Skip to main content

tv   Arts.21  Deutsche Welle  January 1, 2023 8:30am-9:00am CET

8:30 am
oh, as we take on the world 8 hours, i do all this weird all about the stories that matter to you whatever it takes to hide policeman a deal we are, your is actually on fire made for mines. you are the same way when people grinned from ear to ear, scream with joy and can't help but dance with no matter what age they are, then the reason for that might just be about
8:31 am
a great. i love buff, brilliant both of my mom's favorite, very, very good these days eat, you don't find very many who actually dislike about, but you find a lot of people who kind of like a lot of people to really do. it's an amazing phenomenon. everyone loves alba their music and their style. no one it seems actually hates. something a lot of musicians can only dream. so how did the for likable swedes do it? let's find out. with where does the band stand today after their reunion and sold out concerts in london
8:32 am
for the social media generation loves about the bands own tick tock channel featuring videos from the past and present has more than 2000000 followers, which isn't bad. but the hash tag about loan has billions of views and abba is among the bands who songs are most often covered by others. youtube features countless cover versions of their songs in every genre imaginable . i was dead. c, g, i teach generation spawns new abba fans. so what's behind the band and during appeal, the sound, i guess, especially the 2 guys voices. and maybe that's what appeals,
8:33 am
but it's very difficult to say it's, it's really it's for other people to try and explain that challenge accepted beyond . we spoke to a music journalist, an opera singer, a former eurovision winner, a fashion designer, song writers, composers and producers, all of them know as personally and live in stock, whole. a 2 couples behind about benny and any freed up, nita, and beyond. we're not always as well loved as they are today. in the beginning, a lot of journalists and fellow musicians thought the band was totally uncalled. back in the seventy's in sweden harbor was a no go. i should definitely not listen to our by. i shouldn't praised them, they were always neglected by the media while the media treated them. or i will say in the beginning, especially very badly
8:34 am
a because they were so commercial and there it says they want it to be. they want it to be world famous politics and anti war and, you know, you're not supposed to make money with the moose, you know, and in some farm land, you know, where you're supposed to be genuine and all that stuff. so yeah, so abba, like they were in there, they were in their riding room on their island. oh, the 2 male members of alba who wrote all the songs were seen as being a bit too business savvy. and then there was there stage where a combination of glam rock, folklore, and disco. you can still buy some of these classic outfits, but only in costume shops, which only goes to prove how recognizable the abba look is. and i think they oh
8:35 am
little bit too much actually. but it was not sexy and it was not cool. it pushed crowd. ah, this is so crazy. yeah, it's icon. while 19 seventies rockstar is gained in for me for trashing hotel rooms and a drunken rampage. the members of alba had a squeaky clean family friendly image, married, well behaved, harmless scandals free. but while some mock them for that, their concerts like here in london were attended by some very famous fam, abba songs, apparently had something that appealed to their hipaa rockstar colleagues.
8:36 am
no one really saw what happened back at wembley stadium london. 97th 8th. at backstage was, joe was drummer from backlash. who was a big, i'm bad myra. and as bruce springsteen was also a big fan of armor, lots of people understood very like, but the say slack masterful pop music. do you have people like elvis costello and other pop writers going like we've always respected apple we couldn't say so when they were 20 when they were 22 like elvis costello was he couldn't come out in the press and go like yeah, i've been listening to you know, super trooper like all day. no, that wouldn't really work. but, but they were,
8:37 am
i that's no longer a problem. even dave grow has described his band to fighters as a cross between a punk rock band and they love. but actually abs, coolness, transformation didn't start until 10 years after they broke up. and it was the gay club scene that celebrated their campy nist and helped usher in a revival of others music in the 1994 australian film, the adventures of priscilla, queen of the desert. ava's joyful kitch is raised to a new level. it becomes a key to personal freedom
8:38 am
with ah, where most loyal fan base is the gazing definitely and i think that's the way our boss craig venue cbc. typical, happy, sad is something that he said park of like gay contouring in, in the longer the perspective and of course, all the kitchen and costumes. so, so i'm guessing he said extremely in par, important for the life of babylon. just as important was the film muriel's wedding,
8:39 am
also from 1994 and also from australia. the country with the most loyal ab fans next to germany. here to the band itself never appears dancing to a soundtrack of the still an cool music of alba, a pair of social outcasts turned out to be the true winner. ah ah. criticized for became reasons to love them,
8:40 am
but none of that would have been possible without their pop perfection. abba did nothing by haps, they worked with only the very best musicians and from the start wanted the fullest sound for guitars instead of 2 to drum kits instead of one more of a small orchestra than just a band. songs like waterloo and dancing clean wouldn't have been possible without the wall of sound technique, but didn't invent it, but they did make it their own. you listen to those production ideas and go like, why is everything so clear? even though i know that you know that there are 2 or 3 different keyboards and there's a miranda and there's this big piano underneath. and there's this wall of frieda and acne at us like why does this still sound so clean? you know, as opposed to just being like this mess of glop, even though it's like a lots and lots of things. they thought it through. it's always an introduction
