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miércoles, 17 de abril de 2024

When Abba stayed in Bournemouth for an industry party

When Abba stayed in Bournemouth for an industry party


Superstar music chart toppers left HUGE tip for hotel staff

ABBA landing at Hurn Airport 12th Sept 1981.





More than 40 years ago the Echo received a tip that a top musical group were coming to town, but this was nowhere near as impressive as the tip the singing quartet left for the hotel they stayed in.


Out of nowhere, like a bolt from the sky, four of the music industry's most renowned icons graced Bournemouth with their presence - Abba.


  The band flew in from Stockholm on a private jet to Hurn Airport, en route to a party at the end of CBS Records’ conference at the Carlton Hotel in 1981.  


On the following day, as they bid their farewell, the hotel manager was astounded by the generous tip left behind - a staggering £500, equivalent to approximately £2,000 in today's currency.


Upon receiving advanced notice of their arrival, The Daily Echo eagerly awaited the band's presence at the airport.


Agnetha Faltskog said it was unlikely the group would tour Britain, but said: “I love your country.”


Band members Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad had divorced that year, two years after Faltskog and Bjorn Ulvaeus did the same.


Andersson told the Echo: “We find that we are working better together now that there is no pressure of marriage.”




Instead of performing at the Carlton, the group decided to attend a lively gathering alongside approximately 300 delegates. Among the attendees were also the Nolans, who added to the celebratory atmosphere.


The next day, as they departed, they left an incredibly generous tip to mark their departure.


The hotel’s executive director, John Furlong, said: “I have been in the hotel business for a long time, and I have never known anyone to be so generous as this. They can come back any time.”



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article

https://abbaregistro.blogspot.com/2017/09/flashback-day-abba-came-to-bournemouth.html


martes, 9 de abril de 2024

ABBA Voyage, review: surrender to this poptastic retrofuturism

 REVIEW

Abba Voyage, review: surrender to this poptastic retrofuturism – and have the time of your life

    

Fifty years since the band conquered Eurovision, this digital concert residency with life-sized ‘Abbatars’ is still a time-travel triumph


Marianka Swain

9 April 2024 • 12:04pm

ABBA, Pop music



Abba Voyage at the astonishing Abba Arena CREDIT: Abba Voyage

It was a double anniversary celebration for Abba this past weekend: 50 years since they conquered Eurovision, and 25 years in the West End for musical Mamma Mia!. Attending the latter on Saturday, Björn Ulvaeus quipped that although he might not be there for the show’s next big anniversary, “my avatar will” – referring to the Swedish band’s latest smash-hit project, and addition to their peerless legacy, Abba Voyage.


This digital concert residency, which began in 2022, is mind-bending time travel to rival Doctor Who: somehow both richly nostalgic and an extraordinary glimpse of the future. The purpose-built Abba Voyage arena alone is a wonder – a Scandi spaceship landed in Stratford, boasting 291 speakers, 500 moving lights, and 65-million-pixel screens. 


As for those life-sized and eerily lifelike “Abbatars”, George Lucas’s Industrial Light & Magic company used 160 motion-capture cameras to record the briefly reunited Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson, Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad – and then, via CGI, restore them to their youthful 1979 selves. When those four oh-so-familiar figures come rising up onto the stage in their sequinned glam-rock jumpsuits, it really does feel like witchcraft.


But this Abba Voyage London experience wouldn’t be nearly so popular if it was just techie heaven. After all, these richly emotional songs have become embedded in our lives. Director Baillie Walsh makes some canny choices, such as employing a charismatic live band, so we still get that immediate human connection. He also understands, as Ulvaeus puts it, that Abba essentially has a fifth member: the audience. This has to feel like a communal event – and it does.


Although the Abba Voyage setlist begins, oddly, with a deep-cut, it’s not long before you get that collective bliss of 3,000 people thrusting their arms in the air when the Fernando chorus kicks in, or adding a group “a-ha” to Knowing Me, Knowing You. Chiquitita is backed by a gradual solar eclipse, and its ravishing lighting effect makes it look as though the audience in the front dance-floor area is at a music festival during sunset. That section is boogieing throughout, but everyone is on their feet by Dancing Queen.


There’s chat from the band too, adding to the sense of a real gig, like Lyngstad dedicating a song to her grandmother. But there’s no mistaking the pioneering creative ambition. The awe-inspiring, immersive lighting display incorporates everything from shooting-star bolts and alien pyramids to huge strings of coloured beads and a painterly rendering of the Northern Lights.


Wayne McGregor gives a slight upgrade to the 70s moves (Lyngstad is particularly sinuous and athletically high-kicking), but even just Fältskog swaying side to side, her white dress fluttering around her, is a visual marvel. Yes, the eyes are sometimes uncannily blank, but when Fältskog is projected onto the big screens for The Winner Takes It All, she rips our hearts out. Particularly endearing are the moments where the band members exchange smiles or wrap their arms around each other. 


It may be a facsimile, but it’s an irresistibly inviting one. The Abba Voyage running time is a crisp 90 minutes, the arena is unusually well marshalled (and has a surprisingly good food offering), and a wide-ranging audience of all ages is unified in giving a heartfelt thank you for the music. Surrender to this pop-tastic retrofuturism and you’ll have the time of your life.


Currently booking until Jan 5 2025

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/concerts/abba-voyage-abba-arena-review/


jueves, 6 de julio de 2023

Frida - To Turn The Stone




LISTEN: This ‘80s bop by an ABBA legend was originally meant for Donna Summer
Though Anni-Frid Lyngstad, a.k.a. Frida, is best known for her work as part of Swedish supergroup ABBA, her career as a solo artist has almost as many fabulous synth-heavy songs to enjoy.
When ABBA broke up in 1982, Frida had already been planning her solo career in secret. Working with legendary producer and musician Phil Collins, she recorded her comeback solo album Something’s Going On. Its lead single, “I Know There’s Something Going On,” was a breakout hit, but all 11 of the album’s tracks are a stellar display of Frida’s talent, including the moody, dreamlike “To Turn The Stone.”
The meaning behind the song is difficult to decipher. Despite the full version being over five minutes long, “To Turn The Stone” doesn’t have many lyrics, consisting of just three choruses and a whole lot of Collins’ signature reverb-heavy production.
Frida opens the song singing, “The moon retreats behind a silver cloud / As darkness throws its cloak towards the earth / And mystery replaces what we thought we knew / To turn the stone, to turn the stone.”
It may sound nonsensical, but Frida’s voice is killer, as always.
The music video doesn’t bring any clarity, but it sure is fun to look at. The video sees Frida appearing in a burst of sparks in a cave full of fog and dramatic lighting. She sways and sings as the sun slowly rises.
Meanwhile, there are more crossfades than you can count, showing a truly bizarre set of images: a cat, an undulating dancer holding a glowing rod, a second cat, a pile of barbed wire, a mysterious orb, a shattering lightbulb, multiple explosions, heavy rain, and a soaring bird of prey.
Oh, and Frida changes into a red lamé outfit at some point. High camp.
“To Turn The Stone” wasn’t a single, but it was one of only four songs on Something’s Going On to get the music video treatment. The album was released in October 1982 and has since sold more than 1.5 million copies, making it the highest selling album by a former member of ABBA.
Though Frida was the first to release a recording of “To Turn The Stone,” the song was actually recorded a year earlier in 1981 by Donna Summer for her double album I’m A Rainbow. The track was written by Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte, a songwriting duo known for their disco hits that Summer had been working with since the ‘70s.
Summer recorded 18 tracks for I’m A Rainbow, including “To Turn The Stone,” but issues behind the scenes saw the album shelved indefinitely. With Summer’s version apparently scrapped, Moroder and Bellotte instead licensed “To Turn The Stone” to Frida.
15 years later, Summer’s 1981 recording was finally released in 1996 with virtually no promotion. Her version of “To Turn The Stone” is more upbeat, and it sounds like the lovechild of a robot and a set of bagpipes.









