15/9/09
[B.S.O.] "GHOST" & RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS ("UNCHAINED MELODY"). (Homenaje a PATRICK SWAYZE Tribute)
MÁS SOBRE EL CONCIERTO TRIBUTO A ABBA / More on Abba's Tribute Concert
Critica/Review: http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/music/gig-23417103-details/Thank+You+For+The+Music%3A+A+Celebration+Of+The+Music+Of+Abba/gigReview.do?reviewId=23743629
Blog de Chris Evans' blog: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/chrisevans/2009/09/thank_you_for_the_music_blog_p_1.shtml
Galería de fotos/Photo gallery: http://gallery.me.com/aldridgeuk#100285
14/9/09
VIDEOS DEL CONCIERTO TRIBUTO A ABBA / Videos of Abba Tribute Concert
Video elenco MAMMA MIA LONDON cast:
Audio "YOU HAVE TO BE THERE" ["Kristina"] Kelly Ellis:
Pase de fotos del concierto/Pic-slide of the concert:
Final concierto+palabras de Björn/Concert finale+Björn's speech:
LAURA PAUSINI SE RETIRA / Laura Pausini retires
Ahora quiere hacer un parón. Quiere canalizar energías hacia su vida personal y cumplir su mayor sueño: ser madre (¿o cuidar a su familia?).
Pero antes, tiene que poner punto y final a la gira promocional de su último trabajo "PRIMAVERA ANTICIPADA", la más significativa en toda su trayectoria profesional: "Ésta es la gira más importante de mi carrera porque es la más larga -asegura la cantante-, pero después quiero retirarme uno o dos años para ver si se realizará mi deseo de ser madre; me encantaría probar si puedo realizar ese sueño".
Este pequeño intermedio, tendrá un bonito regalo de despedida para sus fans españoles: Laura está ultimando los detalles del lanzamiento de un CD+DVD en vivo en nuestra lengua. El CD incluirá tres temas inéditos y, aunque aún no hay fecha de lanzamiento, todo apunta a que será en el mes de noviembre.
PRIMERAS FOTOS DEL CONCIERTO TRIBUTO DE ABBA ANOCHE / First pics of last night's Abba tribute concert
13/9/09
BENNY HOY EN "TELEGRAPH": "NO HABRÁ 'MAMMA MIA-2'" / Benny today on "Telegraph": "There won't be a 'Mamma Mia-2'"
Otra entrevista de Benny, hoy en "Telegraph". Lo reproducimos en inglés aquí:
Another Benny's interview, today on "Telegraph". We enclose the original in English here:
Despite hopes for a follow-up, Andersson told the Sunday Telegraph: "No, it's not going to happen. There will not be another, quote unquote, Abba musical.
The Swedish Buena Vista Rumours of a sequel were fuelled when the film's Hollywood star Meryl Streep said that she wouldn't mind returning in a "Grand Mamma Mia" if it reunited the cast, which included Julie Walters, Pierce Brosnan and Colin Firth. Last year, Mamma Mia overtook Titanic to become the UK's highest grossing film, and is on its way to making more than £280million internationally.
Despite the potential rewards of a sequel, Andersson said that he will not be permitting his back catalogue to be used. However, he left open the prospect that the film's producers might approach another artist to create a soundtrack.
"Catherine Johnson [Mamma Mia screenwriter] is keen on working on something that has to do with her characters in the Mamma Mia movie – but it will not be with Abba music," he said.
Andersson, 62, will give a rare performance at London's Hyde Park on Sunday, as part of Thank You For The Music, a gala concert organised by the BBC in tribute to the music of Abba. Artists performing songs by Andersson and his former Abba bandmate Björn Ulvaeus, 64, include Lulu, Chaka Khan, Jamie Cullum, Elaine Paige and Wet Wet Wet's Marti Pellow, as well as rising chart star VV Brown. The concert, which will be hosted by Chris Evans and broadcast live on Radio 2, will also include two songs by Kylie Minogue, and a performance by the entire West End cast of the Mamma Mia stage musical.
"Some of the artists [on the bill] I am not so familiar with," Andersson admitted. "I don't really follow what's going on in the pop scene since I quit Abba. But I think I'll enjoy the evening immensely. I will play a song or two, some Swedish folk music, with my fiddler friends from Oresund." He will also perform "a little slice" of a choral suite that he recorded after Abba was wound down in 1982.
More tantalising is the prospect of Andersson accompanying headline act, Kylie Minogue, in her version of When All Is Said And Done, a lesser-known track from Abba's final studio album, The Visitors.
