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A concert like no other

Blending cutting-edge technology, spectacular lighting, and some of the most beloved songs ever written, ABBA take to the stage in a whole new way. In a stunning, purpose-built arena, one of the most popular groups in history appear as digital avatars in a ‘ground-breaking’ (Metro) concert that really ‘needs to be seen to be believed’ (BBC).

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ABBA’s ‘Voyage’ CGI Extravaganza Is Everything It’s Cracked Up to Be, and More: ‘Concert’ Review

By Mark Sutherland

Mark Sutherland

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ABBA Voyage

“To be or not to be, that is no longer the question,” declared ABBA co-founder and musical mastermind Benny Andersson at the start of “ABBA Voyage,” the Swedish quartet’s first “concert” in over 40 years. And if that sounds like a curiously existential way to begin a pop concert, well, this is no ordinary live show.

For a start, despite Andersson’s insistence that “This is really me, I just look very good for my age,” it’s actually his de-aged, computer-generated avatar — or “ABBA-tar,” if you must — that is speaking his pre-recorded words. Alongside him are the similarly CGI-rendered forms of his bandmates, all looking as they did — or, in truth, actually somewhat better than — they did in their ‘70s heyday.

Meet, then, the prefab four, playing a show that is billed, 100% accurately, as “a concert like no other” — which doesn’t mean it isn’t every bit as big a deal as it would have been had ABBA reformed for a more traditional concert.

Staged in the purpose-built ABBA Arena near East London’s Olympic Park, the world premiere performance nonetheless attracted royalty of both the showbiz world (Kylie Minogue, Keira Knightley, Kate Moss) and actual sovereign variety: the King and (dancing) Queen of Sweden walked the red carpet in support of one of their nation’s leading exports.

However, it was the presence of all four real-life members of ABBA — Andersson, co-founder and co-mastermind Björn Ulvaeus, and lead singers Anni-Frid Lyngstad and the usually reclusive Agnetha Fältskog — that caused the real stir, proof of the demand fueling this technologically ground-breaking (and presumably wildly expensive) new concept in entertainment. ( Andersson and Ulvaeus spoke with Variety about the shows last year and earlier this week.)

The stakes, therefore, are high. If there are nerves, however, these ice-cool Swedes — and their similarly unflappable producers, Svana Gisla and Ludvig Andersson — don’t show them. And, as it turns out, there was little need to worry.

True, as the digital foursome emerge from the floor — like Doctor Who’s Tardis, the arena appears bigger on the inside, appropriate for tonight’s adventures in time and space — the spectre of “Rock Circus,” a spectacularly naff animatronic Madame Tussauds attraction that ran in London throughout the ‘90s, hung in the air.

At first, the movements seem a little too jerky, the lines a little too obvious. But then, just as when you saw the initially-somewhat-unconvincing dinosaurs in “Jurassic Park” for the first time, your eyes adjust, the willing suspension of disbelief kicks in, and they begin to feel like living, breathing musicians, rather than the product of 160 motion capture cameras and one billion computing hours by Industrial Light & Magic.

Certainly, the crowd has no problem giving these computer programs a round of applause, a standing ovation or a shrieked declaration of undying love. This, after all, is their chance to witness something most of them had never seen before, and all of them thought they’d never see again – some of the greatest pop songs of all time delivered, at least tangentially, by the original protagonists.

And these avatars certainly capture ABBA’s original exuberance, minus the Jurassic tendencies that tend to blight decades-after-the-fact reunions in the real world. The pre-publicity stressed these weren’t holograms, and that’s true — these digital doppelgangers look almost indistinguishable from real people from every angle, with each tuft of hair and outlandish ‘70s costume rendered in occasionally terrifying detail. They can dance, they can jive, they can even make bad jokes about pausing for costume changes — and the crowd are having the time of their lives, teetering on the brink of delirium throughout, despite their majority VIP status.

But then these songs tend to do that to people. After a slow-ish start with the lesser-known songs “The Visitors” and “Hole in Your Soul,” the set delivers the hits just like any ABBA tribute act. However, some notable classics, from “Super Trouper” to “Money, Money, Money” and “Take a Chance on Me,” are absent — smart money is surely on versions of these already being in the can for future setlist tweaks. But any quibbles are drowned out by a youthful, 10 piece live band — put together by Keira Knightley’s husband, James Righton, formerly of “new rave” sensations the Klaxons — that means “S.O.S” and “Does Your Mother Know?” have rarely sounded so punchy.