sábado, 19 de noviembre de 2022

ABBA Voyage was a spectacular night that I will never forget: review

 ABBA Voyage was a spectacular night that I will never forget: review





Darcy Robertson19 November 2022
It’s 1977 – your sequined silver dress reflecting off the ceiling of the disco ball as you dance the night away in a spacious arena to electrifying, thrilling ABBA hits.
But it’s not really 1977, it’s 2022.
On Monday evening (November 14th) I took my beautiful mother to watch ABBA Voyage – a live show that drew thousands to see one of the world’s most popular bands, ABBA, perform as digital avatars.
I’ve seen the reviews – ABBA Voyage has been called ‘groundbreaking’ and ‘stunning’ by national news organizations; but I was a bit skeptical when I thought that avatars – or abbatars – could really do justice to these powerful adjectives.
But Mamma Mia, was I wrong.
My mom and I definitely donned the part – I was dressed head to toe in silver sequins, sparkly makeup and white go-go boots – a perfect look for an ABBA extravaganza, if I do say so myself.
We arrived at the Pudding Mill Arena at 7pm and enjoyed a cold glass of white wine while taking in the atmosphere of our surroundings and waiting for the show to begin.
At 7.45pm sharp, the stage came alive and we were greeted by Agnetha Faltskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson, who rose off the floor to their 1981 song The Visitors.
I was shocked; The resemblance of the avatars was amazing – every ABBA star looked like they were standing right in front of me on stage.
Hair, eyes, skin color, costumes and even hand movements were imitated to perfection; and in a bizarre, dreamlike way, I felt transported back to the seventies.
It really felt like the Swedish supergroup was standing in front of me.
The Visitors was then mixed into the track Hole in Your Soul and then into the iconic 1975 song SOS
At that point, me, my mother, and the hundreds of spectators beamed with smiles and sang along with each song’s lyrics.
The surrounding stage also transformed – glowing lights flashed constantly throughout the show, revealing many glittering disco objects hanging and swinging from the ceiling.
We were soon taken on a journey through the music of ABBA – Knowing Me, Knowing You, Chiquitita, Fernando and the most famous of them all, Mamma Mia echoed through the arena as we sang, cheered and danced along.
I know it goes without saying, but ABBA really knew (and still do) how to create an archetypal pop song that will stay in the spotlight for decades to come.
Bjorn Ulvaeus’ Abbatar then appeared solo on stage as he introduced the next song (my personal favourite) Does Your Mother Know.
The audience was soon greeted by a very real (and vibrant) band consisting of a guitarist, a pianist, a drummer and three very impressive backing vocalists, who took the lead on my favorite ABBA hit.
In the middle of the set, Eagle can be seen guiding us viewers through an anime story while the four stars “changed outfits” – something that avatars seem to take four minutes to do.
We had such a great time – although it probably wasn’t the best idea to wear my white go-go boots as my feet felt like they were about to fall off – but I wanted to look like it and I wasn’t letting it It keeps me from dancing the night away.
The avatars of Agnetha, Anni-Frid, Bjorn and Benny then returned to the stage wearing advanced glow-in-the-dark bodysuits that flashed to the rhythms and beats of each song, including Lay All Your Love On Me, Gimme! Give me! Give me! and Voulez Vous.
Unsurprisingly, our throats started to hurt because we HAD to sing along to every song – but can you blame us? We watched ABBA. LIVE. IN. CONCERT.
The night ended on an emotional high with an avatar encore of The Winner Takes It All – I was really so sad that the show ended; I could have stayed there for hours (if I had taken my shoes off).
The disco grooves rushed through our veins, the energetic music pumped and the atmosphere was indescribable – it was a night I will never forget.
Tickets for ABBA Voyage’s spectacular performance start from £21, but if you want to feel like a real dance queen for the night make sure you get dance floor tickets.
ABBA Voyage is booking now through November 27, 2023 at the ABBA Arena in London.



Abba, The Crown and deep-fake entertainment

Abba, The Crown and deep-fake entertainment

Jo Ellison 

Abba, The Crown and deep-fake entertainment

Who cares if it’s real as long as you enjoy it




How does it feel to have seen the future?”


So asked the woman behind the cash register as I picked out an Abba Voyage commemorative T-shirt. “That’s the future of entertainment,” she said of the show I’d just seen, her face all mystic and awestruck. “I guess so,” I replied as I handed over my card. She was probably right, but I felt less ecstatic than rueful.


Don’t misunderstand me: Abba Voyage, the live arena event currently occupying Pudding Mill Lane at the ends of east London, is nothing short of a miracle. In a dazzling technological regeneration, the Swedish supergroup has been reanimated, returned to 1977, and reborn as extraordinary “Abba-tars”. As a magic trick, the whole spectacle is completely dazzling. And although the figures have the occasional jolting syncopation of Sims characters (and the band’s voices and physical gestures are modelled on band members now in their seventies), the voyage is an eye-rubbing marvel.


Joining the audience in a lusty rendition of “Fernando” on a damp Monday night, I felt overwhelmed with happiness and nostalgia. I embraced the hen-night energy, danced in the aisles and channelled my inner Agnetha. My daughter, an Abba superfan, went hoarse from singing her lungs out. Chugging home on the Docklands Light Railway, I wondered if one can OD on serotonin.


Who needs actual bodies on a stage when you can build a convincing simulacrum?


Have I seen the future of entertainment, however? I rather hope I haven’t. Apparently music executives the world over are now planning holographic extravaganzas, and at upwards of £100 a ticket, the Abba Voyage business model will be wildly addictive. I can only imagine the 40mn Licks we might see from the Rolling Stones in the future. Not unlike the 3D mania that possessed filmmakers about 10 years ago, the concept of live performance is about to enter a new era.


As with so many things in our lives now, this is the age of deep-fake entertainment. Following the film industry’s acquiescence to the Marvel universe, and ubiquity of the gaming aesthetic, it was only a matter of time before even live performance became subject to techno manipulation. Who needs actual bodies on a stage when you can build a convincing simulacrum? Why bother wrecking your vocal cords over the course of a punishing residency when you can just hit play on a recording?


Harder to replicate though will be the mood of euphoria that only an Abba fan brings with them. I imagine the excitement for musical holograms will likely burn bright but will quickly fall out of favour. What remains more permanent, however, is how blurred our cultural reality is becoming. We are wary of how truthful our news might be (witness the misreporting over the missile strike this week in Poland). But deep-fake entertainment has now wiggled into every facet of culture.