"It's going to be a little adventure," said Andersson, getting into the spirit of the evening. "As well as Kylie being there, I like the fact that Lulu's in, I'm looking forward to meeting Elaine [Paige], who I know from Chess, and Chaka Khan was always a favourite in the 70s.
"This event is very flattering, because basically we're foreigners here. The English have always treated us like we were from England, for some odd reason, I'm very grateful for that. It's quite amazing, like we're yours, which we in no way are."
This one-off gala, which will also be attended by Ulvaeus, could be as close as fans get to an Abba reunion. In 2000, the foursome turned down the offer of a billion dollars to reform.
Famously prickly about the question of Abba ever getting back together, Andersson said that he and Ulvaeus will never perform again with their respective ex-wives, singers Anni-Frid Lyngstad and Agnetha Fältskog. "This is easy to talk about," he said, emphatically, "there's not going to be a reunion."
He is far keener, however, to rekindle his writing partnership with Ulvaeus, which began in 1966 when both were performing in two separate Swedish groups. The following decade, they were spawning hit songs such as Waterloo, Dancing Queen and The Winner Takes It All, eventually shifting more than 350 million Abba albums worldwide.
As a mark of the band's enduring appeal, a touring exhibition called Abbaworld will open in London later this year, offering a "multi-media experience" involving their famously gaudy costumes and other memorabilia.
But the work Andersson is most proud of emerged after the band's gaudy costumes were put in storage. As well as having written and produced albums for numerous Swedish singers in the years after Abba's demise, he and Ulvaeus also have a brace of highly regarded musicals under their belts, most notably Chess, the musical about the Cold War co-written with Tim Rice and featuring the classic ballad I Know Him So Well. Less well-known is the pair's epic Swedish musical, Kristina från Duvemåla, which ran for five years in the capitals of Scandinavia in the mid-90s. But they have barely written a thing together since.
"Bjorn and I talk about 'Do you think we should do anything else?' It's a matter of having the right thing to work on. We don't have anything as it is now, but something might pop up."
Earlier this year, Andersson returned to the UK charts with Story of a Heart, a solo album recorded with his 16-piece Swedish folk band. It contained the first songs he had co-written with Ulvaeus since Kristina. "We hadn't done anything substantial for 15 years," he said.
The pair have also been working together on an English-language version of Kristina, which premieres later this month in New York's Carnegie Hall featuring British tenor Russell Watson. If successful, there is talk of a transfer to London.
"I am as proud of Kristina as I am of my work with Abba," admits Andersson, "because it's so different. It's symphonic – more of an opera, really. It took five years to write, and I'm very pleased with what we achieved."
Perhaps inevitably, after Abba fizzled out in the early 80s, Andersson's achievements have been overshadowed by the musical behemoth that once rivalled Volvo as Sweden's biggest export. Today, Abba's greatest hits compilation is the UK's fourth best-selling album of all time, with the band's back catalogue exceeded in value only by that of the Beatles.
"I'm the greatest Beatles fan," said Andersson, "so I need to get my hands on that new box set. They had so many good songs. First there's the Beatles, then there's nothing."
With a personal fortune of an estimated £100m, Andersson can afford to be less modest about his role in Sweden's Fab Four. Dspite not having recorded together for 27 years, the band's back catalogue is reported to bring in more than £2.5m a year. Andersson also owns a successful boutique hotel in Stockholm, the Rival, where each guest room contains a copy of Abba Gold. But when it comes to serious investing, his money goes on breeding racehorses.
"It's more than a hobby, really," he says. "I breed them, but on a comparatively small scale. It's quite an absorbing business, you know. In a way, it's similar being in the music business. The work you do writing music, you never know what's going to happen until afterwards, and it's the same with horses. You have high hopes, and then it can go any direction.
"I have a number of horses in Sweden, but the racing scene is not that exciting. We have maybe four racetracks in the whole of Scandinavia, so compared with England or Ireland there's quite a difference, which is why I buy on both sides of the North Sea."
His most promising prospects are those kept on a farm in Arundel, Sussex. "I have three horses in training in England at the moment – one four-year-old whose name is Perks. He's a good horse, with quite good form, and he's won number of races. And I have two-year-olds, and they've been out there and look somewhat promising. We shall see. Horses are the perfect way to lose money," he says. "Breeding racehorses is not something you do to make profit. It's like something for amusement and excitement. It's an expensive thing to do, but you never know, one of these days maybe the horse comes up that pays for the rest of them."
As the money rolled in following the band's overwhelming success at the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest, Andersson and his then fiancee Anni-Frid Lyngstad – better known as Frida – discussed leaving Sweden to avoid its famously punitive taxes.
