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ABBA: You Can Dance is a dance and music rhythm game for the Wii, developed by Ubisoft Paris and Ubisoft Bucharest and published by Ubisoft. It released in November 2011 in all territories, and is a spin-off of the Just Dance series , featuring 26 songs by the Swedish pop group ABBA .
The music video for "I Still Have Faith in You", featuring footage of the band during their performing years and a first look at the ABBAtars, earned over a million views in its first three hours. [130] "Don't Shut Me Down" became the first ABBA release since October 1978 to top the singles chart in Sweden. [131]
SingStar ABBA is a singing/voice simulation video game released in 2008 for the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation 3. [1] It was the first band specific SingStar game, [ 2 ] followed by SingStar Queen in 2009.
Like most of ABBA's videos, the video was directed and shot by Lasse Hallström. During the video, the four members of the group are shown playing the board game "Fia-spel", the Scandinavian version of the German board game "Mensch ärgere dich nicht", which is a variation of the English board game Ludo and American Parcheesi.
Björn Kristian Ulvaeus was born in Gothenburg [2] on 25 April 1945. At aged 6, he moved with his family to Västervik, Kalmar County. [3] His parents were Aina Eliza Viktoria (née Bengtsson; 1909–2005) and Erik Gunnar Ulvaeus (1912–1999).
"Waterloo" is a song recorded by Swedish pop group ABBA, with music composed by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus and lyrics written by Stikkan Anderson. It is first single of the group's second album of the same name, and their first under the Atlantic label in the United States. This was also the first single to be credited to the group ...
"Knowing Me, Knowing You" is a song recorded by Swedish pop group ABBA, [2] released in February 1977 as the third single from the group's fourth album, Arrival (1976). It was written by Benny Andersson , Björn Ulvaeus and Stig Anderson , with Anni-Frid Lyngstad singing the lead vocals.
By peaking at No. 3 in the UK, "Money, Money, Money" was the only ABBA single between "Mamma Mia" in January 1976 and "Take a Chance on Me" in February 1978 not to top the UK chart. [7] A British poll of "The Nation's Favourite ABBA song" in December 2010 saw "Money, Money, Money" placed at #22 (out of 25).