ABBA VOYAGE

Meanwhile, the accompanying visuals are out of this world: extravagant light effects, interstellar backdrops and CGI Tron costumes mean that, in the unlikely event you are underwhelmed by splendid versions of “Knowing Me, Knowing You” and “Voulez-Vous,” there’s always something to look at.

The budget doesn’t seem to have quite extended to a full avatar show — there are some bizarre, animated interludes, possibly designed to boost the bar takings, while “Waterloo” simply features joyous archive footage from the very beginning of the band’s journey into the public’s affections.

This “Voyage,” however, is ultimately about more high-tech pleasures. It succeeds so well that you would be surprised if other entertainment centers weren’t already queuing up to host the show (which is booked in London until at least this time next year), and if other groups with pan-generational fanbases and aging personnel weren’t already exploring something similar.

ABBA VOYAGE

By the time the closing salvo of “Dancing Queen,” “Thank You for the Music” and a genuinely emotional “The Winner Takes It All” arrived, the crowd was so immersed that a digital rendering of ABBA as they are now fools almost everyone into believing the real Agnetha, Benny, Björn and Anni-Frid are onstage — that is, until the four of them really did shuffle on a few seconds later.

After 90 minutes with their younger selves, it feels strange to see them like this – mostly grey-haired, Frida with a cane, all suddenly rendered mortal like the rest of us. But it perhaps makes sense of why they embarked on this ludicrously ambitious project, rather than simply getting the band back together.

We’ll sadly never know for sure, but maybe, just maybe, “ABBA Voyage” will turn out to be even better than the real thing..

View this post on Instagram A post shared by ABBA (@abba)

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Abba Voyage Review: No Ordinary Abba Night at the Club

With a concert spectacle mixing wizardry and technical skill, the band makes a case for its continued relevance.

abba voyage concert

By Juan A. Ramírez

LONDON — I kept turning to my friend, wanting to tell him how young and fresh the two women that put the As in Abba seemed on the giant screens ahead of us. Agnetha Faltskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad were not actually in the room with us, but that’s the kind of stupor Abba Voyage dazzles you into.

Though the Swedish pop band has not played London since 1979, holographic “Abbatars” of the band, modeled in their likeness from that year, are currently filling up a custom-built arena for a 90-minute concert of their greatest hits. A combination of motion-captured performance, animated sequences and a live 10-person band make up the spectacle, which makes a floor-thumping case for the music’s continued relevance.

Projected on a screen that envelops one side of the spaceshiplike auditorium, the Abbatars play mostly as if it were a real concert. They “enter” from below the stage, make banter with the audience, ask for patience as they switch costumes, and return for an encore.

It would feel corny if it weren’t so triumphantly fun, and the Friday night crowd was certainly along for the ride. Largely a mix of couples in their mid 60s and younger, disco-leaning gay men, the attendees sang through every number with the intensity of a therapeutic ritual. Abba Voyage is an exercise in symbol worship that separates itself from an ordinary Abba night at the club through state-of-the-art production values.

“To be or not to be — that is no longer the question,” the band member Benny Andersson declares in a prerecorded solo address, and questions about live performance, truth, eternity and transience are frothed up into the sheer giddiness of (almost) being in the same room as one of the biggest acts in pop music history.

It’s hard to pin down the reasons that such a strange, 21st century endeavor is a crowd-pleasing success, but Abba’s music has its own strange alchemy. Take “Mamma Mia” (performed here in rhinestone-emblazoned pink velour jumpsuits): Why is the hook an Italian catchphrase? Or “Fernando” (sung against a dramatic lunar eclipse): What could these four Swedes possibly have to say about the Mexican revolution? And yet, something about the earnestness of those songs, reflected in the audience’s full-chested belting, has made them inescapable pop standards.

Those two songs are performed straightforwardly, the Abbatars life-size and center stage, with surrounding screens projecting close-ups for those seated in the orchestra level, behind a massive dance floor. Most of the numbers are done this way, recreating a concert experience; the audience was overjoyed to dance along and applaud each step of the way. Choreography, based on the band member’s real movements, but captured from younger body doubles, hit its peak during “Gimme! Gimme! Gimme!,” with the digital Lyngstad doing high-kicks and twirls that I’m not sure the real one was capable of in her heyday.