8:41 am
verse. then the other story is different. ah. because does the middle 8? there's the extra rest using a chorus and into the little extra thing on to it is ah, typical things for now both wrong is usually for me. it's the melancholy. it's, it's, they're both sad and happy at the same time. ah, pretty much all of them. oh, and i think it's in the music and it's playful. the songs are very playful, and they're very clear. and if the staccato in the songs are very tucked up, the 3rd earth data, you know,
8:42 am
it's very alba. you know it's sort of classics meat sir, something else. but i think above is inspired by classical music from beginning, ah, slipping through my fingers. ha no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. paula donna slipping through my fingers. ah, it could be called ski. it could be true, but true. mom could be browse. i mean it's, it's this wonderful melodies. it makes me cry every time i or they've sold hundreds of millions of albums and released more than a 100 tracks. a mere fraction of the songs they wrote. some of them give insight into the bans, private lives, with parents lyrics reflecting what was happening in the 2 couples, marriages. they were very swedish
8:43 am
in the way the songs were about for life. and we followed them into the success, into their marriages into the divorce and to their sudden end dealing with the end of his marriage and the possible end of his band. buran poured his sadness and disappointment into lyrics for his ex wife at nita to sing becoming her favorite song. few songs have taken such a melancholy look at the meaning of relationships. ah, son riding aside abba would be nothing without the voices of the 2 singers. not only does each have an impressive vocal range, but they also harmonize perfectly. ah
8:44 am
every now and then in the history of music, voices meet up and i think in the arbor context, you know, something magical happened. if i remember correctly, they also used, you know, they speed it up a tape recorder. so things like that. when they recorded their voices and the and, and slow them down again, and that sort of created of that the arbor sound they found in a 3rd voice. and it has very high as she still is a, it's so fragile, but still very, very powerful. and i think that's, that's her secret, unofficial could use the all to and she is even deeper now her voice.
8:45 am
c c 6 c c i mean, the 3rd voice is magnet, an unofficial combined together. those voices singing those songs. they helped make the swedish music scene. world famous sweden is one of our most successful pop exporting countries in the whole wide world. and abner was definitely the ones who kicked it all off when via had their big breakthrough, 1974 at the eurovision, which followed the whim rocks at the ace of base and the car began send their mandojano. but i'm almost the 1st air act from an non english country who made it really big beyond and benny setting a tone for writing, whether people wanna acknowledge it or not. it is that it's that most out of the
8:46 am
song writing here. these that foundation, restoring a theatre is install coleman and the owning damn. and i'm trying to get, keep the music scene alive and, and, and help the music industry or musical industry or by doing production, shannon producing things. and i think by keeping their own brand alive there also are the same time working on helping. yeah. swedish music industry in general. i think of a certainly is very enterprising they may have seemed unassuming, back in 1972 in one of their 1st tv appearances. but behind that wasn't unwavering commitment to market. i went new mother as nato skipped a german t. v. appearance to stay with her baby, the show had to go on her friend ingo. brandon took her place,
8:47 am
hiding behind her hair and looking less uncomfortable. but no one would notice right. but seriously, it was their videos that were truly innovative, especially for the 970 nearly a decade before mtv revolutionized the format. these days, some of their videos have been watched hundreds of millions of times on youtube with
8:48 am
they wanted to be stars. and they are, they really, you know, try to project in all the music and this start amendment the clothes and they took pictures, a lots of pictures, so many pictures. if you look at the album 0 ma'am later, i mean, i can't believe how many pictures they took all the time. i mean, it looks like they didn't do anything else than take pictures. after both couples divorced the band decided to call it quits in 1982. but every few years they managed to land a few koos without ever taking the stage. in 1992 they released a greatest hits album. alba, gold british pop dual eraser released an album of avar covers and it was clear habit was essential for any party with but buran and benny's sense there was more to be gained. now things started to happen in the ninety's. the word changed, it's i larva,
8:49 am
and up of himself believe, but we have something we can we can go on. so that's very important. what happened when of ira non existing band at the time then since it was all going so well and beerin and benny had been successful with other musicals, it was a no brainer to create. mamma mia, the musical. ah. the production premiered in london on april 6th, 1999. i think even the critics much like they kept so evolving and kept thinking how can we do more of that and can we? and i think they made more money from mommy or the musical than they have from the, from, from the records they've sold. mama, mia was such a success that hollywood came calling. the film version premiered in 2008 and featured meryl streep and pierce brosnan. singing lou
8:50 am
