|
Post by Fafner on Jul 30, 2015 21:25:35 GMT
Just found out that a new choral album containing Benny's music will be released on the 18th of September. Can somebody tell if there are any new pieces in this tracklist? -- 1. Kärlekens tid 2. En skrift i snön 3. Down To The Sacred Wave 4. Lilla skara 5. Var hör vi hemma 6. Historien om schack 7. Anthem 8. Innan gryningen 9. Vilar glad. I din famn 10. Klinga mina klockor 11. O klang och jubletid I'm always exited hearing new pieces by Benny, and can't wait for the next BAO album. For more details see www.icethesite.com/2015/06/benny-confirms-choir-album-out-18-september-tracklist/www.abba-intermezzo.de/enews.htm
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 16, 2015 18:26:09 GMT
A short review from DN who rate it 4 out of 5.
On this recording, which was Gustaf Sjökvist last, singing his brilliant chamber choir songs by Benny Andersson. Interpretations with undisguised clarity and without any inventive arrangements get this famous and beloved music to reach us more directly than perhaps ever before. Not least this will occur when the choir sings a cappella - then the transparency of the sound, the colors in harmony and precision of phrasing are the composition is appear with all its force. As in, "Where do we hear at home" from "Kristina" where the choir intensive rest on the long syllables reinforces the urgent the message. A burning contemporary revival recipe for our recent popular movement that wants to open our country for refugees. Best track: "Var hör vi hemma".
|
|
|
Post by Fafner on Sept 16, 2015 18:30:13 GMT
Thank you contro, but I think there's a problem with the translation - surely if the arrangement gets the music "reach us more directly than perhaps ever before", then the reviewer probably didn't mean that it's "with undisguised clarity and without any inventive arrangements".
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 17, 2015 16:59:14 GMT
No, I think what is meant is that the arrangements are without excessive arrangements, thus reaching us more directly than ever before...
|
|
|
Post by Fafner on Sept 17, 2015 17:31:32 GMT
Still it's a very weird way to say it.
|
|
|
Post by Fafner on Sept 24, 2015 21:49:27 GMT
A short interview about the album
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 26, 2015 6:14:29 GMT
Kärlekens Tid enters the Swedish albums chart at No. 9.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on May 27, 2016 15:22:17 GMT
"En natt i Köpenhamn" by BAO with Helen and Tommy is available on Spotify.
|
|
|
Post by gogo on May 27, 2016 16:01:05 GMT
Just found out that a new choral album containing Benny's music will be released on the 18th of September. Can somebody tell if there are any new pieces in this tracklist? -- No, fafner, there are no new pieces. It's more a sort of "Best of"-album.
|
|
|
Post by Fafner on May 27, 2016 16:02:03 GMT
Just found out that a new choral album containing Benny's music will be released on the 18th of September. Can somebody tell if there are any new pieces in this tracklist? -- No, fafner, there are no new pieces. It's more a sort of "Best of"-album. Thanks.
|
|
|
Post by Fafner on May 27, 2016 18:14:39 GMT
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jul 29, 2016 12:43:43 GMT
On the 7th week in the Swedish albums chart, BAO's CD is up to No.3. ABBA GOLD is No. 28.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2016 15:58:12 GMT
BAO up to No.2 in Sweden this week.
|
|
|
Post by Fafner on Aug 16, 2017 14:15:04 GMT
A new cd coming soon
|
|
|
Post by Fafner on Aug 18, 2017 11:04:08 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Michal on Aug 18, 2017 11:15:52 GMT
Precisely on 29th of September. It's already available for preorder. Here is the tracklist: 1. I Let The Music Speak 2. You And I 3. Aldrig 4. Thank You For The Music 5. Stockholm By Night 6. Chess 7. The Day Before You Came 8. Someone Else’s Story 9. Midnattsdans 10. Målarskolan 11. I Wonder (Departure) 12. Embassy Lament 13. Anthem 14. My Love, My Life 15. Mountain Duet 16. Flickornas rum 17. Efter regnet 18. Tröstevisa 19. En skrift i snön 20. Happy New Year 21. I gott bevar
|
|
|
Post by Fafner on Aug 18, 2017 11:38:07 GMT
Michal, Thank you! I was wondering about the tracklist.
