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What is ABBA's Greatest Studio Album?
I think it's "The Visitors". Such a stunning album. No track on
that record is a filler. What do you think?
that record is a filler. What do you think?
What is ABBA's Greatest Studio Album? 55 votes
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i like `the visitors` album, but `two for the price of one` seems completely out of place and is a bit of a filler track for me. i prefer `voulez-vous` as an album, but even that has `the king has lost his crown`, which for me is another filler. the filler free albums for me are `the album` and `arrival`.
Voulez Vous is great but I Have A Dream and Chiquitita ruins the flow of it completely. Place Summer Night City and Just A Notion in its place and it would have been the perfect album.
Voulez Vous because every track could have been a single (indeed there were 5 massive singles from it). It's the album I'd recommend to a new fan because it's pure hook after hook after hook.
Arrival is up there too. Again almost every song could have been a smah hit single.
The Visitors was their most mature, grown up record.
But I chose ABBA - The Album in the end as I bought it on taped cassette when it first came out and I have a lot of sentimental attachment to it.
I have all of their studio albums now after years of just having gold. I have to say gold doesn't do their work justice. There are so many gems that I didn't hear. If you like darker stuff then The Visitors would be the way to go. Look out for the deluxe edition as that contains more than just the standard 9 song release.
Stand outs - the title track, head over heals, when all is said and done, one of us and slipping through my fingers
I always though "the day before you came" was from this album but my memory deceives me
'the name of the game'
'eagle'
'move on'
utter brilliance, i love those tracks.
Wasn't it the first album to use some kind of sound process or other? With the sound cranked up and when that second post-chorus synth refrain kicks in on The Visitors, it's really special.
I love ABBA in general, but I think for me The Visitors marks a definite progression from their initial Euro cheesypop to 'serious' pop and is the pinnacle of that creativity so far... it's so regrettable that the planned next album never materialised, having dabbled in the electropop/synth movement so successfully (which there had been indications of on Super Trouper with On And On and Me An I), I can only imagine what riches would have been to come when they refined and fully embraced it even more. Of course TDBYC, Under Attack, I Am The City et al still stand as a tantalising glimpse of that.
I'm very sorry to hear so much chagrin for Two For The Price Of One; to me it fits the 'tone' of the album very well - it's in keeping with the overall musical style, and lyrically it tells another of the album's many stories of wistful irony. In fact the only track I feel is slightly out of place on The Visitors is, ironically, the only successful single, One Of Us - whilst I love it, it does feel musically like it would have fitted Super Trouper more and stands out as being, well more 'normal' than the tracks it's surrounded by.
Two For The Price of One still remains my favourite track on that album. I think part of it's problem was that as a song, it was well before it's time, made long before irony became commonplace in pop music. Its joyously subversive in it's acknowledgement of the endless criticisms of ABBA consisting of two hot Swedish women.
I agree. I never been into voulez vous either and again I have to agree with super trouper which I think is their best by a mile