A couple of songs, however, played more like immersive music videos, with the full size of the screens used to tell more thorough visual stories. The band famously sang and performed through its own breakup, and “Knowing Me, Knowing You,” a 1977 anthem mirroring the dissolution of romantic and professional relations in the group, is here performed as an Ingmar Bergman-esque study in missed connections. Its members’ fractured faces sing across a hall of mirrors before ultimately embracing in reconciliation.

Less successful than those episodes were two fully-animated numbers, set to “Eagle” and “Voulez Vous,” following a young traveler’s journey through forests and pyramids, and culminating in their discovery of giant sculptures of the band member’s heads.

Those songs recreate the interstitial bits of a “real” concert, as do speeches from each Abbatar about their success and artistry. The best of these interludes saw the band present the footage from their Eurovision Song Contest-winning performance of “Waterloo,” the song that catapulted them to fame in 1974.

Abba’s music is deceptively complex. What sounds like a simple little song reveals itself to be an intricately layered web of harmonies, melodies, real and digital instruments and angelic English vocals, ever-so-slightly outside the band’s Scandinavian comfort zone.

It’s a mix of wizardry and technical skill that, decades later, after movies and musicals and greatest hits compilations, is still at the pinnacle of pop maximalism. To hear the closing piano riffs on “Chiquitita” in a crowded arena is an exalting experience, and despite its eyebrow-raising premise, Abba Voyage miraculously takes flight.

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Digital avatars of Björn Ulvaeus, Agnetha Fältskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad and Benny Anderson for Abba's Voyage tour.

Abba Voyage review: jaw-dropping avatar act that’s destined to be copied

Abba Arena, London Any sense you’re not actually in the presence of the band dissolves during a setlist of crowd-pleasing hits

T he opening of Abba’s Voyage show is undoubtedly an event – even the band’s most famously publicity-shy member, Agnetha Fältskog, is in attendance – but it’s one accompanied by a genuine sense of mystery. If the mystery isn’t as all-encompassing as that which surrounded the first night of Kate Bush’s return to live performance in 2014 – you at least have a pretty good idea in advance of what songs will be involved, which certainly wasn’t the case then – the question of precisely how Abba will be brought back to life almost 40 years after their last public performance remains veiled in secrecy.

We’ve all seen the band’s eerily de-aged digital avatars – or Abbatars, as they persist in calling them – but what form they take has remained classified: the only solid clue was that they weren’t holograms, which hasn’t stopped the British media doggedly referring to them as holograms ever since.

Bjorn Ulvaeus, Agnetha Faltskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad and Benny Andersson at the premiere of Abba Voyage.

Whatever they are, the effect is genuinely jaw-dropping. Watching the four figures on the stage, it’s almost impossible to tell you’re not watching human beings: occasionally, there’s a hint of video game uncanny valley about the projections on the giant screens either side of the stage, but your attention is continually drawn to the human-sized avatars.

They gaze sadly into each other’s eyes during The Winner Takes It All, deliver cheesy speeches between songs – “I wasn’t married at the time,” says the figure representing Björn Ulvaeus, explaining the genesis of Does Your Mother Know, “or was I?” – and protest at the British judges giving them nul points during the 1974 Eurovision song contest. There are even lulls in the performance, just as there are at a “real” gig, usually when the action shifts from the avatars to more straightforward footage: a lengthy animation shown during Eagle providing an opportunity to visit the bar.

Aside from an opening salvo involving 1982’s darkly powerful The Visitors and Hole In Your Soul, a track from 1978’s Abba The Album, the setlist largely sticks to crowd-pleasing greatest hits – Waterloo, SOS, Knowing Me Knowing You – rather than scouring Abba’s oeuvre for deep cuts. This is both smart commercial sense – this is a show designed to run and run, potentially in several countries at once, something you’re never going to achieve if diehard fans are your target market – and probably for the best, given what a treacherous business scouring Abba’s oeuvre for deep cuts is.

Inside the Abba Arena.

You’re as likely to encounter something like Put On Your White Sombrero or King Kong Song – “can’t you hear the beating of the monkey tom-tom?” – as you are anything approaching the sublimity of Lay All Your Love On Me or The Winner Takes It All. Just as the Dolce & Gabbana-designed costumes rework the band’s 70s wardrobe in a tasteful way – evincing a restraint that Abba themselves seldom deployed in their heyday – so the music, performed by a live band, is occasionally faintly tweaked from the recorded versions the vocals are taken from: Voulez-Vous feels punchier and more raw.

