Mamma mia, here we go again as Abba fever is the name of the game
You don’t often see huge, permanent, stand-alone
museums dedicated to popular culture, but the usual rules don’t apply to
one particular Swedish pop machine. This May Abba: The Museum will open its doors in Stockholm; one million people are expected to visit during its first year in operation.
It's going to be Abba-tastic all during May. Agnetha Faltskog
(eternally known as “the blonde one”) will release her first solo album
in a decade (and very good it reportedly is too). Stockholm- based Spotify,
meanwhile is entering into a big partnership with Abba to mark the
museum’s opening and may well use the occasion to officially roll out
its new player.
With all four band members fully behind the
venture and set to attend the opening night and perhaps even play
together for the first time in decades, it’s expected that
Abba: Gold
(one of the bestselling albums of all time) will be back at the top of the charts once again.
Abba have already sold more than 400 million albums worldwide. More than 50 million people have seen the stage show
Mamma Mia!
; the film version is the most successful musical film of all time.
The truth is that, contrary to appearances,
Abba were never a pop band. Musicologists have long tried to break their
code, but the analysis is usually fruitless as the band music defies
the conventions of pop composition. The intro to the song
Mamma Mia
changes its rhythm on the wrong beat (most producers would have got them to do it again) and on
Money, Money, Money
one of the bars is in a very weird 9/16 time – which really shouldn’t be allowed to happen.
The consensus seems to be that while most pop
music runs away from anything with a classical music feel, Abba’s work
has deep classical music structures that go unnoticed because of the
“chirpiness” of the melody lines. A song such as
Lay All Your Love on Me
is much more intricate and loaded with musical surprises than
you would think. Lyrically, because English wasn’t their first language,
Abba got away with beautiful murder. “You can deny it” was rhymed with
“oh so quiet”, and they even got a rhyme out of “Glasgow” on
Super Trouper
.
But Abba were all about the performance too,
and the museum (which is in a very beautiful part of Stockholm) reflects
this. The band didn’t want any of the usual labels- on-glass-cabinets
nonsense. Yes, they may be rebuilding the cottage on Viggso island
(which was Abba Central, basically) within the museum, but most
attention come May will be on the museum feature that allows you to
virtually don Abba stage gear (sparkly dresses, flared trousers etc) and
join a life- size hologram of the band for a song and a dance.
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