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The acronym Abba, coined in 1973, represented the coming together of four leading figures in Swedish pop. Agnetha Föltskog (b. 5 April 1950, Jönköping, Sweden) had achieved pop success in her country with the 1968 hit 'Jag Var Sa Kar' ('I Was So In Love'). Björn Ulvaeus (b. 25 April 1945, Gothenburg, Sweden) had previously appeared with the folk-influenced Hootenanny Singers (originally known as the Westbay Singers). They also recorded and released a few records overseas as Northern Lights, before teaming up with Benny Andersson (b. Goran Bror Benny |
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Andersson, 16 December 1946, Stockholm, Sweden), appearing
occasionally with his popular beat group, the Hep Stars. The one non-Swede
in the line-up was the solo singer Anni-Frid Synni-Lyngstad (b. 15 November
1945, Narvik, Norway; later known as |
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After its release in 1970, the duo started working as house producers at Stig Anderson's Polar record company. Meanwhile, Ulvaeus continued to work with the Hootenanny Singers in the studio only. The marriage of Ulvaeus and Föltskog, followed later by that of Andersson and Lyngstad, had laid the romantic and musical foundations of the Abba concept. |
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An early single, 'People Need Love',
reached number 17 in Sweden in June 1972. The Eurovision Song Contest served
as a backdrop to their international ambitions and after Lyngstad's
tentative entry in the qualifying Swedish heats as a soloist in 1971, the
quartet, now known as Bjorn & Benny, Agnetha & Anni-Frid, attempted
to represent their country with the infectious 'Ring Ring' in 1973. They
succeeded the following April as Abba, with the more polished and bouncy
'Waterloo', which not only won the contest, but topped the UK charts and,
amazingly, for a Eurovision entry, infiltrated the US Top 10. The middling
success of the re-released 'Ring Ring' and singalong 'I Do I Do I Do I Do I
Do' provided little indication of the chart domination that was to follow.
In September 1975, Abba returned with the worldwide hit 'SOS', a powerhouse
pop production highlighted by immaculately executed counter-harmonies and an
infectiously melodic arrangement. These classic ingredients of the Abba
sound were ably evinced on their first trilogy of consecutive UK
chart-toppers, 'Mamma Mia', 'Fernando' and 'Dancing Queen', which also found
favour in Australia and Germany, and just about every other country in the
world. The last also brought them their only US number 1 and precipitated
their rise to pop superstardom with sales unmatched since the golden age of
the Seven years later, Mamma Mia!, a stage musical based on the songs of Abba, opened in London to excellent reviews. Mamma Mia! opened in Australian in 2001. |
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