ABBA Biography and Music Discography
ABBA
ABBA Music Discography
ABBA Biography
Benny Andersson (keyboards, vocals) was born on December 16th, 1946, in
a suburb of Stockholm. He was a member of The Hep Stars, a very successful
beat group who were known as "the Swedish Beatles" from 1964 to 1969 (their
most successful period). After leaving that group, he formed a songwriting
partnership with Bjorn Ulvaeus (vocals, guitar), who was born on April
25th, 1945, in Gothenberg, Sweden. Bjorn was the leader of a well-known
folk/rock group, The Hootenanny Singers, who were strongly influenced initially
by American acts like The Kingston Trio. Anni-Frid Lyngstad (vocals,
known as 'Frida') was born in Norway, near the large town of Narvik, on
November 15th, 1945. After her mother's death, Frida moved with her
grandmother to Sweden in 1947, and grew up in Eskilstuna, about 100 miles from
Stockholm. After singing with a jazz group led by Bengt Sandlund, she and the
group's bass player, Ragnar Fredericksson, left to form their own band: The
Anni-Frid Four, circa 1964. In 1967, she won a national talent contest, soon
afterwards leaving Eskilstuna to live in Stockholm. She acquired a solo
recording contract, and became a local celebrity. Agnetha Faltskog
(vocals, known when ABBA first emerged in UK as 'Anna,' although her name is
actually pronounced "Ann-yetta") was born on April 5th, 1950, in Jonkoping in
the south of Sweden. After singing with bands from the age of 15 onwards, she
topped the Swedish singles chart for the first time before she was 18, and was
a consistent hit maker both before and during her period with ABBA.
By 1970, Bjorn and Agnetha had fallen in love and were living together, as
were Benny and Frida, although the two girls were still working on their
separate solo careers, while Bjorn & Benny were writing songs and working
as producers for Polar Music/Union Songs. This publishing/production company
was headed by Stig Anderson, a well-known Swedish Music business entrepreneur
who is said to have written more than 2,000 songs in the Sixties and early
Seventies. Stig first signed Bjorn as a songwriter, and when Stig's original
partner died, Bjorn was invited to become the latter's replacement. Bjorn
would only accept the position if he could continue to work with Benny, and
they eventually shared the job until ABBA was formed. In 1971, Bjorn and
Agnetha moved into theatrical work (at Bjorn's suggestion), playing the part of
Mary Magdelene in the Rice/Lloyd Webber musical, Jesus Christ Superstar, and
scoring a massive hit with a Swedish cover version of "Don't Know How To
Love Him." In 1972, Bjorn & Benny scored a big hit in Japan with a
song which they also wrote, and later that year, came close to reaching the US
Top 100 with a single they wrote and performed, "People Need Love" on
which Agnetha & Frida were also featured.
Because of these successes, the songwriting team of Bjorn, Benny & Stig,
(Stig was initially influential as a lyricist), were invited to enter a song
for the Swedish heat of the 1973 Eurovision Song Contest. They decided to
perform it with their partners using the unwieldy name of Bjorn, Benny, Angetha
& Frida, and although the song "Ring Ring," clearly impressed the
audience far more than any of the other entries, a panel of so-called "expert"
judges placed it only third. The immense public outcry which resulted
(especially when the winner of the Swedish heat came nowhere in the Eurovision
Contest proper), led to future Swedish Eurovision entries being chosen on the
basis of public voting.
In early 1974, ABBA (as Stig had christened the quartet) performed
"Waterloo," a song written by Benny, Bjorn & Stig, and walked away
with the Swedish Eurovision heat. In April, 1974, they became the first
Swedish act to win the Eurovision Song Contest, which that year was held in
Brighton. "Waterloo" became the first of the group's nine UK Number One
singles, and launched ABBA as the first internationally successful pop/rock
superstar act who sang in a language other than their native tongue. ABBA were
second only to Volvo as Sweden's biggest export earners for several years, and
remain revered and legendary as one of the most accomplished pop/rock groups
ever.