|
|
|
Post by Liebezeit on Aug 20, 2017 2:11:08 GMT
I just listened to "Thank You For The Music" recently on Spotify. (It came out as a digital single to incite an appetite for streamers alike..) I can hear a bit of jazz influences (even if he had profound classical influences...) in Benny Andersson's piano playing quite well. Makes me want to appreciate his music a little bit more ;-)
|
|
|
Post by Liebezeit on Sept 30, 2017 0:39:36 GMT
Benny Andersson's "Piano" is truly one of a kind of showcasing one's past compositions in a rather poignant, but dreamy way. Not too slow like Glenn Gould, not too fast like Lang Lang, but at the speed of Benny Andersson; whatever he wants to set the tempo, it's his music Spoiler Alert I Let The Music Speak fits well on a piano... You and I (not Me and I) is quite better without all of that Chess-crass thing. It has some really good sustains and build-ups in some parts of the music. Aldrig reminds me of Zigenarvän at the beginning, but has no real resemblance in it. It reminds me of Erik Satie in a nice way, but much elaborate. Typically I'm all for normal-tempo and have a bit of disdain for extremely slow tempo, but it's just neat. Thank You For The Music, as said in the previous post I did on the thread, is ersatz-jazzy, and it seems like he's doing a well-polished demo tape. Another note: Frida ought to sing this version, it fits her range very well! Stockholm by Night seems to have that utopia feel of the city at night, it makes me envision everybody leaving the nightclub after the party's done and they went straight to home. Fascinating! Chess (groans): 4.7/5, because I can't seem to put the words of my opinion quite well in this. There's a bit of "Fernando" in it, at least... The Day Before You Came actually sounds quite better acoustically than the sterile synthpop version that ABBA did. I hated "The Day Before You Came" with a passion until now... The piano version sounds like a continuation of "Money Money Money" than a "throwaway single" or some synthpop rescore of A Clockwork Orange Someone Else's Story ironically doesn't tell somebody's story as it has no text, but the chord progressions are just grand. It's like sounds being turned to fluid to get the ears initiated for Benny's music. Midnattsdans tries not being too baroque nor being too boring. Love it. Målarskolan is one of those danceable tunes from him regardless of instruments! I Wonder (Departure), ah, my favourite Frida song. One of the tunes that can pass through any instruments of a kind and still sound great. It sounds just as if it was made for Agnetha to sing... Embassy's Lament; a rather catchy tune that will withstand with Bach's Bouree in E. Anthem: An uplifting song I still can't describe. My Love, My Life: An excellent piano rendition of my favourite Agnetha song! Mountain Duet: 5/5 Flickornas Rum: Finally, a joyful and uptempo kind of piano song I like from the album. :-) Efter Regnet: I'd describe the song as an incidental music for a scene where "a distance is far away from somewhere that used to be a prime" Tröstevsia: It reminds me of the Swedish folk influence that Benny mentioned in an interview or that Benny used. En skrift i snön: The second to best track on "Piano" so far. Love it.. Happy New Year: Oh yes! the sad ABBA song everyone misinterprets as a "happy cheerful song". That's Björn's text that makes it sad, not Benny's. They're like polar opposites; Benny's there trying to make a "New Year" anthem with a small drop of sadness to accommodate Björn's lyrics, and Björn's trying to write something about facing the new reality and the new year in a pragmatic way. There's a saying "Meet the new boss, same as the old boss". The piano track was at Super Trouper and now the new piano track is at Benny's house. Minimalism at its finest. I Gott Bevar: Wonderous closing track. I can imagine a spaceship departing loudly as the album unfolds. 4.98/5 (-0.02, since The Day Before You Came is still a bit of a bug to me...)
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 30, 2017 22:06:02 GMT
Here is an interesting Benny Interview from 'The Herald' - which is a Scottish Newspaper. So, there may be a 2nd 'Piano' Album, as Benny would like to include 'The Winner Takes It All' & 'Like An Angel Passing Through My Room' - as well as several other ABBA Songs that would suit only a piano instrumentation. (In some Articles, the 'Journalists' think that the 'You And I' Track, from 'Chess', is 'Me And I' - off 'Super Trouper'!)
Piano is a 21-track solo album of ABBA hits by Benny Andersson
by Lorraine Wilson
Saturday 30th September 2017
IT’S A rare day that Benny Andersson doesn’t play piano. He takes a seat and simply waits to see what happens. On some days there is new music for projects such as Benny Andersson's orkester; on others when he thinks “I don’t want to write music today” he plays anyway.
Those days spent revisiting previous compositions were the genesis of Piano, a 21-track solo piano album, released yesterday on classical label Deutsche Grammophon.
“Invariably I would play Mountain Duet or You and I from Chess, because both are so good for piano. There were so many songs that worked well that the idea began to form,” he says.
“Those were the first two on a list of 50 songs. I removed everything that needs guitar, drums, and bass – so that meant leaving out Dancing Queen, Take A Chance on Me, Waterloo – I couldn’t do any of those justice – but there were still more than 40 songs to choose from.”
The tracks are taken from across ABBA’s catalogue, from musicals such as Chess and Kristina fran Duvemala, and from his solo work, including BAO.
Following similar promotional jaunts in Berlin and Stockholm, he’s now in a rather lovely London hotel for several days of talking, and without false modesty seems equally bewildered and delighted that so many people are interested in his work.