"I'm not one who complains about Swedish taxes, they're not so bad. We used to have some strange tax rules for artists. In the middle of the 70s Astrid Lindgren, who wrote all the Pippi Longstocking books, published an article describing how she paid 102 per cent tax – "which was actually true, if you had your own company and paid your own social security, all that stuff."
"We said we we're going to be there as a band for maybe three years, and if we were going to make a lot of money, what is going to happen? We tried to figure out what we could do. But it ended up with all of us saying, no, no, we like it here, we want to stay here, and there's no reason to move somewhere else just to save some money. It's only money."
AGNETHA, FOTOS VERANO 2009 / Agnetha, Summer 2009 pics
Agnetha no se prodiga mucho en público, pero durante este verano ha hecho apariciones públicas en Estocolmo: el 6 de mayo asistió a la inauguración de la tienda de Louis Vuitton; el 18 de junio asistió con su hija Linda a la gala "Celebration of the Arts" en el Ayuntamiento y el 7 de este mes invitada a la fiesta organizada por Villman AB en el Teatro Vasa. Aquí las fotos.
LUZ ENTREVISTADA PARA "EL PAÍS SEMANAL" / Luz interviewed for "El País Semanal"
Hoy domingo en la revista "El País Semanal" entrevista con Luz.
Today Sunday Luz is interviewed for the weekly magazine "El País Semanal".
Luz profunda
JUAN CRUZ 13/09/2009
Amor y desengaño. Pasión y melancolía. Así es el nuevo disco de luz casal, con grandes canciones latinoamericanas. Y así es su respuesta a los nuevos zarpazos del cáncer. Vuelve luz, aún más intensa.
Luz Casal ha pasado en los últimos cinco años por algunas ventoleras de salud que a veces la dejaron impávida, asustada de lo que la naturaleza puede hacer para tratar de doblegar el ánimo de una persona. En lugar de conseguir su propósito, la enfermedad, un cáncer que quiso morderla, pero al que ella se enfrentó con brío, ha hecho más honda su mirada; esa ingenuidad que muestra como si hubiera renacido de la infancia galaico-asturiana ha regresado a su rostro, en el que ahora habita aún más pasión, la pasión de vivir, de seguir la lucha de la vida.
'Con mil desengaños', Luz Casal
AUDIO - El Pais - 13-09-2009
“Con los mensajes que recibía, ¿Cómo me iba a venir abajo?”
“Es mejor cantarlas con distancia. Si no, parece una parodia”
Esa enfermedad ha atacado dos veces; entre tanta energía que hubo de desplegar para recuperar el sosiego y la salud que ahora tiene, Luz Casal se encerró con otras músicas; dejó atrás la melancolía rockera y se fue a buscar sonidos suramericanos. Su nuevo disco es el resultado de su incursión apasionada por el repertorio clásico de América Latina.
En su casa tiene un cuarto inmenso en el que hay miles de discos, viejos y nuevos, los de Paco Pérez Briand, su compañero, su fiel amigo, el periodista musical, y los suyos; y ahí dentro rebuscó letras que ahora, en su voz, forman su nuevo disco, La pasión.
Cuando estuvo enferma, dice, recibió todo tipo de consejos: haz este disco, haz el otro; pero ella tenía esa inspiración, Suramérica, la música de siempre. "No es un disco de versiones; es un disco de homenaje. A una época, a unos compositores, a un estilo". Buscó en Los Ángeles lo más auténtico de esa herencia, y halló a un arreglista, Emir Deodato, brasileño, que ha trabajado para Frank Sinatra, Björk, Roberta Flack (Killing me softly). A este hombre le resultó fascinante este proyecto de reconstruir "tal como se grababa en los viejos tiempos, con todos los instrumentos y todas las voces". Le leyó la idea a Luz Casal, y el disco suena a esa convicción que arreglista y cantante compartieron "desde que nos vimos".
Para ella era un reto. "Diecinueve años después de Piensa en mí, asumía un proyecto que no tenía que ver ni con el rock ni con el pop. Piensa en mí fue la puerta que se abría a un estilo de música que yo no solía interpretar. Acaso creía, por influencia del rock y del pop, que era una música de generaciones anteriores; pero asumí el reto, como ahora, de meterme sin esfuerzo en canciones majestuosas, como éstas que interpreto ahora. Hace 19 años, cuando salió aquel disco, después de haber editado cinco elepés, la gente me paraba por la calle: 'No sabía que usted cantara tan bien'. Así que ahora he repetido la experiencia de cantar como en Piensa en mí".
