ABBACountry of origin:Sweden Type of music generally:Mainstream pop, dance Status:No longer recording See also:The ABBA site Covers/own material:Own General comments:Recommended for '70s dance/pop music fans Recommended first album:Greatest Hits, Volume 2 covers their period of greatest achievement. (nightwol@dircon.co.uk) Recordings:ABBA released quite a number of albums before breaking up, including: Voulez-VousRelease info:1979—Polar (distributed by Polygram)—821 320-2 Availability:Wide Ecto priority:Low Group members:Agnetha Fältskog—vocals Produced by:Benny Andersson & Bjorn Ulvaeus Comments:Outside of their greatest hits compilations, ABBA albums were always a mixed bag. With a handful of perfectly crafted pop songs of the very highest quality padded out with decidedly pedestrian fillers of little or no interest. The passage of time has emphasised that distinction. With the exception of the title track, all the good songs on this album can also be found on Greatest Hits, Volume 2. (nightwol@dircon.co.uk) Greatest Hits, Volume 2Release info:1979—Polar (distributed by Polygram)—800 012-2 Availability:Wide Ecto priority:Medium to high Group members:Agnetha Fältskog—vocals Guest artists:Rutger Gunnarsson—bass Produced by:Benny Andersson & Bjorn Ulvaeus Comments:The one ABBA album that should be in every pop-fan's collection. This release (comprising songs drawn from the albums ABBA, Arrival, ABBA—The Album, and Voulez-Vous) covers the group's most inspired years (1975-1979) and every track is a winner. The lyrics plumb no great depths of sophistication but the pop sensibility of the songs and performances of ABBA at their best has rarely if ever been bettered, and this album is the perfect demonstration of that. Supremely crafted pop music of the highest distinction. (nightwol@dircon.co.uk) Super TrouperRelease info:1980—Polar (distributed by Polygram)—800 023-2 Availability:Generally available Ecto priority:Low Group members:Agnetha Fältskog—vocals Guest artists:Per Lindval—drums Produced by:Benny Andersson & Bjorn Ulvaeus Comments:By now the inspiration was beginning to wear a little thin. A typically excellent production job by the two 'B's can't conceal an increasing weariness that pervades both the songwriting and the singing. In spite of this, "The Winner Takes it All" is pretty near vintage ABBA and "Lay All Your Love on Me" isn't so very far off. Nostalgia value only these days. (nightwol@dircon.co.uk) The VisitorsRelease info:1981—Polar (distributed by Polygram)—POLCD 342 Availability:Generally available Ecto priority:Low Group members:Agnetha FFaltskogauml;ltskog—vocals Guest artists:Ola Brunkert—drums Produced by:Benny Andersson & Bjorn Ulvaeus Comments:The title track stands head and shoulders above the rest on this, the last album the group made before they split. It's hard to know if in different circumstances it might have heralded a new, deeper and more sophisticated, direction for their music but certainly it is quite different from the perfect disco-pop ABBA were rightly famed for. Elsewhere, there is a distinctly valedictory quality to many of the songs and the closing diptych ("Slipping Through my Fingers" and "Like an Angel Passing Through my Room") provide an eerily subdued and wistful end to an era. (nightwol@dircon.co.uk) Thanks to Steve Fagg for work on this entry.
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