Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta abba virtual. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta abba virtual. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 2 de octubre de 2018

Are ABBA about to release a new album?

Showbiz › Celebrity News
Are ABBA about to release a new album?
Iconic band tease new material — but don't expect them to perform again

EMMA POWELL
Tuesday 2 October 2018 11:37




ABBA co-founder Björn Ulvaeus has hinted that the band could release a new album — 37 years after the release of their last, The Visitors.

The news comes as the Swedish group prepare to release their first songs in decades.

Speaking to A List he said: “A new album, possibly. Or four songs or something like that — that’s possible. But for us to perform on stage that’s just not going to happen. That’s a definite.”

Ulvaeus, 73, recently reunited with bandmates Agnetha Fältskog, Benny Andersson, and Anni-Frid Lyngstad to write and record new songs, one of which, I Still Have Faith In You, will debut on the BBC in December.

abbamammamiaparty2101a.jpg
Reunited: Bjorn Ulvaeus, Agnetha Faltskog, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad (Rex)
He said returning to the recording studio was a “wonderful” experience. “When we were all four in the studio that was amazing because we hadn’t been in a studio situation since the beginning of the Eighties,” he said. “We were standing there in these familiar surroundings and we looked at each other and it took 15 seconds and we were back.”

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The foursome, who won the Eurovision Song Contest with Waterloo in 1974, sold 400 million singles and albums worldwide before their split in 1983.


Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again - Trailer 3
Ulvaeus said London was “so incredibly important” to their success and is now launching Mamma Mia! The Party in the capital. The immersive theatrical and dining experience will see the O2 transformed into a Greek taverna as actors perform a spin-off story from the hit musical and film, which has been adapted by comedian Sandi Toksvig, who said she has made a “friend for life” in Ulvaeus.

Asked if the band will make an appearance when the experience launches next summer, he said: “All four of us love London, so who knows.”

https://www.standard.co.uk/showbiz/celebrity-news/is-abba-about-to-release-a-new-album-a3951151.html

lunes, 16 de julio de 2018

Bjorn Ulvaeus has revealed details of the two new songs

Abba star reveals details of group’s two new songs
Abba announced they were reuniting to make new music earlier this year.

By Laura Harding, Press Association Senior Entertainment Correspondent

July 16 2018 9:04 PM


Abba star Bjorn Ulvaeus has revealed details of the two new songs the group has reunited to record.

The Swedish foursome announced they were getting back together to make new music ahead of their digital avatar tour.

Arriving at the world premiere of Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again, he told the Press Association: “One of them is a pop tune, very danceable.

“The other is more timeless, more reflective, that is all I will say. It is Nordic sad, but happy at the same time.”

He added: “I think that exuberant quality of the two ladies (Agnetha Faltskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad) together singing, that makes the saddest song a bit uplifting, anyway I think that is what happens and that is very organic, that isn’t calculated, that just happened that way.”

Bandmate Benny Andersson hinted that he also had a third song on his mind.



He said: “Yeah it is but don’t tell anyone. If we do a third one, it won’t be out until we go on the road.”

Andersson also said it is unlikely there will be a third album, adding: “It’s good to have a reason to do what you do and this avatar tour is a reason to come up with something.



“Doing another album is like doing Mamma Mia 3, what is the point unless there is a good reason, good script, good environment? It is such a joyful experience, so that is a reason to do it.”

Andersson also said he was determined that any sequel to Mamma Mia would have value that was more than just financial, so he wanted to wait until there was a good script.

He said: “It was not until we said yes. The first one was a good film, we were all happy about that and obviously the studio wanted to do another one because it went so well, so they said we should do another one but for what reason? Artistic reasons?

“But they kept asking. Finally after eight years there was a script that everyone agreed on, so we said, ‘OK then, let’s do it’. I am happy with it, it’s good stuff. For me this has nothing to do with money, I have enough, I am good.”

Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again is released in UK cinemas on July 20.

Press Association


https://www.independent.ie/entertainment/movies/abba-star-reveals-details-of-groups-two-new-songs-37125843.html

viernes, 8 de junio de 2018

ABBA in RMV Studio Stockholm

"Frida, Agnetha, Björn and Benny in RMV Studio Stockholm, recording the two new songs! Release end of this year"





source: https://www.instagram.com/p/BjwGbkTF5Cx/














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PUBLISHED: 22:39, Fri, Jun 8, 2018 | UPDATED: 22:53, Fri, Jun 8, 2018

Mamma Mia – here we go again! Abba back in studio
SUPER Troupers Abba are back in the studio after promising fans they will release new songs for the fi rst time in 35 years. Pictures yesterday emerged of the band hard at work – and the fantastic four looked on top form


Benny Andersson discusses ABBA going on ‘virtual tour’
video

BBC The One Show on September, 25 2017

The Swedish music legends, famed for hits including Mamma Mia, Dancing Queen, Super Trouper and Take A Chance On Me, confirmed in April they were going back to work.

Pictures show Bjorn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson, Agnetha Faltskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad working their magic in a Swedish recording studio.

The band were laying down two long-awaited new songs to be released later this year. Their first, I Still Have Faith In You, should be out in December.


In one snap Bjorn and Benny look deep in thought at a mixing desk in the Stockholm studio, while in another Agnetha and Anni-Frid tried out their vocals.



Abba are back in the studio after promising fans they will release new songs
Abba in the studio INSTAGRAM@abbaofficial

Abba's new songs will be their first in 35 years
AbbaPA

Bjorn, Anni-Frid, Agnetha and Benny together in 2016 in Stockholm
These are pics we have all dreamed of




Gerard Hayes - Fan

The pictures sent fans wild with one, Gerard Hayes, saying: “The circle is complete now for Abba and their fans. These are pics we have all dreamed of.”

Another Trevor Ashman said: “I bet they will be the Christmas number ones.” The group, formed of two married couples, Agnetha and Bjorn, and Benny and Anni-Frid, won the Eurovision song contest with Waterloo in 1974 and went on to become one of the most popular in history, selling over 380 million albums and singles worldwide.

In 1982 they announced they were “on a break” following the demise of both marriages. They finally called it a day in 1983.

The band said their getting back together was a consequence of the decision 18 months ago to put on a “virtual reality tour” next year.

Abba: Thank You For The Music
Mon, September 14, 2009


The songs will be performed by digital avatars of the group from their 1970s heyday.

Earlier this year the group said: “The decision to go ahead with the exciting avatar tour project had an unexpected consequence. We all four felt that, after some 35 years, it could be fun to join forces again and go into the recording studio.

“It was like time had stood still and that we had only been away on a short holiday.”

Benny and Bjorn are also enjoying a revival of their musical Chess, which opened in London’s West End last month to rave reviews.

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/
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