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ABBA- WHEN ALL IS SAID AND DONE |
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The Visitors,
PolyGram Records, 1982
BILLBOARD CHART
ACHIEVEMENTS:
Adult Contemporary: # 10 Pop Singles: # 27 Dance Club Play: # 8 INTERNATIONAL CHART ACHIEVEMENTS: # 1 in Costa Rica for 10 wks # 81 in Australia, April '82 Top Ten at MATT RADIO |
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ABBA's final album was recorded
during a period of
major personal shake-ups, principally in the decision by Benny
Andersson and Frida
to follow the same route to divorce that had already been taken by
Björn
Ulvaeus and Agnetha
Faltskog. Both male members of the group would soon remarry, but
at
the time, despite all of these changes in their circumstances, The
Visitors was never intended as ABBA's swan song — they were to
go
on recording together. That may explain why, rather than having a
threadbare,
thrown-together feel, The
Visitors is a beautifully made, very
sophisticated album, filled with serious but never downbeat songs, all
beautifully sung and showing off some of the quartet's boldest
songwriting efforts. The title track is
a topical song about Soviet dissidents that also
manages to be very catchy, while "I Let the Music Speak" sounds like a
Broadway number (and a very good one, at that) in search of a musical
to be part of, and "When All Is Said and Done" is a serious, achingly
beautiful ballad with a lot to say about their personal
situations. Even "Two for the Price of One," a lighthearted song
sung by Björn
Ulvaeus about answering a personal advertisement, offered several
catchy hooks and beautiful backup singing. "Like an Angel Passing
Through My Room" ended the original album on a hauntingly ethereal
note, but not as any kind of larger statement about the quartet's fate.
The intention was to keep working together, but Andersson's and Ulvaeus' growing involvement with their stage project, "Chess", prevented any further work together by the group beyond three songs, "The Day Before You Came," "Cassandra," and "Under Attack," all of which are present as bonus tracks on the 2001 remastered edition (in gatefold packaging), along with the orphaned B-side "Should I Laugh or Cry," from the same sessions as The Visitors, and only add to the appeal of the original album. source: Bruce Eder, allmusic.com |