Whether CGI, blue screen, holographic or simply pure fabrication, the boundaries between what is real or imagined are becoming muddled in the chopped salad of entertainment. It’s especially pernicious in programmes that present events as being factual history. The 90th series of The Crown arrived last week along with a volley of complaints about the series’ wildly fictitious diversions. Former prime minister John Major has vehemently denied having met King Charles to discuss the then prince’s succession frustrations. (He seemed a great deal less concerned by the casting of Jonny Lee Miller, who has lent that greyest of political leaders a disconcertingly sexy charisma). At this point in the Netflix drama, it seems rather pointless to bleat about misrepresentation. But it’s dismaying to realise that audiences care less and less for the truth in their fiction.



We seem to be caught in a cycle that places extraordinary value in making things “look” authentic. Whether it’s Dominic West dressing up in the right kind of tweeds, or Abba created in lasers, as long as everything looks the part, we seem less concerned by the substance. On TikTok, I watch compare-and-contrast videos in which you can watch the dramatic restagings of The Crown (and other “true stories”) next to videos of contemporary live footage. The impersonations, the wardrobes and intonation are so good that you scarcely know which is the real one. Entertainment has become a bizarre hybrid in which the gap between virtual and real has shrunk to a hair’s width.


But while many are now exploring the limits of what can be done to bend an audience’s perception, there is also a growing contingent who still crave the corporeal and real.


As I write, I am sitting in a presale queue in the hope of snagging a ticket for Blur, who will reunite for a single concert at Wembley Stadium next summer. The band last played a full set together in 2015, and for years a reunion has seemed unimaginable. Pulp have also announced a string of dates after nearly a decade of not playing together. That the bands have suddenly announced dates next year has set a million Brit-pop pulses aflutter. To see Damon, Alex, Graham and Dave on a stage again? That really would be a miracle.


https://www.ft.com/content/eb79eacc-0bde-465d-94fa-a2fac2c79a53

domingo, 7 de agosto de 2022

Review: ABBA Voyage provides pristine digital images and bouncing pop

 Review: ABBA Voyage provides pristine digital images and bouncing pop

Dr. Tim Sandle — 

Digital Journal - Entertainment


Back to the 1970s but digitally, ABBA’s Voyage, the new London show, is reviewed.


ABBA are back, at least virtually. Playing in London is the show ABBA Voyage, using digitally recorded avatars of the four band members, together with an array of visual effects and a live performing band.


Since ‘splitting’ in 1983, ABBA have resisted offers to reform and tour even where the price tag has exceeded $1 billion. While the band have recently returned to the studio, it is through advances in digital technology that their admirers can see and hear them play.


While this Digital Journal reviewer is more interested in the return of The Cure in terms of a band revival, the reviews for ABBA Voyage and the technical sophistication of the virtual performance was sufficient to spark interest. And this interest was well rewarded.


The show is a spectacular success – from its realism, to the music, and overall pazazz. The venue is custom-built arena at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in London, and the two shows per day continue to sell out.


Most of the expected songs are showcased across the 22 song set – from Waterloo to Mamma Mia, from SOS to Fernando. Some high charting tracks inevitably do not feature across the 90 minute set, given that the band have an extensive back catalogue including 50 singles released since 1971.


What was remarkable about the performances was the realism. If one member of ABBA stepped back into a darker area, their image faded but they were still visible as if they were really there. Each performer was also complete from any viewing point – fully formed three dimensional images.


At time the band wear clothes from the 1970s and 1980s, often invoking the era of the discotheque; at other times they are wearing more modern clothing, including suits that would not be out of place in the remake of Tron. As dazzling as the futuristic suits are ,the band look better in the recreations of them at the time of their spangly, jump-suited pomp


The quality of the effects and imaging of the performers was due to the work undertaken by Industrial Light and Magic (ILM), the film effects company founded by Star Wars creator George Lucas. More than 100 digital artists and technicians worked on the avatars (or perhaps ABBA-tars?) and effects.


To animate the avatars, the ABBA band members wore motion capture suits and were filmed using 160 cameras, with effects layered on. At the very end of the show images of the band members as they are today are displayed; appearing much older but still with energy and star appeal: Agnetha Fältskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Björn Ulvaeus, and Benny Andersson.


The music too was crystal clear. There was no break or variation in sound between a new song, as taken from ABBA’s 2021 Voyage release, or an older classic. Each number sounded fresh, with the originally recorded vocals seamlessly matched with the musical accompaniment from the live band.


The concept could open up new possibilities for heritage acts to recreate their golden years. Whether the concept and technology should be applied to deceased artists is a different thing. The appropriateness of this is for debate at a different time; in the meantime, the technical possibilities are endless.


ABBA Voyage is currently showing in London, U.K. on an initial one year run (with options to extend the show until mid-2026).





https://www.digitaljournal.com/entertainment/review-abba-voyage-provides-pristine-digital-images-and-bouncing-pop/article

miércoles, 3 de agosto de 2022

How UK filmmaker Baillie Walsh helped to bring ABBA Voyage to life

 How UK filmmaker Baillie Walsh helped to bring ABBA Voyage to life


By Charles Gant3 August 2022



When Swedish pop group ABBA first started talking to UK director Baillie Walsh to about the concept of ABBA Voyage, the idea was to make it more as a film than as a live stage show. But Walsh, a filmmaker whose work has encompassed documentary, commercials, pop videos and one fiction feature, turned out to be the one who was most adamant ABBA Voyage should feel like a live event, not a film.


“When I came in, it was much more cinematic rather than a live concert with life-size avatars,” explains Walsh, who was appointed director after being introduced to ABBA songwriters Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus via Zoom in August 2019.


The Swedish quartet had originally wanted to create an audiovisual accompaniment to Voyage, their first studio album since 1981’s The Visitors, and had been developing ideas with Chernobyl creator, Sweden’s Johan Renck, and with producers Svana Gisla and Ludvig Andersson (son of ABBA member Benny Andersson). Gisla had worked with Walsh on documentary feature Springsteen And I in 2013 and earlier on Oasis videos, one of which developed into the feature-length concert-tour film Lord Don’t Slow Me Down in 2007. Gisla and Renck also run a production company together, Gisla Renck.


When Renck moved on following the success of Chernobyl, Gisla called Walsh. “I took a breath and said, ‘Well, I’d be mad not to,’” he says. “It’s such a massive opportunity. But it wasn’t clear what this thing was at this point.”


ABBA Voyage is a 95-minute virtual concert in a purpose-built arena at the Queen Elizabeth Park in east London, combining a live band, digital avatars of ABBA (as they looked in the 1970s, with motion capture and visual effects by Industrial Light & Magic), a giant screen, animated sequences and light show. Swedish entertainment company Pophouse is co-developer and lead investor, and the budget is £140m ($168m). The run of the event is open-ended, and tickets are currently available until May 2023.


Walsh began by putting himself in the shoes of the audience. “We’ve got to fill that arena with 3,000 people a night. How are we going to do this, and is a cinematic experience going to fill the arena?


