| Abba: The Name of the Game |  | Author: Andrew Oldham Publisher: Music Book Services Corporation Category: Book
This item is no longer available
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 6571406
Media: Paperback Pages: 366 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.5 x 1
ISBN: 1886894493 Dewey Decimal Number: 781 EAN: 9781886894495 ASIN: 1886894493
Publication Date: October 1996
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Product Description Once known for successful pop records and a wardrobe of polyester jump suits, this is a reassessment of a band now enjoying a revival. Abba were once reviled by most critics, but now bands like Bjorn Again and Erasure keep the phenomenon thriving. This is their background story. The biography features the early years when as engaged couples as they then styled themselves, they failed to make it as Sweden's entrant for Eurovision with a song called "Waterloo". It caused a national outcry. It is a history of worldwide hit records, infighting, partner swapping, and financial disaster - they do not get one kroner in royalties for many of their songs, and bitterness. But it is also a story of triumph. A book that is written with the co-operation of the members of the band.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
4 stars for being fun to read, 2 stars for accuracy February 10, 2003 Richard Laven (Dumfries Scotland) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a triumph of style over substance. The research is very poor with the result that there are a lot of factual errors in this book. I counted three in the first chapter alone (an example is the scoring system used in Eurovision in 1974). The main one, of course, is the repeated reference to Frida and Agnetha hating each other, which simply wasn't (and isn't) true. Nevertheless, this book is a fun quick read and the author's opinions, which range from comments on ABBA's music (which, in general, they rave about) to pop lyrics in general and musicians in the movies, are lively and entertaining. If you just cut out the personal stuff between the girls, the rest of this book will tell you as much as you ever need to know about ABBA, unless you're more than a casual fan. For those wanting more, 'Bright Lights, Dark Shadows' fills out the details, in a less tabloid fashion - but that still has it's moments of wrong-headedness (the comments in regard to the failure of Chess, in particular)
Don't believe a word... September 18, 2000 Oliver Witt (Kiel, Schleswig-Holstein Germany) 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
Dear Mr Oldham,your book is so full of mistakes that it makes the average ABBA-fan scream for justice. Here are just a few of your inaccuaracies: You write: "No more carefree laughter..Agnetha sings mournfully on Knowing Me Knowing You"...well, it was Frida who sang lead on this one- a fact that was even mentioned in the liner notes on the "Arrival"-album. You write:"At the end of their 1979 tour ABBA knew they would never tour again...well, Mr Oldham, tell me then, who toured Japan in spring the following year- impersonaters??? You write: Opus 10 died of boredom before delivery- but the one track they recorded for that album- I Am The City shows that ABBA had lost none of their vitality...well Opus 10 was never recorded because such a project didn't exist and I Am The City was recorded way back in 1982- and not in 1986. Dear Mr Oldham, you don't even know the bare facts that one can look up in any "Gold" compilation inner sleeve. A man who doesn't even know who sang lead on the worldwide hit Knowing Me Knowing You is surely not the right person to write an in-depth biography. Save time and effort next time !
Rumours and gossips January 12, 2000 Nadya (Moscow, Russia) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I don't like this book at all! First of all, I don't think that interfering of the authors of the book into private lives of Agnetha, Frida, Benny and Bjorn was very nice of them. And then I don't think that these people really can know what they are talking about. I mean, it can be interesting to read about the behind-the scene lives of ABBA members but how can these people write what Agnetha was thinking about sitting alone in her hotel room? No one but Agnetha can know it , and I don't think it was she who told Andrew Oldham about her feelings. I suppose that the authors really did a big research before writing this book but there things they just couldn't know about. They give their idea of private lives of Frida, Agnetha, Bjorn and Benny, told some gossips and rumours but most of those things can't be proved. You may think that I think so `cause I'm ABBA fan and I just don't like reading some rather unpleasant things about the members of the group. It isn't so. Being ABBA fan I'm interested in knowing as much as possible about their lives, even if sometimes I don't like what I hear. But it should be facts, not rumours! Though I have to admit that this book can give you a lot of fun if you don't take it seriously! I gave it 2 stars only because of the pics. Some of them are really cute!
The Name of the Game: Take a Chance on It October 1, 1999 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
To this day, the original Swedish Fab Four -ABBA- remain one of Europe's most popular music groups. Not bad for a group that hasn't recorded together in over 15 years. Their albums continue to sell well, especially in the UK, where their ABBA Gold/More ABBA Gold albums have remained in the top 40 album charts for close to 5 years! And with the success of the smash London musical Mamma Mia!, co-produced by Bjorn Ulvaeus and chock full of ABBA's greatest hits, which has played to sold-out performances since its debut in April 1999, ABBA's popularity is nowhere near ending. The book, ABBA: The Name of the Game, provides the ABBA fan with a great detail of the behind- the-scene lives of Agnetha, Benny, Bjorn and Anni- Frid, some of which could be debatable as painstakingly honest or tabloid trash. Obviously written as an unauthorized biography, the book places a great deal of emphasis on the "feud" that seemed to exist between Agnetha and Frida, a far cry from the happy smiles and wholesomeness you'd see in their videos. (Agnetha Faltskog went so far as to write a book of her own in 1997, "As I Am", to deny those allegations.) While praising most of ABBA's songs, the authors' criticisms of the few songs "they" didn't like was the equivalence of catty office gossip. At times, the book can be factually informative, but a good deal of it looks like it was written with a poisoned pen.
More than you expect, a true treat! April 6, 1999 1 out of 5 found this review helpful
Even if you're not much of an Abba fan, this book is definitely worth your time. It provides much more insight into Abba than you would expect. Each chapter offers insight into the music, into the members' lives and feelings, into the world's reaction to the music and the members...expect a lot. The writing style is chatty and witty, à la Joan Rivers but not excessively so. There are a number of pages of photos which supplement the text; some include Abba members in private moments, such as the one of Agnetha "scraping through saucepans." All in all a fine collection.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
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