My My! - ABBA Through the Ages
Verlag | Simon & Schuster UK |
Auflage | 2024 |
Seiten | 336 |
Format | 15,0 x 2,5 x 23,0 cm |
Paperback - Trade paperback (UK) | |
Gewicht | 389 g |
Artikeltyp | Englisches Buch |
EAN | 9781398529717 |
Bestell-Nr | 39852971UA |
On the fiftieth anniversary of Waterloo - the song, not the battle - one super-fan sits down to listen to the ABBA Gold album from start to finish, and looks back over the half-century he has spent in the company of ABBA's music, and attempting to unlock the secrets of its hold on him, and on all of us.
'A lovely book - as bright, shiny and uplifting as an Abba hit' Daily Mail
'[A] witty and affectionate account . . . It's not a stretch to say that, at its core, My My! is a book about time, death and the possibility of immortality' Sunday Times
My My! The story of ABBA told through a selection of their greatest hits.
This year is the fiftieth anniversary of Waterloo (the song, not the battle) - a seminal moment in pop history which saw Swedish sensation ABBA burst on to the international music scene. How is it that half a century later this seventies Eurovision act is bigger than ever - reaching listeners of all ages and spinning off into musicals, museums and holograms? Giles Smith, writer and music fan, sets out to find out why.
My My! is a celebration of ABBA through the ages. It's one fan's way of saying: thank you for the music.
Rezension:
'[Giles Smith] is a perfect guide to ABBA's ups and down on pop's stock market [and] an astute musicologist, able to take apart these songs without wrecking their delicate internal workings . . . For such a droll book, then, My My! comes with an existential kick, concerned with the effects of time's passing on art, the way it can become distorted through hearsay and assumption, like a fuzzy tenth-generation mix tape . . . It's not a stretch to say that, at its core, My My! is a book about time, death and the possibility of immortality . . . As Smith's loving testament to the band so clearly shows, in 2024 there's nothing to hide. ABBA, their avatars facing down death itself from their purpose-built arena, have won the war' Sunday Times