By the time the show hits its finale with Thank You For The Music followed by Dancing Queen, any lingering sense that you’re not actually in the presence of Abba has dissolved. It’s so successful that it’s hard not to imagine other artists following suit – you strongly suspect the surviving members of Queen will be on the blower to Industrial Light & Magic before the week’s out.

However, Ulvaeus has already issued a warning to anyone planning on following Abba’s path to resurrect a deceased star: “It is better to do it with someone who is alive because … the measurements in the cranium are the same.” It’s a warning that’s going to go unheeded: access to cranial measurements or not, Voyage is the kind of triumph that’s destined not merely to run and run but be repeatedly copied.

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ABBA's virtual concert spectacular is reportedly coming to Australia

By Bronte Gossling | 4 hours ago

It's a beautiful day to be an ABBA fan living in Australia , with a new report suggesting the Swedish supergroup's virtual concert spectacular is coming to Melbourne.

According to The Age ,  ABBA Voyage is close to signing a deal that would see a permanent arena built at Flemington Racecourse to house ABBA's 90-minute 3D musical experience.

If it eventuates, it would mean Melbourne would be the second city in the world to stage ABBA Voyage .

Watch the video above.

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According to the publication, Michael Bolingbroke – who is the chief executive officer and executive producer of ABBA Voyage – left the show's London headquarters in late April to visit Melbourne, where he's understood to have met with officials from Visit Victoria and the state government, as well as music promoters.

A previous meeting in December is also understood to have occurred about the reported deal.

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ABBA: Then

Multiple sources told the newspaper that a deal was close to being signed, with an official announcement suspected to be made "within weeks".

It's understood the cost of ABBA Voyage could be anywhere from $60 million to $100 million, with the arena and stage technology that was created with the assistance of the company behind Star Wars ' special effects needing to be built.

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Flemington Racecourse, which is accessible by train, is the preferred venue.

It comes as the 50th anniversary of ABBA's 1974 Eurovision win approaches , with the song contest taking place in Sweden this week to honour the group.

ABBA, however, has reportedly declined to perform at the contest this year.

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ABBA the Show

  • February 14, 2012 Setlist

ABBA the Show Setlist at Crocus City Hall, Moscow, Russia

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  • Song played from tape Helikopter Intro Play Video
  • Ring Ring ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Take a Chance on Me ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Knowing Me, Knowing You ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Money, Money, Money ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Fernando ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Honey, Honey ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • SOS ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Intermezzo No. 1 ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Voulez-vous ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Mamma Mia ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Chiquitita ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • I Have a Dream ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • The Winner Takes It All ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Dancing Queen ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight) ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Super Trouper ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • So Long ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Does Your Mother Know ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Song played from tape Eurovision Intro Play Video
  • Waterloo ( ABBA  cover) Play Video
  • Thank You for the Music ( ABBA  cover) Play Video

Edits and Comments

9 activities (last edit by event_monkey , 27 Apr 2024, 05:54 Etc/UTC )

Songs on Albums

  • Chiquitita by ABBA
  • Dancing Queen by ABBA
  • Does Your Mother Know by ABBA
  • Fernando by ABBA
  • Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight) by ABBA
  • Honey, Honey by ABBA
  • I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do by ABBA
  • I Have a Dream by ABBA
  • Intermezzo No. 1 by ABBA
  • Knowing Me, Knowing You by ABBA
  • Mamma Mia by ABBA
  • Money, Money, Money by ABBA
  • Ring Ring by ABBA
  • SOS by ABBA
  • So Long by ABBA
  • Super Trouper by ABBA
  • Take a Chance on Me by ABBA
  • Thank You for the Music by ABBA
  • The Winner Takes It All by ABBA
  • Voulez-vous by ABBA
  • Waterloo by ABBA

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abba voyage concert

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COMMENTS

  1. ABBA Voyage Official Website

    Experience ABBA as digital avatars in a stunning, purpose-built arena in London, UK. Book tickets now for the ground-breaking concert that blends cutting-edge technology and beloved songs.

