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| CD - Bonus DVD | $33.09 |
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It's hard to believe that it all started with "Waterloo," a song built around the unlikeliest of metaphors for love. Sweden's Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson, Agnetha Fältskog, and Anni-Frid Lyngstad won the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest with the tune; what followed was an impressive and dominant world stardom that lasted for the next six or seven years. The group was never that big in the U.S. (only four Top Ten hits), but just about anyone alive at the time can hum a handful or two of the group's melodies. "Waterloo," it turns out, was songwriters Ulvaeus and Andersson's most ambitious lyrical turn; for the rest of their hits you get slighter stuff -- earnest recitals of true love and exhortations to dance from Fältskog and Lyngstad -- set to a nonthreatening MOR pop production that can make the Carpenters seem daring. So why do we still love ABBA? Melodrama aside, there's something at once naive and unprepossessing about the foursome's best singles -- the warmth and openness of the chorus to "S.O.S.," the grinding, driving background vocals to "Take a Chance on Me," the simple drama of "Fernando." Bill Wyman, Barnes & Noble