Halló un productor al que le sonaba la melodía del proyecto, "un chico francés de origen iraní que vivió en Venezuela, Renaud Letang, que entre sus éxitos cuenta el de haber producido Clandestino, de Manu Chao". Letang no tiene mucho más de 30 años, pero el repertorio que recuperaba Luz le sonaba. En Los Ángeles se encontró, además, con Álex Acuña, un batería que trabajó con Weather Report, con Madonna, con Ray Charles, y que podía hacer que los instrumentos adquirieran "ese sonido original, ampuloso" que requería la búsqueda que Luz se había propuesto.
"Todos eran de origen hispano, y todos guardaban recuerdos de las canciones". Así que ahora tiene Luz Casal "la sensación de haber trabajado en las mejores condiciones de toda mi vida", a lo que ella ha añadido "energía e ilusión". Ella quiso poner "la voz propia, natural, sin impostaciones". "En algún momento, por ejemplo en Historia de un amor, que es quizá la que tiene que ver más conmigo misma, con mi propia historia en algún momento, quise cantarla como más de dentro, con más sutileza, como si hiciera hincapié en lo que cuenta. Y cuando la escuché, la sentí tan exagerada... Comprobé ahí que estas canciones hay que cantarlas con distancia, porque, si no, parece que estás haciendo una parodia". Hay alguna "en la que te tienes que abrir en canal", pero lo mejor es cantar con distancia. "Como siempre se hizo".
Ha cantado y ha rescatado "a los pioneros". Ahí están Carlos Eleta Almarán (Historia de un amor), René Touzet (Con mil desengaños), Manuel Rivas Ávila (Cenizas), Mario Molina, Jesús Dávalos y Eduardo Magallanes (Adónde va nuestro amor), Francisco Flores (Nieblas), Julio R. Reyes (Mar y cielo), Rosario Sansores y Enrique Brito (Sombras), Jair Amor y Oswaldo Gouveia (Qué quieres tú de mí), la simpar María Elena Walsh (Como la cigarra)... En los créditos, ella no quiere que se le escape el nombre de Jorge Fernández, director artístico de su compañía, EMI, en Francia, "un chico de El Bierzo, radicado en Francia, a quien también le sonaban las canciones".
Ella no lo ve como un disco circunstancial, es un manifiesto. Es decir, es su reencuentro con melodías que están detrás de la canción contemporánea, y al recopilarlas ha hecho un relato de la pasión en la música, que es la pasión en la vida, una especie de bolero inmenso que la rockera prolonga como si estuviera rescatando la melancolía de Negra sombra, aquella canción que nos devolvió los versos estupefactos de Rosalía de Castro. Toda canción encierra autobiografía, "pero en este caso hay pocas con las que yo me halle sentimentalmente ligada. Lo que quería era comprobar si mi capacidad como intérprete no se quedaba por debajo de lo que exigían esas canciones".
Para hacerlo, Luz Casal se encerró consigo misma y con esos discos que ya tienen la vejez necesaria de los clásicos, y los ha devuelto a la vida, es decir, a la voz contemporánea, desgarrada, en un tiempo en que la pasión parece que se dice de otra manera. "Era una aventura arriesgada; yo quería llegar a aquella sonoridad histórica, y todo ha conspirado, en primer lugar, el extraordinario conjunto que agrupamos, para lograrlo".
Con el disco ya en la mano, adornado con las fotos de Jean Baptiste Mondino, en las que luce como si volviera de un sueño, o estuviera en él, vestida de blanco, retratada en medio de un espacio versallesco cerca de París, Luz me habló de la experiencia del dolor y de la pasión.
Una vez dijo: "Se canta y se escribe mejor después de una herida". Fue hace dos años; acababa de publicar Vida tóxica; estábamos en la penumbra de un hotel de Málaga, ella iba vestida de negro; tenía el pelo corto, como ahora en estas fotografías de Mondino, pero entonces el pelo era el espejo también de la herida sufrida. Entonces Luz estaba especialmente honda, o ahondada; ese túnel del que salía entera le había dejado muchas huellas. En aquel entonces, se convenció a sí misma de que trabajar era mejor que olvidarse de la voz, que había que cantar, como decía Bertolt Brecht, también en los tiempos oscuros. Y hasta el título del disco, Vida tóxica, y su decisión de recorrer luego pueblos de España y de Francia (donde es una artista queridísima) constituía no sólo una decisión, sino, también, un manifiesto. Le pregunté entonces: "¿Y después?".
"Pues a seguir siendo Luz, la hija de Casal".
