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  1. ABBA Dancing Queen Gimme Gimme A Man After Midnight Angel Eyes Mamma Mia The Winner Takes It Lay All Your Love Take a Chance on Me Waterloo Chiquitita Super ...

    • 4 min
    • Rob Sheffield
    • “DANCING QUEEN” (1976) Sometimes a band’s most famous song is also their best. Since ABBA were the poppermost of pop stars, making music that belonged to absolutely everybody, it makes poetic sense their most brilliant moment is also their most universally beloved.
    • “KNOWING ME, KNOWING YOU” (1976) Skintight Lycra pantsuits and tragic heartbreak: the ultimate ABBA combination. Like Carole King on Tapestry or Fleetwood Mac on Rumours, ABBA layer their lush 1970s harmonies to kiss off a broken marriage.
    • “THE NAME OF THE GAME” (1977) Having tried everything else a time or two, ABBA made their big prog statement on the 1977 opus that they modestly titled The Album.
    • “SOS” (1975) Play this back to back with anything by Joy Division or the early Cure and you can hear how goth ABBA were. “SOS” defines the high-gloss Nordic melancholy that made them so influential for the new wave and postpunk artists who followed, as those lonely piano notes build up into an overload of synth bombast.
  2. Greatest Hits is a compilation album by the Swedish pop group ABBA. It was originally released in Scandinavia on 17 November 1975 [4] and in other parts of the world in 1976, notably the UK on 10 April, and on 18 September in the US and Canada. The 1976 version of the album included the band's most recent single "Fernando".

    • March 1972 – September 1975
    • Pop
    • 17 November 1975
  3. Here We Go Again (The Movie Soundtrack feat. the Songs of ABBA) 2018. ABBA Gold: Greatest Hits. 1992. Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again (The Movie Soundtrack) [Singalong Version] 2018. Voulez-Vous (Bonus Track Version) 1979.

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