“My questions were: what do I want to see? Gradually, I came to realise, what I would want to see is life-size avatars, and I would want to go to a gig. So let’s make this as much of a gig as we possibly can. Let’s make this a live concert.”


Learning curve

Born in London and raised in Essex, Walsh attended Colchester School of Art (now part of Colchester Institute), studying art and graphics. In his 20s, a chequered career saw him living in Los Angeles as a coin dealer, before working as an erotic dancer at London’s Raymond Revue Bar, and as a model. “And then, at the age of 25, I realised I wanted to be a director,” he says.


Walsh was part of a fashionable London 1980s set clustered around performance artist and club promoter Leigh Bowery. He made a series of short videos and films featuring his friends, including the 1987 music short Boys, sampling dialogue from Mike Leigh’s Abigail’s Party.


Boys caught the attention of UK pop star Boy George, who asked Walsh to direct two music videos (‘After The Love’, ‘Generations Of Love’) – launching Walsh’s professional career. But it was his pop promos for Massive Attack, beginning in 1991 with ‘Unfinished Sympathy’, filmed in Downtown Los Angeles in one continuous shot, that won the biggest plaudits. He went on to direct videos for artists including New Order, INXS and Kylie Minogue.


Walsh made his feature debut with documentary Mirror Mirror, chronicling the life of New York transsexual performer Consuela Cosmetic. The film premiered at Toronto International Film Festival in 1996.


His career seemed to reach its apex a decade later with the 2008 fiction feature Flashbacks Of A Fool, backed and distributed by Disney in the UK, and starring Daniel Craig as a fading Hollywood star, reflecting on his youth.


“The experience of making that was one of the best times in my life,” says the director. “Sadly, it wasn’t received well, so that wasn’t so great.”


Walsh met Craig when he starred in Love Is The Devil in 1998, directed by Walsh’s partner at the time, John Maybury, and the two have been friends ever since. Craig committed to Flashbacks Of A Fool, and honoured that commitment despite beginning his run of James Bond films with Casino Royale in 2006. The actor also served as executive producer on the film.


“The reality is, it’s a very small film,” says Walsh. “I wrote it for Dan before he became Bond, and after he became Bond, he still generously wanted to do it. But what that brought was a lot of baggage, Bond baggage, and they released it like a Bond film. That was out of my control and out of Dan’s control, and it just didn’t work.”


Walsh returned to work in music videos, commercials and documentary, and was busy with the 46-minute Being James Bond: The Daniel Craig Story for Apple TV when the call came for ABBA Voyage.


Creative choices

Walsh’s role was to devise “what this beast was going to be”, as well as a visual treatment for each song. Principal photography included two motion-capture shoots: one shot over five weeks with the four ABBA members (who are now aged between 72 and 76); and the other with younger body doubles executing the same dance routines.


Choreographer Wayne McGregor guided this process, putting the movements of the quartet into young bodies. ILM then transformed the motion-capture data into avatars – or ABBAtars, in the lexicon of the project.


The lifelike look and feel of the avatars is also in part thanks to the concert’s vast LED screen, made by ROE Visual, which utilises 65.3million 2mm pixels in total, and runs at 50 frames a second – thus using 3.2 billion pixels per second.


The virtual stage behind the digital characters uses digital lights that are an extension of, and are aligned with, the physical lighting in the arena. For this reason, ABBA Voyage needs to be shown in a purpose-built arena – and any clone shows globally will need to replicate the space constructed in London.


The critical and commercial success of ABBA Voyage naturally leads to speculation that this particular hybrid could become a new event model for legacy or deceased acts, but Walsh sounds a note of caution.


“I think [Abba] was the best band to do this with. First of all, because they were so involved. And without an artist’s involvement, possibly it becomes a cynical money-making exercise. ABBA’s motive for doing this was creative. They’re creatively curious.


“Could you do this with Prince? What we did with ABBA was we brought them into 2022. And we were able to do that because ABBA were there to help us make choices of how they wanted to be presented. You couldn’t move Prince from where he left, because Prince was such the master of the creative behind his own persona.”


Similarly, the Rolling Stones have been touring consistently for many decades, and – unlike ABBA, who had last appeared together onstage in 1981 – there is no single fixed image of them as a live band. “There isn’t that need that ABBA fans had to see ABBA,” adds Walsh. “My feeling is that with a band that’s still around [having creative input], with their back catalogue, and they hadn’t been on tour for 40 years, that’s as good as it’s going to get.”


Legacy

The success of ABBA Voyage may help place Walsh back on the map of a film industry that has perhaps, over the years, struggled to get a clear fix on his varied creative career. The director himself acknowledge all his diverse experiences have fed into the project.


“I pulled on every thread of everything I’ve ever done,” he says. “I don’t want to have it be the last thing I do, but I certainly did put everything I had into it. All of those ideas come from a life, come from my life. Every job I’ve ever done, whether that be bingo calling, or erotic dancing, or putting on fashion shows, or whatever it is, there’s all of that in there.”


Since ABBA Voyage opened in May, Walsh has been busy regularly attending the event, checking on performances and lighting cues, and imposing creative tweaks. That work has come to an end, and he will now take a break at his second home in Iceland.


“Because I’ve been so immersed in this through recent years, I don’t have a feature film project on right now,” he says. “Obviously, I’ve got sitting in my drawer lots of things I would love to do, lots of scripts that are sitting there. There are TV series that I would love to get started – or restarted in the case of Pussycat Lounge, based on my year at the Raymond Revue Bar, which was developed with Tiger Aspect and has now returned to me. But first I need to go away and take some time and a breath and figure out what it is I’d like to do.”

https://www.screendaily.com/features/how-uk-filmmaker-baillie-walsh-helped-to-bring-abba-voyage-to-life/5173139.article



jueves, 21 de julio de 2022

Super Trouper - Baillie Walsh

 Alex Bilmes 

Super Trouper

Baillie Walsh, the mastermind behind ABBA Voyage, the blockbuster “virtual concert” in London, on the making of a game-changing spectacular, the future of live performance, plus his own amazing adventures in the worlds of pop, performance, music and film




21 Jul 2022


The British film director Baillie Walsh is a man of many parts. He broke through as a director of music videos, initially with Boy George and then the Bristol trip hop collective Massive Attack, for whom he made the promo for the magnificent “Unfinished Sympathy”, from their era-defining 1991 album, Blue Lines. Later he directed memorable videos for Kylie Minogue, INXS, New Order and Oasis.


Walsh has made numerous award-winning commercials; acclaimed shorts; documentaries about music (Springsteen & I); and about filmmaking (Being James Bond: The Daniel Craig Story). He has written and directed a feature film, 2008’s Flashbacks of a Fool, starring that same Daniel Craig as a faded Hollywood star — narcissistic, hedonistic — forced to confront his past in 1970s Britain. (Don’t worry, Daniel, it’ll never happen!) For the finale of an Alexander McQueen fashion show, in Paris in 2006, he created a hologram of Kate Moss. I was in the audience for that show. It was beautiful, ghostly, and oddly moving.