Siguió siendo Luz, la hija de Casal. La enfermedad le dio una tregua, durante la cual no sólo siguió siendo Luz, la hija de Casal, sino que quiso ser otros y otras, y mezcló su inspiración con la música romántica latinoamericana, con toda su pasión y melancolía.
Eso es también lo que hay detrás de su mirada, captada por Mondino, que ha fijado el momento en el que ahora está: parece ingrávida, combina aquella mirada de la lucha que le vimos hace dos años en Málaga con la de las letras en las que ha estado sumida. "Bueno, Mondino parecía ya reacio a hacer fotos de gente de la música. Pero le hablaron; él dijo que necesitaba escuchar la música. Y lo que iba a ser un encuentro de media hora se convirtió en una sesión de tres horas. El resultado es éste. A fuerza de oírlo, he acabado por creer que de veras estoy guapa en esas fotos".
Pero ¿qué pasó, qué ha aprendido de esa lucha contra la enfermedad, que, mientras tanto, volvió a dar el segundo aviso? "Yo traté de mostrarme como siempre he hecho, con franqueza. Y he aprendido que la gente se preocupa por sus semejantes. Aprendí, también, que la enfermedad te vincula a otros que tienen el mismo problema, y esa es una forma maravillosa de hacer amigos".
La gente asocia ahora ese poder de recuperación, y de lucha, a un modo de ser. ¿Estaba antes? ¿De dónde viene? "¿De dónde viene?", vuelve a preguntar. "Quizá de que empecé a trabajar desde muy pequeña... Ayudan la familia, los amigos, la confianza en ti y en lo que haces. El cariño que te transmite el público". Esa energía también viene de la infancia: "Mi infancia ha hecho de mí el 90% de lo que soy. Lo que he hecho es pulir las cosas. Yo soy un producto de lo que me sucedió desde que tuve seis años y me fui de Galicia a Asturias, hasta los 16. Las claridades y nieblas de ese tiempo son la clave".
En La pasión hay letras que revuelcan desde hace decenios los estómagos de los desengaños: "Ya no estás más a mi lado, corazón, / en el alma sólo tengo soledad, / y si ya no puedo verte, / por qué Dios me hizo quererte, / para hacerme sufrir más...".
Luz Casal no sólo ha hecho una discoteca de la pasión, o del amor, sino del sufrimiento que sigue al final de las mejores pasiones, las más encendidas: "Con mil desengaños / no podrás pagar el desengaño mío, / con mil sufrimientos / no podrías sufrir lo que he sufrido yo". Es la armonía entre el encuentro y la despedida, la resignación y la búsqueda. Su disco habla de las nieblas y de las cenizas, resultados del fuego que el bolero va extendiendo como un manto oscuro: "No habrá nieblas / en mi noche si tú estás, / no habrá llantos / ni pesares si tú estás, / es por eso que angustiada / yo repito emocionada / no habrá nieblas / en mi noche si tú estás". Y, sin embargo, las cenizas. "Después de tanto soportar la pena / de sentir tu olvido, / después que todo te lo dio / mi pobre corazón herido, / has vuelto a verme para que yo sepa de tu desventura / Sólo cenizas hallarás / de todo lo que fue mi amor".
Salir de ese universo de sombras no debe de ser sencillo. Ella canta, por ejemplo, ese No, no y no: "Como todo llega en esta vida, / yo prefiero la ilusión perdida / a que me vuelvas a engañar... / No, no y no. / No te lo puedo creer". O Sombras: "Cuando tú te hayas ido / me envolverán las sombras. / Cuando tú te hayas ido / con mi dolor a solas / evocaré el idilio / de las azules olas...". O esa canción, Como la cigarra, en la que se mezclan rabia y risa: "Tantas veces me mataron, / tantas veces me morí, / sin embargo, estoy aquí / resucitando...".
Un manifiesto de amor al amor, y a Latinoamérica, a la música que dice amor y desengaño con la misma voz. Palabras, acaso, para curarse. En aquella conversación de Málaga nos contó cómo se fue salvando de la angustia y el dolor, como aquel personaje de Hemingway: "Conoció la angustia y el dolor, pero nunca estuvo triste una mañana". Se salvó escuchando música, y escuchando mensajes telefónicos, leyendo e-mails. "Mi carencia de miedo, mi actitud, todo viene de los mensajes que recibía. ¿Cómo me iba a venir abajo?". En ese tiempo, alguien le enviaba naranjas cada 21 días. "Porque cada 21 días era la quimio. Las naranjas y las flores eran de admiradoras, mujeres que se gastan el sueldo yendo a mis conciertos por todo el mundo. ¡Y me siguen enviando naranjas! Tengo suerte. El cariño es una cosa buenísima".