The "Waterloo" single also topped charts around the world, as well as
making the US Top 10, and while the group reached the charts on both sides of
the Atlantic with follow-up singles, for over a year, they seemed unable to
overcome the apparent stigma which has afflicted non-British Eurovision
winners. However, in the autumn of 1975, "SOS" returned them to the UK
Top 10 and US Top 20 - during this period of uncertainty, their fame in
non-English speaking markets (Scandinavia, Germany, Benelux, Spain, etc.) was
fast increasing, and at the start of 1976, they returned to the top of the UK
singles chart with "Mamma Mia," which also topped the charts in Germany.
Their next dozen consecutive singles released up to the end of 1979 reached Top
5 on the UK chart, and included five more UK Number One hits; "Fernando"
(which topped the charts in Holland and Australia), "Dancing Queen"
(also their only US Number One), "Knowing Me, Knowing You" (another
German Number One), "The Name Of The Game" and "Take A Chance On
Me." Between 1976 and 1979, five consecutive ABBA albums topped the UK
chart. During this period, ABBA were at Number One on the UK
album chart for 36 weeks of a possible 192. The only group to have spent more
weeks at the top of the UK album chart by the end of 1991 was The Beatles.
In 1977, just as "Knowing Me, Knowing You" was released to become their
fourth Number One in 15 months, ABBA embarked on their first live concert in
Britain, during which they filled the Royal Albert Hall. 1977 was also the year
when the group starred in a feature film made in Australia, where they were
incredibly popular. ABBA - The Movie, jointly produced by Stig
Anderson and Reg Grundy, an Australian who was later responsible for the
incredibly popular "Neighbors" TV series, was released also in 1978 to immense
box office success (but little critical acclaim). 1978 also saw Benny &
Frida, who lived together for several years, finally getting married, so that
for the first time, ABBA was composed of two husband and wife teams. This
situation lasted less than three months, as by the end of the year, Agnetha and
Bjorn had separated.
The first of ABBA's 1979 albums, Voulez-Vous, was seen as a departure
from previous work, as it was a much more personal collection in lyrical terms,
with several songs about the tribulations of romance from which the group
members were suffering. "I Have A Dream," ABBA's final UK single of a
decade which they had dominated, topped the Dutch charts, and was different
again - a sing-a-long item which was specially recorded live at Wembley Arena
with a large choir of children, at the last concert of what would sadly turn
out to be ABBA's final world tour.
However, it wasn't all over - not by a long shot. 1980 found Benny &
Bjorn working on songs for the group's seventh original album Super
Trouper, which was eventually released at the end of the year, when, of
course, it instantly topped the UK album chart, a position echoed in the
singles chart by the title track, which also outsold everything in Germany and
Holland. The album also included another Number One single, "The Winner
Takes All." a reflective song about the end of a romance which mirrored the
emotional situation of each member of the group - in early 1981, Benny and
Anni-Frid became another divorce statistic, adding poignancy to Benny &
Bjorn's songs.
A third track from the album, "Lay All Your Love On Me," made the Top
10 of the UK singles chart, and the song proving another milestone when it
topped the US club chart, proving that ABBA were both versatile and able to
understand many musical styles besides the pure pop which had made them famous.
However, with relationships between the couples inevitably strained - Bjorn had
remarried, as would Benny before the end of the year - a concert tour was out
of the question, although the quartet reconvened for what turned out to be
their final original album, The Visitors, which included another UK
top 3 single of that era, "One Of Us." A few smaller hit singles
extracted from the album kept ABBA's name in both the chart and the public eye,
but by this time, each of the group members was considering future projects
outside the ABBA umbrella.
Anni-Frid and Agnetha embarked on solo careers with some success, but the
appeal of their records was simply less attractive to record buyers than had
been the case with ABBA's output between 1974 and 1982. The release of a
compilation double album, The Singles - The First Ten Years, which
predictably topped the UK album chart, perhaps tended to deflect attention away
from solo albums by Frida (produced by Phil Collins), or Agnetha (produced by
Mike Chapman of Chinnichap fame). As songwriters, Benny & Bjorn were
obviously better placed to prolong their success, and their most notable
achievement during the 1980s was probably the musical Chess which they
co-wrote with famed English lyricist Tim Rice. Based on an actual
confrontation in Iceland between American and Russian grand masters of the
board game, it included several international hit singles, and spawned a big
selling album released in 1984.
Biography Courtesy of Polygram Records Web Site
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