Testimonials from prominent collaborators are not hard to come by. Moss, no slouch herself in this department, talks about his “sense of style and incredible taste.” Kylie mentions his incredible “capacity to convey emotion.”


“At his heart,” says Daniel Craig, “Baillie is a showman. The incredibly hard work that goes into all his projects is for one purpose: to move an audience, to give them a totally new experience, to affect them emotionally and spiritually and send them away with smiles on their faces.”


All of which could accurately be said of the 62-year-old’s latest project. It is perhaps his most high profile, and ground-breaking, to date. ABBA Voyage, which embarks seven times a week, including matinees, from the purpose-built, 3,000-capacity, spaceship-like ABBA Arena in Stratford, east London, opened in May to reviews that might reasonably be characterised as ecstatic. “Jaw-dropping,” marvelled the Guardian. “Mind-blowing,” panted the Telegraph.


I saw the show in early July. It is that rare thing: an event that exceeds its hype. It is, not to sound too fulsome, an astonishment. It is, also, a potential game-changer for the music industry and even for the idea of “live performance” — whatever that means after one has seen it.


ABBA Voyage has been described as a “virtual concert”. The former members of one of the most beloved and successful pop groups of all time — that is, Agnetha Faitskog, Bjorn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson, and Anni-Frid Lyngstad — do not appear on stage in person. But they do appear. (ABBA disbanded in 1982; although they reconstituted the group five years ago, and have since released new music, it’s been over four decades since they gave a public concert.)


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Instead of flesh and blood ABBA, the show is performed by life-sized, animated CGI avatars of the four members, restored by technology to their pop star primes. (ABBAtars, the producers call them.) But it’s also performed by the real ABBA, in the sense that they sang the songs, and danced the dances, in a studio in Sweden, and motion-capture technology allowed those performances — the singing, the dancing, even the chat between the songs — to be combined, on “stage”, with a live 10-piece band and a spectacular light show. The effect is uncanny. It’s not quite correct to say one feels oneself to be present at an ABBA concert in 1979. You are aware (just about, and sometimes not even) that it is 2022, and that in real life the members of ABBA don’t look like that anymore. But you are also conscious that you have entered another world — a virtual world, which is not to say you’re not in it — where you can be thrilled and moved by the power and beauty of some of the most familiar songs in the pop canon, those gorgeous, melancholic bangers that only those four people, together, could have made. The show might be virtual, but the feelings it evokes are genuine. I know, I felt them.


ABBA Voyage benefits from the talents of thousands of technicians and creatives: among others, a huge team from Industrial Light & Magic, the Hollywood visual effects powerhouse; the brilliant British choreographer Wayne McGregor; Swedish costume designer B Akerlund, whose clever modernising of the band’s stage wardrobes gives the show its convincing retro-contemporary feel; the live band; producers Ludwig Andersson and Svana Gisla. But if the Voyage is a trip, and it certainly is, then Baillie Walsh is the man at the controls.


Slim, tanned, and handsome behind dark glasses — so youthful, in fact, that one wonders if this is really him, or a CGI avatar of his younger self? — Walsh arrives on the dot for his Esquire interview, at a hotel in Soho on a Tuesday morning (he lives just around the corner), orders a cup of English breakfast tea and settles himself at a quiet table. He talks for close to two hours, with barely a pause: about ABBA, avatars, his three decades and counting in film and music, and his own extraordinary backstory, from teenage tearaway to Top of the Pops and beyond…


The conversation below, as they say, has been edited and condensed. (A lot.)


Let’s start with how you got involved with the ABBA project. What happened?


One of the producers, Svana Gisla, I’ve worked with many times. I made Springsteen & I with her. A Kylie video, an Oasis film. And she was working with [Swedish director] Johan Renck on this project, and then he had this enormous success with [acclaimed HBO series] Chernobyl. So he saw a film opportunity and didn’t want to do this. [Raised eyebrow.]


Lucky for you!


Lucky for me. I had a Zoom call with Benny and Bjorn and they said yes on that call. That’s where it all began, three years ago.


How far developed was the idea when you signed up?


Johan had done a road map and there was a set list, which came from ABBA. But it was a very rough idea. They knew they wanted to make younger versions of themselves, that was ABBA’s idea. Whether that was going to be holograms or whatever, that was still up for grabs. So I came on board and there was a gradual process of: “What is this thing going to be?” The creative process on something like this is long, because it’s so big. You’re not doing one song. You’re asking, “What is this monster, what can it be?” So, my first job was to sit down and think about what I would want to go and see. I always played it like that. Then it was about talking to ILM about what would be possible. Ben Morris, the creative director there, was really brilliant to work with. And he loved the challenge, the idea of having life-sized avatars, and wanting to feel like they are really there.


Was there a Eureka moment where you said, “I know what this should be! It’s a live concert given by CGI performers!”


There was a few. When I realised, first of all, they have to be life-sized, that the audience has to feel like they are there. I knew it wasn’t going to be holograms. Holograms are so limiting, in the sense that you can’t light them. So then it was, “What does that mean?” We want life-size avatars but we want to see them really big, in detail, like you have at a concert, with the big screens. So we want those iMAG screens.


IMAG screens, for those of us who don’t know…


Those big screens, so when you go to see Beyonce, and she’s the size of a bean, you can see her close-up. But this isn’t the O2, where you’re so far away you can’t see or hear or feel what’s going on.


Your arena is much smaller than that.


That’s part of the success of the thing, I think, that arena. It’s really quite intimate. You can see every face in there, and the excitement spreads. I mean, there are many reasons for the success of this, so far. Lots of magic has happened. I’m a part of that, but the fact that it’s ABBA, the fact that they are still alive, and contributed enormously to this, and their soul is in this. The fact that they haven’t toured for 40 years, so there’s a great hunger to see them live, in whatever form. The arena, which is the perfect size, I think. And also so well designed, so comfortable. It doesn’t feel like you’re going to a horrible, beer-stinking arena, with turnstiles. From the moment you arrive, it’s already exciting. Like, “What the hell is this?”


Because it could have been a disaster.


Yes. It could have been a disaster, so easily.


Because it’s a very weird idea.


Yes! Totally. The whole thing I fought against is the tech, being led by the tech. The tech should be the least important thing. The important thing is the emotion. I want people to laugh, dance, cry. And you’ve got to be really careful with that. It’s multi-layered, because you are playing with the past, the present and future. And all of those big questions. You can’t throw that in people’s faces. The concert isn’t a big intellectual idea. And I never tried to intellectualise it. But I knew there were lots of big ideas under the surface.

There’s a lightness of touch to it that’s very appealing. And, of course, in the moment, unless you’re weird, you are not trying to deconstruct it. You’re just enjoying yourself. But afterwards I certainly was provoked to think about mortality, ageing, nostalgia…


But you can’t be heavy handed with those things. All I ever thought was, if I’m feeling emotion, if the ideas for presenting the songs resonate with me, then I’m on to something. Because I am the audience. So if it chokes me up, it’s going to choke everyone else up.


There are some people who feel that emotion stimulated by technology is somehow cheaper. That it’s inauthentic, in some way. That a concert given by avatars is fake.