12/9/09
"NEVER AGAIN"/"YA NUNCA MÁS", TOMAS LEDIN & AGNETHA FÄLTSKOG
Audio "YA NUNCA MÁS" Tomas+Agnetha:
[Gold] ACE OF BASE
Video "CRUEL SUMMER" ("Verano cruel"):
Video "LIVING IN DANGER" ("Viviendo en peligro"):
Video "HAPPY NATION" ("Nación feliz"):
Video "LUCKY LOVE" ("Amor afortunado"):
Video "NEVER GONNA SAY I'M SORRY" ("Nunca voy a decir lo siento"):
Video "BEAUTIFUL LIFE" ("Vida maravillosa"):
Video "LIFE IS A FLOWER" ("La vida es una flor"):
Video "UNSPEAKABLE" ("Sin palabras"):
Video "DA CAPO":
Enlaces/Links:
Audio "EVERYTIME IT RAINS" ("Cada vez que llueve"):
10/9/09
BENNY ENTREVISTADO PARA ABCnews / Benny interviewed for ABCnews
Reproducimos en inglés entrevista a Benny Andersson para ABCnews.
We reproduce Benny Andersson's interview for ABCnews.
Benny speaks about the ABBA tribute concert in Hyde Park, the Kristina concerts, donating to the Feministiskt initiativ party, complaining to the McCain campaign about their use of ABBA songs, and the search inside for new music.
Benny Andersson
Benny Andersson, one of the "B's" in ABBA, has spent the whole summer out in Sweden's Baltic archipelago and, on his first day back in the studio, is not in the mood for work.
"I am supposed to write new music, but I admit I am not feeling inspired at the moment. I have not written all summer," a tanned Andersson said with a relaxed smile.
That may change soon as autumn promises to be busy for the man behind most of ABBA's music and songwriter Bjorn Ulvaeus - the other "B" and Andersson's oldest friend and collaborator.
Kristina in concert at Carnegie Hall on Sept 23 and 24
Coming up first is a tribute concert to ABBA, "Thank You For the Music," in Hyde Park, London, on Sept. 13, including singers Kylie Minogue, Chaka Khan, Lulu, Elaine Page, and the West End cast of Mamma Mia!
Benny will also be on stage with the Swedish six-man band Orsa Spelmän, or Orsa Fiddlers' Ensemble, which plays Swedish folk music.
But it's two concerts at New York's Carnegie Hall on Sept. 23 and 24 that seem to stir most excitement in the seasoned musician, who has performed since childhood. Titled "Kristina," the concerts will contain a selection from his and Ulvaeus' musical "Kristina från Duvemåla."
"I know I will be nervous," Andersson said. "I will be curious to see the reaction from the audience."
Andersson described the musical more like "a modern opera" and said it was the hardest and most daunting piece he had ever composed. Not only because it took five years to write or that it encompasses three hours of music, but also because it is based on the Swedish national epic "The Emigrants" by Swedish author and historian Vilhelm Moberg.
Andersson read the four-volume oeuvre for the first time at the age of 19 and was gripped by its protagonists, the farmer Karl Oskar and his wife Kristina, and their dramatic destinies.
The books follow the hardships of the starving couple in the mid-1800s as they uproot their family from a famine-stricken Sweden to move to America - a decision taken by a million Swedes at the time.
"It feels very special to play this music in New York. This is where most of the immigrants first arrived. Millions of Americans share the history of these characters," Andersson said, hinting that the musical might get a Broadway production, just like Mamma Mia! and Chess - his and Ulvaeus' first musical.
While Andersson and Ulvaeus had several projects in the pipeline, Andersson was adamant an ABBA reunion was not among of them.
"No! That's not happening. One should never say never, but No!" he said, shaking his head in response to the question that has followed the former ABBA members despite their consistent denials.
"The simple reason is that none of us wants to do it," he said, adding he was keen to protect the ABBA legacy by "leaving it alone."
Instead, the next big thing for Ulvaeus and Andersson following the "Kristina" concerts would be to write new material for a follow up to Mamma Mia!, he said, stressing it would not be a classical sequel, but a "looser kind of follow up."
While they had not yet decided on the format or the theme, Andersson said he had been positively surprised by the screen adaptation of Mamma Mia!, and had not ruled out another film or a continuation of the same theme.
Asked about sources of inspiration, Andersson just shook his head.
"Inspiration is overrated. It's all down to discipline. I have to keep working at it, and if I am lucky it will come. Then I have about one or two days of flow. Then it's uphill again," he smiled.
