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Well, as far as I know there is only one mix of "Dancing Queen" in English that has ever been officially released. There is the Spanish version that used an alternate take on the backing track. On the original multi-tracks there is a second verse after the instrumental bridge and the "You're a tease , you turn 'em on....verse in the English ...
"Dancing Queen" is in 4/4, the pianoroll starts "on four", that means when they recorded it, it was 1-2-3- Roll, so what we hear is probably some "rest" of whatever they used to count in. It may have been a piano note that Benny played three times before doing the "role".
4.) Abba - Dancing Queen 39.) Harry Nilsson - Without You 91.) Kate Bush - Wuthering Heights 28.) Rod Stewart - Maggie May 89.) Roberta Flack - The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face 2.) George Harrison - My Sweet Lord 64.) Led Zeppelin - Whole Lotta Love 29.) Abba - Waterloo 81.) Christie - Yellow River 65.) Exile - Kiss You All Over
Missing verse in ABBA's Dancing Queen. Discussion in 'Music Corner' started by brinkeguthrie, Feb 12, 2022.
Overall though, the volume is consistent across the set and it makes for a nice listening experience. It's a nice set, especially as a wider introduction to ABBA than Gold. It's also a better master than any of the Gold CD's, particularly the post-2000's reissues which are all loud as hell and after 2005 all use the butchered Dancing Queen.
Huge fan of ABBA but I am very unfamiliar with this edit for Dancing Queen. I've heard some talk of it but I don't exactly know who or what people are talking about. I'm sorry if this has been covered before. Apparently there was some kind of edit to the song that was very unpopular. Can somebody please give me quick rundown of what exactly ...
Growing up in the 1970s, basically, Abba was "Dancing Queen" and "Take a Chance on Me". Two big hits, but overall they were a minor part of the USA music landscape of the late 1970s. As teenagers, we heard about how massive they were in Europe and other parts of the world, but we laughed about that, their sound and their look seemed goofy and ...
Agnetha takes the prize based on her lead vocals on "S.O.S." and "The Winner Takes It All," but Frida certainly had a fabulous voice in her own right, and many of the band's best songs are co-lead-vocals for the two women: "Dancing Queen," "Take a Chance on Me," etc. Of course, the best ABBA lead vocal of all is Björn's on "Does Your Mother Know."
I am curious about "Dancing Queen" (I hope they didn't include ANY of the bad restoration jobs from previous remasters) and the whole "The Visitors" (I hope they used the right master this time). The box set looks fantastic. The LP replica CD sleeves are very nice. Good job so far, POLAR !!!
I've never thought of ABBA as being disco, they seem to have been labelled as disco retrospectively, probably due to their very 70s stage outfits, the music is much more pop/soft rock. Most disco falls into the range of 115-130 beats per minute. Dancing Queen is 101 BPM.