The interesting challenge was: how can we fall in love with an avatar? That was the challenge. I wanted to do that, to fall in love with an avatar. And I did! The soul of ABBA is in those avatars. Their voices, those speeches, everything they say, the soul is there. It’s irrelevant that it’s an avatar. I mean, it’s helped by the fact that it’s ABBA, and their music is very emotive. That’s a massive advantage. If it had been Black Sabbath, it would have been harder to fall in love with the avatars. But ABBA’s songs, everyone has a connection to those songs. They are part of our DNA. They are part of who we are.


Talk a bit about the process of creating the avatars. How did you do it?


Basically, we were in a studio in Sweden for five weeks, with ABBA. And we filmed them with 160 cameras, in motion-capture suits. We went through the whole set list, and more, and they performed those songs for the cameras. It was a very bizarre, amazing experience. You’re in this kind of NASA-style studio, with monitors and cameras everywhere, and 100 people in there taking all the data. A very bizarre situation. As individuals they are really lovely people, but the moment you bring those four people together, something happens. This strange alchemy. Which is a really rare thing. I mean, I’m sure it happens when the Stones come together, or when the Beatles came together. This extraordinary energy. I don’t want to get all woo-woo about it. But it’s perceptible. When they came together on that stage, on the first day, it’s goosebumps. It’s a magical thing. And that’s why I feel so lucky to have got this gig and to have been able to do what I’ve done, with ABBA. I can’t think of another band who would be better than them for this project. I’m spoilt now. I’m fucked, really. I’ve made something that hasn’t been done before, which is a really rare opportunity. How am I gonna top this?


That was going to be my last question. I was going to leave your existential crisis for later.


Thank you!


Now that you mention it though…

I haven’t had time to think about it. I’ve been on this project for three years and I’ve had four days off. I finish on Thursday and go to Iceland on Saturday.


For a holiday?


I’ve got a house there. This’ll be the first time I’ve been in three years, but it’s where I go and spend time alone. I look at nature, and look at sky, and go fishing, and it’s good for my head. I’m not quite sure how it’s going to work this time. I’m expecting an enormous crash.


Clearly, you’re going to have a terrible time.


Terrible! It’s going to be awful. No, but I have just had the best job that I’ll probably ever have. I hope that’s not true. But I think it’s the best job I’ve ever done. I’ve worked for a very long time and there are peaks and troughs. But the scale of this is what makes me most proud. It’s big!


It feels game-changing in many ways, and it does open a Pandora’s box. What does this mean for live performance? What does it mean for musicians? For audiences? Could you do it with the Stones? What would it mean if you did?


Of course you could. Charlie [Watts] isn’t around, so you’re going to miss that. But yes, you could.


You couldn’t do it with Prince, for example, presumably because you can’t do the motion-capture part?


No, but you could do it. Especially with the way technology is moving. You could do it posthumously. But one of the things that is great about what we’ve been able to do is, we’ve been able to update ABBA. It’s not just nostalgia. It’s past, present and future. It’s about being able to reinvent ABBA for 2022. It’s not about recreating the 1979 Wembley concert. That wouldn’t be interesting. You can watch that on YouTube.


What about the Stones, then? Would it be desirable to do this with them?


That’s not for me to say. It’s not desirable for me. Because I think I’ve had the best band to do this with. The Stones have been on tour since year dot. They’re still on tour now. Of course, it would be exciting to see Mick in his heyday. But Mick is still so great live, at 78. Unbelievable. Not only running about the stage, but singing at the same time! I can’t walk and speak! He’s still doing it, and that’s what you want to see, with the Stones.


There are ethical concerns, too. Especially the idea of doing it with dead people.


Well, Whitney! They made a hologram of her. I didn’t see it. I saw bits of it on YouTube. But the first word that comes to mind is “grotesque.” Because that’s just a money-making exercise.



Is this going to be rolled out to other countries?


Yeah, I think so. You could do Vegas, you could do New York.


Will you be involved in those?


I hope so. This is my baby and the idea that someone else is going to take it and remodel it in some way that I found really annoying… I hope I am involved. Maybe we can add something to this that will knock people’s socks off even more? Because we do have the ability to change the show. We recorded more songs, filmed more songs. Maybe we can improve it?


One more question on the ethics of it. If a contemporary artist came to you, say Beyonce, and asked you to do the same for her as you’ve done for ABBA, to put on a virtual Beyonce concert that could play every night of the week in cities around the world, forever, and she need never leave the house again, would you? Because that idea worries people who love live music.


Yes, but I think they shouldn’t worry. Because first of all, Beyonce loves to perform. She’s not going to stop, because she is a genius performer. That’s who she is. That’s her being. And I don’t think this is going to replace anything. It’s part of the entertainment world now. But people want to see live concerts, and people still want to perform them. You think Bruce Springsteen is going to stop touring because he could do a virtual show? His life is touring. And most of those people who perform, it’s who they are. The Stones don’t want to sit at home with their feet up! They want to be on stage. They love that adoration. Who wouldn’t? 100,000 people screaming that they love you? Gimme more! So I don’t think people should be worried. They should be excited. And it’s not just music. The idea of how theatre can use this. The immersive quality of it. That thing about not knowing where the real world ends and the digital world begins. All that is really interesting. I want to see what other people do with it. I want to be excited and blown away and confused. I really look forward to seeing where it goes.



You live round the corner from here. Did you grow up in London?



I was born in London and then moved to Essex when I was young. And brought up there, all around Clacton-on-Sea, those terrible seaside towns. Working on Clacton pier, being a bingo caller, that was the start of my showbiz journey.


Do you come from a showbiz family?


No. My mum was a pharmacist, my dad was a rogue, a gambler, with all of the disaster that brings. And my mother brought up three kids on her own, pretty much. I have an older brother and a younger sister.


What kind of boy were you?


I was a rogue, too, a runaway. At the age of 14 I ran away for a month, and was in London with my friend. Can you imagine?


What were you doing?


Stealing. Shoplifting from Portobello antique shops and selling it on the Market. I was a terrible, horrible child.


Where were you living?


At the Venus Hotel on Portobello Road, with my friend’s sister. She had two children and she lived in one room in the hotel, and we lived there too. But I got caught, in the end, and put into a home, a halfway borstal. And that fixed me. I was only a couple of weeks but it scared the life out of me. And then I decided, somehow, I was going to go to art school. I was always in trouble at school, for fighting, but this teacher picked up on the fact I had some kind of talent and nurtured me, and I got into Colchester art school, doing graphics.



When was this?


I was there from 1976 to 79.


During punk.


Yeah. But I wasn’t a punk. I was more of a soul boy. It was [famous Essex soul club] Lacy Lady for me.


And after you finished art school?


Well, I didn’t want to be a graphic designer. I didn’t want to be trapped behind a desk. It wasn’t for me. Back in those days you didn’t think about a career. I just went on the adventure. I became a coin dealer, by accident.


How does a person become a coin dealer by accident?


It was when there was a gold rush on. We used to set up in hotels and buy gold and silver by weight, and the person whose business this was, was a coin dealer. I knew nothing about coins. But the great thing about it was, we travelled all over the world. And of course, I’d never travelled. I was 19, 20, and I moved to California. And I got bored of that after six months, came back to London for a holiday, and I got a job dancing with the girls at the [legendary Soho strip club] Raymond Revue Bar. Basically, erotic dancing.