Luckily, the handsome black Yamaha grand piano standing in his studio can electronically remember what he has played and play it back to him.
Andersson said he listened to all kinds of music, mostly classical, and especially Johann Sebastian Bach, whose range and depth were "inexhaustible."
While Bach's cello suites were among Andersson's favorite pieces of music, he declined to mention any contemporary music he liked because he said he was not up to date with the current pop scene.
Instead, the music closest to his heart was Swedish folk music, he said, his face lighting up. Andersson received his first accordion when he was six years old - a classical instrument central to Swedish folk music that both his grandfather and father had played and taught each other.
For Andersson, Swedish folk music expressed and represented the Nordic climate of long, harsh, dark winters and short, light summers and the physical and emotional conditions people lived under as a consequence.
"I think there is an understanding in the music for our conditions up here. You can hear what kind of a life people have had up here in the deep dark forests - a hard life," he said pensively.
In fact, he speculated, perhaps it was the influences of Swedish folk music and its wide range of happy yet melancholic undertones that had made ABBA's music resonate in so many parts of the world.
"It's funny. I am always asked why I think ABBA has such broad appeal - from Galapagos to China and Egypt. Why does it work in all these different places? I don't know, but perhaps a part of it has to do with that melancholy below the gaiety."
Andersson's desire to feel part of a greater context might explain why he claims to feel friendlier towards the taxman than most multi-millionaires. He enjoys such rich men's hobbies as breeding racing horses and runs the trendy Hotel Rival in Stockholm, but insists he does not mind paying Sweden's high taxes.
"Yes I pay a lot of tax, but I like the idea of giving back to society," he said, adding there was quite enough money left after he had paid the hefty sums.
Another example of his social engagement was the elections to the European parliament in June when Andersson donated one million SEK to Swedish political party "Feministiskt initiativ" - the world's first feminist political party.
The party's ballots had been disappearing mysteriously from polling places, which prompted Andersson to fund a campaign to inform people how they could vote for the party anyway. At first he had preferred to remain anonymous not to overshadow the cause, but when it was later revealed he was the donor he did not mind.
In sharp contrast, he did mind being "used" in last year's U.S. presidential election. In an attempt to appeal to voters, candidates John McCain and Barack Obama released their top ten favorite songs. McCain's list included ABBA hits "Dancing Queen" and "Take a Chance on Me."
"We did not appreciate that at all," Andersson said with a grimace of aversion, adding he and Ulvaeus complained to the McCain campaign.
Pressed to pick his three favorite ABBA songs, he chose "Dancing Queen", "The Winner Takes It All" and "The Day Before You Came" that describes the story of a woman's mundane life before she met her lover. Andersson said he liked it for its strong story, its special "atypical" music and the fact it was the group's last song.
Reflecting over the power of music in a social-political context, Andersson considered the possibilities of subtly marrying music with a discussion about equality between men and women - a cause he held close to heart.
For example, Mamma Mia!, did in fact have a strong feminist message, but dressed up in the Trojan horse of ABBA's music it became widely popular.
"Maybe we should continue on that theme. I think I am beginning to feel inspired."
8/9/09
EL MUSEO ITINERANTE "ABBAWORLD" SE PROMOCIONA EN LA TELE / Abbaworld, the touring exhibition promoted on TV
Video promocional sobre los preparativos del museo itinerante de Abba: Abbaworld en reportajes de la CNN y la BBC. Vedlo aquí. Se prevé su estreno en Londres este año.
Promotional video about the setting up of Abba's touring exhibition; Abbaworld in CNN & BBC reports. Watch it here. Its world premiere is set in London this autumn.
CNN:
BBC:
6/9/09
BENNY ENTREVISTADO EN BBC-RADIO2 / Benny interviewed on BBC-Radio2
FRIENDS, "LISTEN TO YOUR HEARTBEAT" (Sweden-Eurovision 2001)
Friends: Stefan Brunzell, Tony Haglund, Kristian Hermanson, Nina Inhammar, Kim Kärnfalk & Peter Stranberg.
27 años después de "WATERLOO", Suecia intentó conquistar Eurovisión con otro grupo con un sonido cercano a Abba, el grupo se llamaba Friends y la canción "LYSSNA TILL DITT HJÄRTA" ("Listen to your heartbeat"/"Escucha el latido de tu corazón"). Me gustaba...