The 70-year-old is keen to have a discussion about why I feel ABBA’s music has endured. The last recorded output was released when he was just 35, but there is building excitement about a live tour in 2019 that involves all four members – even if they will only be virtual participants.
The planning of this live tour and recording music for the next Mamma Mia! film has taken up his summer alongside Piano, but the interest in the album seems to be giving him the greatest satisfaction for the moment. Despite the fact that the compositions range from 1973 to 2016, the album feels like a whole. Anyone new to Andersson’s work might believe all were composed for this album.
“I thought that the first time I listened, once we put the songs in order. I thought OK, we’ll try to release this, at least in Sweden so that my grandkid can listen to their grandpa play piano when I’m gone!’
“It was also surprising to hear just me. No lyrics, no women singing… just the music. I recognised myself in it. Although I’m not a melancholic guy, I’m really not. I enjoy life. It’s been good to me.”
The 35 years since ABBA last released a record has been a period of rightful reappraisal for the songwriting of Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus, as well their skill as producers. Musicians have always known that their work was superlative, and adding those two female voices that managed to excel individually but also blend as one was a gift from the musical gods.
As producers they were keen to use the latest technology and even on Piano, he was tempted to bring out the Synclavier for string embellishments. “But no, I managed to stop myself,” he laughs. “I had to stay true to the original idea.”
The album’s opening track, I Let The Music Speak from The Visitors, ABBA’s final and arguably finest album, is “The song that told me – or us really – that ‘we’re on our way to the theatre here’. You can stage that song with choirs but it sounds equally valid just with piano.”
Most of his interviews in recent years have been attached to the Mamma Mia! musical, but he has no problem in chatting without Ulvaeus, his friend and collaborator of 51 years alongside him.
“Nooooo, that’s good,” he laughs. “When it was four of us it was impossible, but even with just Bjorn and I, if we were doing anything, we had to do one at a time. With both of us, I would wait for him to answer, he would wait for me to answer…it became so awkward. And then they just mix up who is saying what!”
There will be no solo performances of Piano, however. His live work in Scotland has been confined to Glasgow with ABBA and a performance with BAO almost 20 years ago. He also visited the city around seven years ago for a concert version of Chess. “I’m not that educated a pianist,” he shakes his head. “In the studio we can correct my mistakes but I wouldn’t want to charge people money to hear those mistakes.”
He does play with the 16-piece Benny Anderssons orkester, which takes its own dancefloor to outdoor events and plays to 5000 people, who dance or sit back on the grass and listen. It’s a four-hour show where he switches between piano and the instrument that started it all for him – the accordion.
“I love my accordion. It’s a wonderful instrument to play. It’s physical. You have it on you and you have to work hard to get something out of it. For me it connects all the northern European countries in their folk music too. Scotland is much more like Sweden than England. We all have our own style in Sweden, Germany, Scotland, Ireland – but it’s all connected.”
There might well be another Piano album. “We could only do 21 songs but there are others that I would like to put out – The Winner Takes It All and Like An Angel Passing Through My Room. So even if no-one wants this one, I’ll probably do another! I did try
I tried Knowing Me Knowing You for this album. I bought a metronome and sat it on the piano but it didn’t work. I like that verse – it’s almost nothing – and that’s clever,” he smiles. “It’s a good sounding recording so I will leave it there.”
Before returning home to Stockholm there was a meeting with the set designer working on the virtual tour. “The band will be completely live – it will be everything you would expect from a live concert. The only thing that isn’t there will be the four of us – in person anyway. We’ll be there in digital shape, maybe holograms, maybe augmented reality and definitely on screens. It’s a lot of work, but it’s fun because it hasn’t been done to this level.”
Of course the four will never perform live in person again. To ask the question is ridiculous. According to Andersson, the break-up was more a fade-out rather than any firm decision to put ABBA behind them. “After The Visitors, we took a break to do Chess. We thought this would take two, maybe three years, but it took five years before it made it to the West End. By that point going back didn’t feel like the right thing to do.
“In 1982 we thought OK, maybe some more ABBA royalties will trickle in for a couple of years and that will be it. That sort of happened for a few years and then Muriel’s Wedding arrived. And then Erasure. Then the ABBA Gold Greatest Hits took off because for once we were on one record label for the whole world. And then of course Mamma Mia! around 17 years ago. But I would like to think it all happened because there is some quality to the music.
“The fact that someone is still interested in what I’m doing. I enjoy that you like me!” he laughs. “People are so kind, they say ‘thank you for brightening up my life and thank you for this song’ It’s not the fame that’s been so important. It’s that communication.”