Hang on. You need to explain this.


OK. So, I was staying in this really crummy flat where there was newspaper on the kitchen floor. And I saw an advert there for people willing to appear naked on stage. And I thought, “I could never do that.” So: great, you’re gonna do it. Things that are fearful, you do them. I love that. That’s the whole thing about being creative. I love to be shit-scared. So I called up and I got the job.


Did you have to audition?


Yeah.


You had to take all your clothes off and dance around?


The first audition was just take your clothes off and stand and pose and turn around for the choreographer, Gerard. And I later went to visit him at his flat on Charing Cross Road. And there’s this bay window that looks out onto the National Portrait Gallery, the Garrick Theatre, the neon lights, I’m 20 years old, and it’s like, “This is the best flat in the world!” And the dancer I took over from had the flat upstairs, so he moved out and I moved in, and I still live there today. I’ve been there 40 years, my whole adult life. And I think I might stay.


So the Raymond Revue Bar…


My first taste of showbiz!


It’s a load of girls getting their kit off on stage and…


Yeah, you’re a prop. You’re naked, and you have simulated sex. There’s a scene. You’d come out and pretend to play tennis, and then the music would change and suddenly it would be a sauna scene, and there’s a bench, and the lights change and you’re pretending to throw water over the girls… It was a real experience. I never got used to it. The audience are men. They want to see naked girls. They’re not happy when they see you up there.


How long did this last?


About a year? And while I was working there, I met Antony Price, at the Camden Palace. And he became my first boyfriend.


And Antony Price, for those who don’t know, was an important fashion designer…


The designer for Roxy Music. He was a real hero of mine when I was a kid. When I was 14. All those album covers, all those clothes… And because I was a dancer, Antony asked me to stage his fashion show, at the Camden Palace. So at the age of 21, I did that. At the time it was a really big deal.


Your first directing job.


Yes. I learned so much from that, and from him. His style and taste and knowledge of film and music. Just an unbelievable man.


Was that the end of your career as an erotic dancer?


Well, then I became a model. That was great. Modelling gave me the chance to try lots of things and meet lots of people. And I was successful. Modelling was a different world then. I made a living from it for a reasonable amount of time. I enjoyed it for a while, then it gets dull. It becomes a job. The glamour wears thin. And then I was getting dancing jobs as well. You know, dancing with Bananarama.


I don’t know! Tell me about dancing with Bananarama. When was that?


1987, I think. I got a call from [now famous Strictly judge] Bruno Tonioli saying, “Do you want to dance on Top of the Pops?” So, I went, “Lifelong ambition!” So, me, Bruno, and his boyfriend then, Paul, were the backing dancers for Bananarama on Top of the Pops.



Which song?


“I Heard a Rumour.”


I’ll look it up on YouTube.


You should. [I did. The trio certainly carry off their cycling shorts.]


When does the film directing start?


At the age of 25 I saw 1900, the Bertolucci film. And that blew my head off. I just thought, I want to do that.


What was it about that film?


Just the epic quality, the skill in the filmmaking, the beauty, the emotion, the characters, the storytelling… it had everything. Now, I’m never going to make a film like 1900, but I started making little films with my mates. Super 8 and video cameras. And then I made one video in 1987, with [performance artist, nightclub legend, fashion icon] Leigh Bowery, who was a great mate.


You knew these people through nightclubs, that amazing scene in London in the 1980s?


Yes, exactly.


Were you a Blitz kid?


No, after that. Taboo, Leigh’s club, in Leicester Square, that was the best for me. That was the summit of my nightlife.


It’s always striking, that so many influential creative people came from that very select, underground world.



Everybody was there. [Film director] John Maybury was my boyfriend at that time. I went out with John for 17 years. I learnt a lot from him. They were amazing times.


All the most important future fashion designers and photographers and artists and filmmakers and pop stars in one room in London, dancing. It's hard to imagine this happening now…


Because of social media, I suppose. People are on their phones all the time. They don’t go out anymore. It’s one important point about the ABBA show [which insists the audience switch off their phones.] I had to really fight for that. Because otherwise they spend the whole concert filming it.


People can’t process a show, or anything else, unless they mediate it themselves.


It’s just like, “What the fuck are you doing?” It’s such madness.


You wonder what people think they are going to do with all that footage. What’s it for?


I know. Is it about ownership? “Look, I filmed this!”


So the ABBA phones policy came from that?


Yes, for all those reasons. But it was a very contentious idea. Lots of the suits, they disagree. They think that’s what everyone wants. I said, no, nobody wants that. They want to experience the show. They don’t want it ruined. The moment you put a phone up, everything’s abstract. You’re not in the moment. It’s insane. Stop!


So back to the career. You’re making a film with Leigh Bowery.


Yes, I wanted to make a pop video. So I made a track, a series of samples, called “Boys”. And Leigh is the lead in it. And Boy George saw it. This was ’87. And he asked me to make a video for him. And that was it, I was away. I made one called “After the Love”, and then “Generations of Love”, in 1990. That changed everything for me, because Massive Attack saw it. Basically it was the story of Soho, at that time. Thatcher had been in power for a long time. I was just seeing homeless people everywhere. It was really bad. So I got all my mates dressed up in drag, as prostitutes. Leigh styled it. I made a porn film, so we could project it for a scene inside one of the porn cinemas. I went and presented it at Virgin, and persuaded them. They paid the bill. And the next week I got a letter saying if you EVER show this film anywhere, we’ll sue you. But I got away with it. And it was a calling card. I still think it’s my best video. I have such fond memories of it.


And that’s what got you Massive Attack.


What a gift! To be given that album. I got the first four singles. Goosebumps, immediately, “Unfinished Sympathy” is one of my favourite songs ever, still. So beautiful. Extraordinary. And because they were the biggest band of that year, and I was associated with them, suddenly I had a career. Hate that word, career. I had the possibility of a working life, of becoming a director, I was up and running.



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"Unfinished Sympathy" was such a distinctive video: one take, [the singer] Shara Nelson walking through Downtown LA, apparently oblivious to everything around her. And that’s it.


It hadn’t been done before. I wanted to challenge myself, I wanted to be scared. “Can I do this?”


It’s the antithesis of one of those videos that’s all about trying to sell the image of the star, the band.


But the song gave me this. That thing of when you are really hurt, and you are walking down the street and you are completely and utterly within yourself. You are not noticing anything that’s going on around you. We’ve all been there, right? Just destroyed by love. I wanted it to be that unbroken thought. This inner voice. That came from the music. But at the same time I was very aware that I was going against the tide, which I knew was a really good idea. Always a good idea. Because every [other] video at the time, it was [director] David Fincher, and it was all about fast-cuts.


His stuff with Madonna?


Yeah, it was all fast cuts. Make it as bright and shiny and fast-cutty as you can. And I’m sorry but “Vogue” is a fucking genius video. And David Fincher did it very well. But we went against the grain, made it really gritty. And Massive Attack’s music always smelt American to me. It sounded so big, so epic. I really wanted an international visual language for them. Take it away from Bristol, from the UK. So Downtown LA. In fact, the first video I did for them was “Daydreaming”, which I set in the Deep South. But yes, opportunities were coming thick and fast at that time.


