Description
Perhaps more than any other Greatest Hits compilation, Abba Gold
has come to define a band's career on one disk. More than that, its
release in 1992 heralded the critical rehabilitation of a group which
had, since its demise a decade earlier, become little more than a
memory of trashy costumes and cheesy tunes to many people. Here,
Elisabeth Vincentelli charts the circumstances surrounding the birth of
Abba Gold, looks at the impact it had on the music world, and tells the stories behind some of the greatest pop songs ever recorded.
EXCERPT:Pop
is the opium of the masses, the sweetener that makes you swallow the
status quo-and that comforting attitude is reflected in pop's reliance
on tried-and-true song structure, including the obligation to build up
to a memorable chorus. The chorus is what sells the song, it's the part
that's supposed to become imprinted in your head as it caps a sweet,
sweet momentum. Starting a song with the chorus is the equivalent of
drawing your gun too early in a shoot-out, of revealing your hand too
hastily in a poker game: Once you've given everything you have, where's
the pay off? And yet "Dancing Queen" doesn't flag after its flamboyant
beginning: The chorus acts as both teaser and pay off. Ironically for a
band that was supposed to be a bunch of control freaks with a solution
to every technical or musical conundrum, it later surfaced that
"Dancing Queen" starts with the chorus because Abba just couldn't
figure out how to make it work any other way.
Author(s)
Elisabeth Vincentelli, Elisabeth Vincentelli is music editor of Time Out New York. She has also written for the Village Voice, Rolling Stone, and Entertainment Weekly among many other publications. She grew up in France and has loved Abba since watching them triumph at the Eurovision Song Contest in 1974.
Reviews
'The idea was simple: to ask a group of authors to each write a book about a classic album. What emerged became Continuum's 33 1/3 series. Without guidelines or rules, each author embraced their own favourite album and chose exactly how they wanted to write about it.As a result, each book is by turn anecdotal, obsessive, technical and personal, but always passionate.'
Swell Music, December 2006,