abba songs, carried the stars to the phone with a light heartedness that enchanted a global audience. the sweetest mentality is really fantastic because we don't care but famous people when they did erm. mamma mia, the film air with meryl streep and all these big stars, i realized that mary street was actually more starstruck them all by themselves. the inevitable sequel followed a decade later, launching out his old hurts, back into the charts. in the meantime, the band had another plan to enshrine their legendary status, a monument to themselves. it kicked off in 2008 with the traveling exhibition. have a world feature and memorabilia, and an early version of today's advertise, which fans could join on stage. then on may 7th, 2013. how about the museum opened its doors to the public in the swedish capital
8:51 am
stock horn. and once again, the band came new young fans. tourists now come from around the world to visit the museum. they've been very thinking about it in their business manner. i think mostly bjorn is a very business minded man. benny is more of all the music all the time and he has his own little band, replaced polk music. and but i mean, he's also part of the big musicals. but bjorn, i think is the more more business minded guy. seeing how bjorn deals with his investments and what he does actually with innovation and with gaming and all that other stuff. because he's created this world for himself and that be in the movies and everything. i mean this, i can't be more productive than that actually. part of that is the development of
8:52 am
virtual reality patterns using motion capture recordings of singing and dancing stand ins as well as the original band members. the digital doppelganger is, are not just museum ready, but stage ready as well. have announced the release of 2 new songs and 2018 for concerts to be performed by the avatars. yet another coo, there are tech no artists in san francisco. building my head as we speak, it all came together in an incredible come back in september 2021. when the band recorded a new studio album together. how about voyage? no one had expected it and the response was suitably sensationally. a voyage because it's been a voyage in children. ah, the pressure was on for the 1st concert in may 2022 in london. if at all failed,
8:53 am
the album legend would be tarnished the purpose built venue and expensive flop. and the avatars solis, empty reflections. but once again, other everything, right? seeing these images who still remembers the early versions of the avatars. it's not a game changer. it will be a milestone. i think in, in music entertainment, i think. yeah, and i never had such a good time, but i'm happy now, but i, i think i'm a happier man now than i was in the seventy's. oh, whether it's song writing, marketing, or crafting their image. it all seems to have come easy forever. yet they've always state ground it in the end, abby stands for one thing above all, and it's perhaps the reason everyone loves them. it's the memory. when people hear abba, they think of their youth. i was on a friend when i was young,
8:54 am
denovia was pick one of the girls and i was, i was on the fleet. i'm originally from uganda to between 71 to 79. uganda was in a very odd thomas state. if there's anything that i can remember, it's alba was always in the airways. i don't think there's any other group that we played so much than about music. and that goes for basically all the sort of top 40 stations and sweden still. and a lot of people to day cohen, c, mama, me an i don't, i don't, maybe they don't even know what i bet it's, you know, i think it's mommy, you know. so i think over the generations, if it's good enough it'll, it'll come through if everybody could write a song like alber all, everybody would now not the seventy's, of course because it wasn't cool. we're one of the most covert artist of all time. just like to beat us friday nights in the latter. oh, it's a lucky twist of fate for ab that their songs have remained so timeless. where the
8:55 am
play the right music. in this when you come to look for king, do you agree? ah, but john himself says it best in the story about these 4 people who came together by chance to beautiful women with fantastic voices should meet and fall in love with 2 guys who happened to be so bright and that they should follow mcgrew, and that their music would live on, i mean, what are the odds against that? that's a wonderful story. yeah. ah, ah,
8:56 am
ah washer. see. mm. mm. a with mm. ah ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
8:57 am
ah ah, ah, with who oh, the beauty of the mysteries. robert wilson is one of the most important figures him theater worldwide. his productions achieve, culture and feature magical, inexplicable,
8:58 am
and haunting image. we ask mister wilson to reveal some work his artistic sequence . busy in 15 minutes on d, w, the 77 percent is bringing you an episode full of female power. i do music that people love because things i love when i love people, oh, you cuttin up and running to be more connected to the culture. it's africa, which ultimately inspires me. 3 women, 3 powerful messages, 77 percent 90 minutes on d w. o. how many push it out in the world right now? the climate change? if any, off the story. this is life less the way from just one week. how
8:59 am
much was going to really get we still have time to go. i'm going all with his subscriber all morning. like people in trucks injured when trying to flee the city center. more and more refugees are being turned away at the border. families on the taxi. the reason for the credit on that is with people seen extreme ground rush, getting 200 people from the agency around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. ask why? because no one should have to flee. make up your own
9:00 am
mind. d. w. made for mines. ah, ah ah, this is the w news welcome to 2023. countries around the world ring in the new year . crowds gather in new york times square foot celebrations on the river nile in egypt. lights off before revel us in cairo.

16 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on