Video Festival Eurovisión 2001 "LISTEN TO YOUR HEARTBEAT":
Audio Swedish Version Sueca "LYSSNA TILL DITT HJÄRTA":
"ONLY A WOMAN'S HEART", ELEANOR McEVOY & MARY BLACK (+EMMYLOU HARRIS)
Enlaces/Links:
Audio "ONLY A WOMAN'S HEART" - Eleanor McEvoy:
5/9/09
DICIEMBRE 2004: ENTREVISTA A AGNETHA / December 2004: Agnetha's interview
"WATERLOO", 35º ANIVERSARIO / 35th anniversary
Video Eurovisión'74 "WATERLOO" (35º aniversario)
Video votación Eurovisión'74 voting:
Video actuación final/final performance Abba Eurovisión'74:
"¿POR QUÉ NO TE VAS?", FRAGMENTO DE LO NUEVO DE VALLÍN CON ANA TORROJA / Extract from Vallín & Ana Torroja's new song
Torroja & Vallín
We've got hold of an interview that Sergio Vallín has given to Rockola.fm where he talks about his solo-album and as soundtrack we can hear an extract of a his song with Ana Torroja "¿POR QUÉ NO TE VAS?" ("Why don't you leave?")
Video entrevista/interview:
Enlaces/Links:
Audio fragmento "¿POR QUÉ NO TE VAS?"+Ana Torroja excerpt:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOoFBjJF3_M
Audio escucha previa/preview CD "BENDITO ENTRE LAS MUJERES" (Parte 1) Natalia Jiménez, Ana Torroja, Raquel del Rosario:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kf1rryLI1w4
4/9/09
ABBA, LUGARES RELACIONADOS / Related places [Q7]
3/9/09
BJÖRN, OTRA ENTREVISTA / Björn, another interview
Otra entrevista de Björn ahora a Metro.UK en inglés que incluimos.
Another interview now to Metro.UK we include:
Yes, in a way. I like my home city very much so when CNN asked me I thought: why not show the world what it looks like? I’d never thought of myself as a travel presenter until the offer came up. Sell Stockholm to me. What I like about Stockholm is it’s a convenient size. It’s a capital with everything you need but it’s not huge. The population is about 1.3million, which is nothing compared with London, Paris or New York. That means more space and a lot less queuing.
How does Sweden differ from Britain?
I lived in the south-east of England for six years, which is among the most densely populated areas in Europe, and there was a lot of queuing. But as people Swedes and Brits are getting more and more alike.
Isn’t the city about to open an Abba museum?
I’m not sure what’s happening but there is going to be a touring exhibition called Abba World. I don’t want to run a museum about myself so I’m keeping my distance.
Is he jealous you grew a beard like his?
Ha ha, I’ve never asked. I grew the beard in 1981 so I’ve had it for a while. I can’t even remember the reason I started growing it, I must have wanted to hide my face or something. The likelihood of me shaving off my beard is as far away as the reunion of Abba.
How much would it take to get you all back together?
I’d like Abba to be the group who said they’d never make a comeback and never did. We’d be the only ones, I think.
You suffer from long-term memory loss. Has it helped banish thoughts of Abba’s costumes?
I cringe when I see some of them but it was glam-rock days and everyone looked like that. If you look back, people such as Gary Glitter looked more hideous than I did. At Eurovision in 1974 I was a bit overweight and the outfits were very tight. The costumes at the beginning were awful but near the end of Abba we got very sophisticated.
I’d like Abba to be the group who said they’d never make a comeback and never did. We’d be the only ones, I think
Are you sure it’s not short-term memory loss?
I mean, how about an Abba reunion? No, no. That won’t pay off! The memory loss is hugely exaggerated. I was on a radio show and I told them my episodic memory wasn’t very good. It’s the sort of memory where you can vividly remember where you were and you can even smell and pinpoint how you felt at that point. I have precious few of those and I envy anyone able to relive their happiest moments.
Will Britain ever win Eurovision again?
It’s a matter of having a good enough song. I’m still a firm believer in that. Sweden hasn’t been very good either.
Have you ever thanked anyone for the music?
It would be the Beatles, absolutely by far the most influential and most important band for Benny and me. It was the idea that two people in a group could write their own songs and we thought, if they can do it, why can’t we? That changed everything for us. Before the Beatles, songwriters were very anonymous people and nobody paid any attention to them.
On an Abba pilgrimage, where in Stockholm should one visit?
Metronome Studio is where we recorded our early hits. It hasn’t become a tourist attraction and only the most avid fans find it. The studio is untouched from the days when we recorded there and the same guy has been running it since 1971. I’m amazed he hasn’t cashed in.
How do you feel about tribute act Björn Again being named after you?
It’s pretty cool. Whenever I have to call people back I say: ‘Hi, it’s Björn again.’ Benny hasn’t said he’s jealous but I bet he is!