"
The Name of the Game" is a 1977 song by Swedish pop group
ABBA, and was released as the first single from the group's fifth studio album,
ABBA: The Album. It became a UK number one, topping the
UK Singles Chart for four weeks in November 1977.
[4]
History[edit]
"The Name of the Game", first called "A Bit of Myself", was the first song to be recorded for ABBA's fifth studio album, following the band's European and Australian tour. It was their most complex composition yet – with
Agnetha Fältskog and
Anni-Frid Lyngstad sharing the lead vocals but with solo passages from both women – and contained the influences of the laid-back California sound of the day.
[citation needed]
The opening riff on bass and synthesizer is inspired by Stevie Wonder's "
I Wish" from the 1976 album
Songs in the Key of Life, and both Andersson and Ulvaeus have acknowledged being inspired by Wonder's music during this part of ABBA's career.
[citation needed]
A preliminary version of "The Name of the Game" was worked into the 1977 feature film
ABBA: The Movie, for which it was written. When it was eventually finished, it was released as the lead single from
ABBA: The Album in October 1977. Originally, another track entitled "Hole in Your Soul" was intended for release, but those plans were soon shelved. "The Name of the Game" was released with a live version of "I Wonder (Departure)" as the
B-side. This B-side was one of several songs written for the mini-musical
The Girl With The Golden Hair, written by Ulvaeus and Andersson and originally performed by ABBA on their 1977 world tour. The recording used on the "The Name of the Game" single was recorded at Sydney Showground, Sydney, Australia on 3 or 4 March 1977. A studio recorded version of the song was included on
ABBA: The Album.
"The Name of The Game" also marks the last time Stig Anderson helped with the lyrics of a single.
[citation needed]
Reception[edit]
The song was a Top 5 hit in ABBA's native Sweden, Belgium, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, South Africa and Rhodesia, while peaking inside the Top 10 in Australia,
Germany, Switzerland and Mexico.
[6] On the US
Billboard Hot 100, "The Name of the Game" almost reached the Top 10, peaking at No. 12 on 11–18 March 1978.
An edited version of "The Name of the Game", which omitted the entire second verse of the song, reducing the length of the track from its original 4:51 to 3:58, was released on a promotional single in the US. The US Promo Edit of "The Name of the Game" then – apparently by mistake – found its way onto the 1982
Polar Music compilation
The Singles: The First Ten Years,
[citation needed] and then onto a number of hits packages issued on both vinyl and CD in the 1980s and early 1990s. This edit also appears on the original 1992 version of the group's
Gold: Greatest Hits album. Not until the 1999 remastered edition of
Gold: Greatest Hits did the song appear in its entirety on that compilation.
[citation needed]
When
PolyGram released the first digitally remastered CD version of
The Album in 1997, the fact that one of the nine tracks was nearly a minute shorter than it was supposed to be somehow managed to elude the remastering engineers – the US Promo Edit was again used by mistake and the first edition was subsequently withdrawn.
[7]
"The Name of the Game" was
sampled in 1996 by the
Fugees for their hit "Rumble in the Jungle", the first time that an ABBA song had been legally sampled by another act.
[8]
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