It’s more than tempting to say, “thank you for the music” as the allotted time comes to a close and the record company representatives arrive, but thankfully he stops that potential cringefest in its tracks by looking at the far wall with a puzzled expression, and asks them if a bed has been taken away. When they say it has, he looks over the top of his glasses with a twinkle: “Did they think people would get ideas?”.
Piano was released yesterday on Deutsche Grammophon.
|
|
|
Post by Michal on Oct 1, 2017 12:10:15 GMT
Great interview. And great news! I haven't received my copy of Piano yet but I'm already looking forward to Pt.2! :-)
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on May 11, 2019 16:31:04 GMT
|
|
|
Post by abbafan1976 on Oct 7, 2023 16:15:00 GMT
Piano is brilliant.
|
|
|
Post by baab on Apr 27, 2024 21:20:05 GMT
|
|
|
Post by richard on Apr 28, 2024 13:26:23 GMT
I've not taken a lot of interest in Benny's BAO work. For anyone more familiar with it than I am, would it be accurate to say that, stylistically, post-ABBA, it's more 'classical' and 'musical theatre' than pop? Unlike, say, Paul McCartney, whose songwriting since The Beatles, and then Wings, has, I think remained mostly pop-y.
Someone - was it Tony/HOMETIME ? - said this track reminded them a bit of ISHFIY *. And I agree. I wish Agnetha and Frida's voices had been deployed a bit more like this in ABBA - as I'm sure many of us would've liked them to have done with I Know Him So Well.
* I mean Ode To Freedom
|
|
|
Post by johnny on Apr 28, 2024 17:56:26 GMT
I am not interested in BAO either. The only song I like is Story of the Heart. That seems like a prototype DSMD.
|
|
|
Post by baab on Apr 29, 2024 14:52:41 GMT
I've not taken a lot of interest in Benny's BAO work. For anyone more familiar with it than I am, would it be accurate to say that, stylistically, post-ABBA, it's more 'classical' and 'musical theatre' than pop? Benny Anderssons post-ABBA work on his 2 Solo Albums and on the BAO Albums is a mixture of Swedish Folk Music, sometimes combined/influenced by Classical Music. It often works in Musicals or Music Theatre. The maybe most ABBAish Songs are "Story of a Heart" and "Crush On You". When BAO 3 came out, it was reported, that "Crush On You" was a song intended for ABBA but never completed. Benny did not state if a recording by ABBA exists. However, I do not like the song much and it didn't leave big Impressions. There are a lot of great melodies and songs in Benny's Solo Work,and I prefer those songs mostly over the (Sometimes) outdated sounding Pop songs he produced for Gemini and Josefin Nilsson. Maybe the language is a problem, as most Lyrics are in Swedish? In the field of classical Music, Swedish is not an issue, as our Opera Houses produce e.g.Janacek Operas also in Czech language
|
|
|
Post by richard on Apr 29, 2024 18:04:54 GMT
Thanks for the informative response, baab , For some time now, since I heard solo piano versions of them on YouTube (not played by Benny, by the way), I've felt that Bumblebee and Little Things on Voyage would have been better suited to more classical treatments. As it turned out, arrangement-wise, they seem to me neither pop nor classical. That said, I could do without the tooting flutes in Bumblebee for a start! And, since I've mentioned Ode To Freedom, that sounds somehow incomplete on Voyage, but I like it's classical approach. Maybe it would sound more 'finished' to me recorded by BAO!
|
|
|
Post by baab on Apr 30, 2024 11:17:53 GMT
...I've felt that Bumblebee and Little Things on Voyage would have been better suited to more classical treatments. As it turned out, arrangement-wise, they seem to me neither pop nor classical. That said, I could do without the tooting flutes in Bumblebee for a start! I agree, personally I thing LT and BB would have fitted much better on a BAO Album and to be honest, there are severall songs in the BAO catalogue which are quite similiar. I always wondered, if Agnetha and/or Frida couldn't have contributed on a BAO Album for such kind of songs.
|
|
|
Post by janabbafan on Sept 27, 2024 17:03:01 GMT
Listing now for the third time to the new album of Benny Anderssons Orkester "Alla Kan Dansa". I like it very much!! "Som en sprucken mandolin", "Lagt kort ligger", "Så länge det finns liv, finns det hopp", "Om det bara vore så lätt", "Vårarna som försvann", those are 5 compositions on that new album, what would have happened if they were recorded for ABBA, with the voices of Agnetha and Frida, with the special choruses of Agnetha and Frida, all lyrics are by Björn, is in one of those 5 maybe a recycling of the two unfinished songs recorded during the Voyage album recordings? They were mentioning "Hit by a train" and "The story ends with you" or so, I mean those 2 everybody was hoping for. Did those 2 resurrect in one of those 5 titles on the new BAO album??? I do an edit, is "Mingel" the one who is "Hit by a train"?
I am (almost) sure that Benny did recycling... But wich ones? ?
|
|