admission or have the option of a seat in the auditorium if you prefer. You can even party in style in your own dance booth.’


In March 2020 the London Legacy Development Corporation gave its approval for the pop-up arena to stay on the plot for five years. The 6,710m² scheme has been designed to be demountable and re-usable.


The main auditorium has been designed to create an ‘internal clear span of 61m and allow for a 360-degree immersive experience’.


As well as this main space, the development will feature a box office, backstage facilities and storage, shops, food stalls, bars and a covered concourse.


In November 2019 the early designs were looked at by the London Legacy Development Corporation quality review panel chaired by Catherine Burd.


The panellists were supportive of the project saying the ‘proposed design, including timber cladding, [had] the potential to be beautiful’.


However, it did have a word of warning about its construction: ‘Given that the structure is to be re-used – with a life span expected to extend well beyond its three years at Pudding Mill – the panel urges that investment in quality be made now.


‘The design of the building, including its materiality, must result in a structure that is not only beautiful, but also durable.


‘The panel urges that the intention to use timber for both the theatre building cladding and the canopy structure be fully followed through, without compromise.’


The arena is due to open its doors in May 2022. The practice has been contacted for comment


https://www.architectsjournal.co.uk/news/london-practice-behind-new-olympic-park-arena-for-abbas-virtual-comeback-tour








"I Still Have Faith In You"

 Crítica: Nuevo single de Abba es una "obra maestra"

Columna de Ricardo Martínez: ¿Por qué I Still Have Faith In You es un Instant Classic y una Obra Maestra?

"I Still Have Faith In You", el primero de los dos temas nuevos que lanzaron mundialmente ayer, responde a estos nuevos tiempos musicales -sin dejar de ser fiel a sus raíces- de una manera que no resulta sino magistral.

Juan Espinoza

03/09/2021 - 07:11 h CLT



Crítica: Nuevo single de Abba es una "obra maestra"


(un intento de análisis en borrador de la nueva canción de ABBA a casi cuarenta años de distancia)

Hace ya demasiados años encontré un blog de un doctorado en composición musical que había analizado y documentado las estructuras de todas las canciones de Los Beatles. La gran sorpresa que salía de la Caja de Pandora que resultaba aquella base de datos es que Los Beatles fueron mucho más experimentales y exploratorios en sus composiciones de lo que podía captar el oído desatento.


Las secuencias de estrofas, coros y middle eights, eran versátiles y variaban de tema a tema, alejándose de la fórmula que para Atlantic habían firmado y fichado Tom (Dowd) & Jerry (Waxler) cerca de un lustro antes de la entrada de la Invasión Británica a la escena del pop universal, a saber, la sucesión: Estrofa-Estrofa-Coro-Estrofa-Coro-Coro-Middle Eight-Coro.


ABBA facturó algo similar en los orígenes de Suecia como potencia mundial de la música popular. Aunque nunca separándose del todo de la «Solución Tom & Jerry».


Hace 39 años la luz de ABBA se extinguió y durante lustros brilló bajo cuerdas hasta ser redescubierta por las comunidades LGBTTTIQA+, y en especial por «Priscilla, La Reina del Desierto«.


En el intertanto los procesos de creación de canciones y de producción del pop cambiaron para siempre. Tom & Jerry y Los Beatles y ABBA fueron guardados con sus Estrofas y Coros y Middle Eights en un gabinete, y ascendió la fórmula de un Hook tras otro, a menudo en diferentes intérpretes en un mismo tema bajo la enseña del ft., como ha documentado un reportaje de The New York Times que no tiene desperdicio, entronizado como estrella de la estructura al Drop, ese momento en que la canción alcanza el peak de intensidad en la pista de baile.


Y entonces ABBA regresó desde las arenas del tiempo.


Por lo suyo.


«I Still Have Faith In You», el primero de los dos temas nuevos que lanzaron mundialmente ayer, responde a estos nuevos tiempos musicales -sin dejar de ser fiel a sus raíces- de una manera que no resulta sino magistral.


Jude Rogers, la crítica musical de The Guardian advierte en su análisis realizado a la velocidad del rayo que el tema se inicia con uno de los trucos más clásicos del cuarteto: principiar con una melodía instrumental que da la impresión de que estamos en medio de la obra y no en su comienzo. Y luego viene la voz de Agnetha (aunque el peso del tema lo lleva Ann-Frid) que casi recitando melodiza, «I Still Have Faith In You».


La canción puede dividirse en tres «temas», a los que suele llamárseles, en este tipo de análisis, temas A, B y C.


Son los siguientes:


Tema A: I Still Have Faith In You


Tema B: Do I Have It In Me?


Tema C: We Do Have It In Us


El Tema A corresponde a lo que Tom & Jerry consideraban la Estrofa, mientras que el Tema B sería, por su melodía más sutil y delicada, el Middle Eight; y, por su parte, el Tema C corresponde en propiedad al actual Drop. Sobre todo, porque se anuncia con un ascenso instrumental intenso y es donde Agnetha y Ann-Frid extreman su performance vocálica.


Estos tres temas solo aparentemente parecen ser parte de la Fórmula ABBA tradicional de los setenta e inicios de los ochenta, porque la manera como las repeticiones de los mismos de alternar en «I Still Have Faith In You» resulta asimismo sumamente contemporánea.


Eso, al punto que, en el momento crucial de la canción, los tres Temas son entonados al mismo tiempo. En el fraseo de la penúltima estrofa del texto:


(I Still Have Faith In You)


And We Still Have It In Us


We’ve Only Just Arrived


(Do I Have It In Me?)


La manera como el anudamiento de los Temas A, B y C se desarrolla en el regreso de ABBA no sólo es emocionante, sino que de una inteligencia composicional y de atención a los nuevos valores musicales pop de hondo calado.


No por nada, si se pone la frase inicial de cada uno de los tres Temas (A, B y C), se descubre un mensaje secreto:


I Still Have Faith In You


Do I Have It In Me?


We Do Have It In Us


Que se puede traducir como:


Todavía tengo fe en ti


¿La tengo en mí?


¡La tenemos en nosotros!


O, «en nosotres».


Lo que, además, es una respuesta al dolor de la canción clásica de ABBA con la que más hace intertexto esta nueva entrega, la desolada canción de ruptura, «The Winner Takes It All» (aunque huelga decir que los redobles de tambores de fondo de «I Still Have Faith In You» remiten a su vez a «Fernando»).


Nada. Como dije en la ADN este mediodía: «nunca subestimemos el poder de fuego de la Armada Musical Sueca».


Gracias, ABBA, por la música


https://www.adnradio.cl/musica/2021/09/03/critica-nuevo-single-de-abba-es-una-obra-maestra.html




ABBA are Back !

ABBA are Back! Enjoy!






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photo abba newsfhash on Facebook







actualizada 10 09 2021

ABBA Voyage - The new music !

 






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------------- ABBA Voyage: The Journey Is About To Begin

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The new songs!! 

ABBA - I Still Have Faith In You

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAzEY1MfXrQ

ABBA - Don't Shut Me Down (Lyric Video)

https://youtu.be/hWGWFa3jznI









Grona Lund













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