  2. Your Official First Look at ABBA Voyage. Only at the ABBA ...

    Experience ABBA Voyage live and in person, only at the ABBA Arena, London. "It has to be seen to be believed" - Rolling StoneBook now at ABBAVoyage.com#ABBA ...

  3. ABBA Voyage

    ABBA Voyage (2022-2025) ABBA Voyage is a virtual concert residency by the Swedish pop group ABBA . The concerts feature virtual avatars (dubbed 'ABBAtars'), depicting the group as they appeared in 1979, and utilise vocals re-recorded by the group in a Swedish studio specifically for this show, accompanied by a live instrumental band on stage. [2]

  4. ABBA Voyage: The Journey Is About To Begin

    Discover how ABBA Voyage blends the physical and digital worlds in a revolutionary concert. Watch the official trailer and get ready for the journey.

  5. ABBA Voyage

    Agnetha, Björn, Benny, Anni-Frid.Experience a concert like no other. Book your tickets at ABBAVoyage.com.

  6. ABBA's 'Voyage' Virtual Concert to Go on Tour

    The show, which features ABBA-tars performing their hits in a London arena, has sold over 1 million tickets and will expand to other cities. Universal Music Group chairman confirmed the plans during an earnings call.

  7. ABBA's 'Voyage' Is Everything It's Cracked Up to Be: 'Concert' Review

    ABBA's first concert in 40 years features de-aged avatars of the band members in a futuristic arena. Read Variety's review of the show, which delivers the hits and the visuals, but lacks some classics and interaction.

  8. Abba Voyage: The band's virtual concert needs to be seen to be believed

    Source: ABBA Voyage The show, which takes place in a purpose-built arena in east London, is currently due to run until December 2022. Then, in true Swedish style, the venue can be collapsed into a ...

  9. Abba Voyage Review: No Ordinary Abba Night at the Club

    Abba Voyage is an exercise in symbol worship that separates itself from an ordinary Abba night at the club through state-of-the-art production values. ... recreating a concert experience; the ...

  10. Abba Voyage review: jaw-dropping avatar act that's destined to be

    T he opening of Abba's Voyage show is undoubtedly an event - even the band's most famously publicity-shy member, Agnetha Fältskog, is in attendance - but it's one accompanied by a ...

  11. ABBA Voyage Concert Setlist at ABBA Arena, London on May 6, 2024

    Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically! Get the ABBA Voyage Setlist of the concert at ABBA Arena, London, England on May 6, 2024 and other ABBA Voyage Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  12. ABBA Voyage Tickets, 2024 Concert Tour Dates

    Sunday 01:00 PMSun 1:00 PM 5/19/24, 1:00 PM. London, GB ABBA Arena Abba Voyage. Find Tickets 5/19/24, 1:00 PM. Loaded 20 out of 259 events. More Events. Advertisement. Buy ABBA Voyage tickets from the official Ticketmaster.com site. Find ABBA Voyage tour schedule, concert details, reviews and photos.

  13. ABBA close to landing Flemington as venue for spectacular virtual concert

    Swedish pop group ABBA's spectacular 3D virtual concert ABBA Voyage is close to signing a deal to build a permanent arena at Flemington Racecourse, making Melbourne the second city in the world ...

  14. Voyage (ABBA album)

    Voyage is the ninth studio album by the Swedish pop group ABBA, released 5 November 2021.With ten songs written by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus, it is the group's first album of new material in forty years. The album was supported by the dual single release of "I Still Have Faith in You" and "Don't Shut Me Down", released alongside the album announcement on 2 September 2021.

  15. ABBA Voyage Australia: ABBA's virtual concert spectacular is reportedly

    It's a beautiful day to be an ABBA fan living in Australia, with a new report suggesting the Swedish supergroup's virtual concert spectacular is coming to Melbourne.. According to The Age,  ABBA Voyage is close to signing a deal that would see a permanent arena built at Flemington Racecourse to house ABBA's 90-minute 3D musical experien. If it eventuates, it would mean Melbourne would be ...

  16. ABBA Voyage

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  17. I do, I do, I do love Abba

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  18. BBC Radio 2 listeners vote Dancing Queen their favourite ABBA Song

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  19. ABBA the Show Setlist at Crocus City Hall, Moscow

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  20. THE ABBA SHOW (Moscow live 2012)

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  21. The Real ABBA Tribute in Moscow

    The Real ABBA Tribute am roten Platz in Moskau.

  22. Arame

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