You were very successful for a while.


Yeah. I only made thirteen videos. And then the world changed, budgets shrank, the demands from the record companies grew. And I thought, if you want me to basically make advertising, I’ll go off and make a ton of money doing that.


Which is what you did.


It’s what I did. I don’t say I made a ton of money but I earned a living. And the great thing about advertising, as nasty as it can be, is that you get to hone your craft. You’re filming, you’re on a set, you’re working with people. That’s really important, because making films is next to impossible, right? I’ve never been lucky at that.


Was it always in your mind, throughout the Eighties and the Nineties and beyond, to make a feature film?


Always. Always to make movies. And I wrote many and nearly got them made and spent years trying, as you do with films.


And, finally, you got there, with Flashbacks of a Fool.


Yes. And there were really good things about that and really bad things about that. The great thing was, I wrote that for Daniel Craig before he was Bond, right? We’re mates. And he still wanted to make it after he became Bond, which was wonderful. Because that meant all the effort that I’d made when I tried to get it made before he was Bond, and failed, had not been wasted. When he became Bond that gave him enormous power. He could get anything made. And he was generous enough to sprinkle some of that glitter on to me, and to allow me to make that film. The trouble with that is, that this small art film is then sold as a Bond film. Which is a disaster. Because if you deceive an audience, they don’t like it. You can’t sell candyfloss as popcorn. People want to know what they’re buying, so when it’s released as a fucking Bond film, and it’s a small little art film that should be in two cinemas and possibly grow from there, it’s a disaster. And critics don’t like it, either. No one likes it. I still have a fondness for Flashbacks, but I was really hurt by the response to it. When you put that much heart and soul into something, and you have a joyous time making it, and it’s received with a shrug of the shoulders and a “whatever”, it’s tough. The opposite to what the ABBA thing has been. This is all five stars. Every review. I’ll never have reviews like this again. But the reviews for Flashbacks knocked me, they knocked my confidence. I doubted myself. I felt misunderstood. It was really, really annoying. “No one understands me!”


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How did you recover from that?


Well, cut to two years later, someone sends me a link to Flashbacks on YouTube and I read the reviews on there. It blew me away. Floods of tears. Because what I wanted, it did happen, people did get it. So I’m not saying the film is a success, or good. But the response I wanted did happen, and that was a beautiful thing. So I’m really fond of the film. I know it’s flawed but I think there are great moments in it, and I learnt from it. I would love the opportunity to make another feature film. I still have that ambition. Even though film now, somehow, has really lost its lustre. It’s really shocking.


Why is that?


The demise of Weinstein, I think. It died with Weinstein. It was dying anyway, but that finished it off. Because when he was at his pinnacle, the monster that he was, but how fucking great were the films? And the stars! Now, apart from Tom Cruise, there are no movie stars left.


The independent film scene in the Nineties and Noughties was rocking.



It was so exciting. And it’s gone. It’s such a tragedy, obviously, that Harvey was such a monster. Not only for the obvious reasons, for the people affected by his behaviour, which is a tragedy. But also for cinema. Now, the world’s a different place. That was the zeitgeist, that was the time. And now cinema is not nearly as interesting as it was. So yes, I do want to make films, but the idea of making an arthouse movie and going to Poland to show it at a fucking festival, is not interesting. I want people to see it!


What about TV, where all the action is? Is that appealing?


Yeah, I have a TV series I’d love to make. It’s called Pussycat Lounge, based on my year at the Raymond Revue Bar. Set in that period. [Production company] Tiger Aspect had it. That didn’t go very well. Got it back from them. And right now no one is interested. I think that because I do so many different things, it’s kind of hard to place me.


You’re a victim of your own versatility?


Maybe. I always try to treat everything I do with the same enthusiasm. I don’t think there’s a difference between all these things [videos, and films, and shows]. But people in Hollywood don’t think like that. They want you to repeat everything. We all know that.


They would rather you did another ABBA Voyage than made a TV show.


Exactly. Although having said that, I do love putting on a live show, seeing people’s reactions, having an adoring crowd. And it also seems to me that this golden age of TV is coming to an end, too. Five years ago, every director wanted a TV show. Now it feels like that’s dying. There’s too much stuff, right? I’m just overwhelmed when I go on to Netflix. That was the great thing about growing up in my period: you had to wait for the single to come out. You had to wait for Top of the Pops on Thursday, to see that performance. Now we’re just fucking overwhelmed.


Not least by social media. We’re all on our phones.


I think social media is a terrible thing, I don’t do any of it. It’s just noise. I think it’s the least creative thing ever. And if I was on it, because I’m obsessive, I would want to do it well, and that’s a full-time job. It’s all-consuming. I wouldn’t have made [the ABBA] show if I was on social media. I wouldn’t have had time!


Also, don’t know about you but I have never been moved by a post on Instagram. I have never been enlightened by a Tweet. These aren’t media where we can really connect deeply with other people.


No! It’s impossible. I’m suspicious of all posts. They all have a motive. They aren’t gifts. They’re not about anything but the person who sends them. It’s all about you. And, actually, fuck off!


A lot of stuff seems to be dying. I saw Glastonbury on TV. It was Noel Gallagher, Paul McCartney…


And Diana Ross! Fucking geriatric. Torture, it was torture! Although I had to watch the Pet Shop Boys, because I know them. And you know what? They were fucking great. Like, “OK! Now we’re cooking!”


The risk is, we end up sounding like a grumpy old men.


But I am! And it’s hard to be excited about anything when there’s too much stuff.



Which brings us back to the ABBA show.


It’s exciting because it doesn’t feel like anything else. It’s different. It’s a miracle! Seeing the joy drip off the walls of that arena, it’s unbelievable.


So what’s next?


A holiday. And because I’ve thought of nothing else for three years other than ABBA, I need to take a breath, and be quiet, and think. Like I was saying, I’ve been really spoilt, with this project. What’s next? The thing is, in a way it’s not for me to say. All these opportunities that have come my way, people have given them to me. A lot of them, I haven’t gone searching for them. So what’s next is, wait for the next job to be offered.


That sounds both admirably zen, and also a little terrifying. What if nothing comes along?


Something always has. Alex, I’ve done this for 30 years or more. There are times when I’m really popular, and times when I can’t get arrested. That can go on for years. There have been times when I haven’t worked at all for two years. Because I couldn’t get a job. But that’s the nature of my business. You’re in and out of fashion. You do something that gets lots of attention and you’ll get work for a couple of years, maybe. And then it stops again. You do the best you can. You might do quiet work for a bit. A commercial that’s only shown in China. To earn a living. And you wait for an opportunity.


So now…


For a couple of weeks, I’ve got opportunities.


And you’re going to disappear to Iceland?!


They know where to find me. But, no, the ABBA show is going to roll out all over the world, right? That’ll give me some longevity. And by that point I’ll be dead anyway. So, I’m not fretting.


https://www.esquire.com/uk/culture/a40665750/baillie-walsh-abba-voyage-interview/


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