"Ring Ring" tells of a lover waiting all alone by the telephone for the object of her desire to call.
[1]
History[edit]
After the success of "
People Need Love" in 1972 by Björn & Benny, Agnetha & Anni-Frid (as the group was then known), the group's manager,
Stig Anderson, realised the potential of coupling the vocal talents of the women with the writing talents of the men. It was then decided that the quartet would record an LP. This eventually turned out to be the album
Ring Ring.
Andersson, Ulvaeus and Anderson were invited to submit a song for the selection process for choosing the Swedish entry for the 1973
Eurovision Song Contest. After several days, Andersson and Ulvaeus came up with the tune for the Swedish version of "Ring Ring", with the working title "Klocklåt" (Clock Tune). Stig Anderson wrote the lyrics with the intention of making a "poppy" song, trying to remove the pomp and circumstance surrounding the Eurovision Song Contest at the time.
After this, the song was retitled "Ring Ring". To make it more accessible to a universal audience, Anderson asked American songwriter Neil Sedaka, together with his songwriting partner, Phil Cody, to pen the lyrics for an English version.
On 10 January 1973, the song was recorded at the Metronome Studio in
Stockholm.
Michael B. Tretow, the studio engineer, collaborated with Andersson and Ulvaeus over many of their subsequent singles and albums. Tretow had read a book about record producer
Phil Spector, famed for his "
Wall of Sound" treatment to the songs that he produced. While Spector used several musicians playing the same instruments in the same recording studio at the same time, this was far too expensive for this case. Thus, Tretow's solution was to simply record the song's backing track twice, in order to achieve an orchestral sound. By changing the speed of the tape between the overdubs, making the instruments marginally out of tune, this increased the effect. This was unlike anything that had been done before in Swedish music.
However, when Björn & Benny, Agnetha & Anni-Frid performed "Ring Ring" in the Swedish heats on 10 February 1973,
[2] they only finished third. Nevertheless, the song fared much better in the Swedish charts, both in its Swedish and English language incarnations, where it hit number one and number two respectively.
It was only now the quartet decided that performing as a group was a serious and realistic idea. They toured Sweden, and despite the failure of "Ring Ring" to represent the country at the 1973 Eurovision Song Contest, they began to prepare themselves for 1974's competition, with "
Waterloo".
Reception and other versions[edit]
Though "Ring Ring" did not get the opportunity to represent
Sweden in the 1973 Eurovision Song Contest, the subtitled Swedish Version ("Bara Du Slog En Signal") performed extremely well in the Swedish charts, giving the quartet their first #1 hit. The English version did almost as well, peaking at #2 in
Sweden,
Norway and
Austria, and reaching the Top 10 in the
Netherlands,
South Africa and Rhodesia (now
Zimbabwe) charts. (On the official South African year-end chart for 1974, "Ring Ring" was placed 13th; while its successor "
Waterloo" was placed as the 14th best selling singles for that year). It did, however, top the charts in
Belgium, becoming the first of 16 chart-toppers for ABBA in that country. It was the group's first release in the
UK in October 1973, but failed to chart, selling only five thousand copies.
[3] A remixed version of the song, later described by
Carl Magnus Palm as having a "superfluous saxophone solo and leaden sound",
[4]reached #32 in June 1974, with "
Rock'n Roll Band" issued on the B-side (after the #1 success of "Waterloo"), and would later hit #7 in
Australia during the height of "ABBAmania". A second remixed version, different than but based on the one released in the UK, was included as a bonus track on the original
U.S. and
Canadian release of the
Waterloo album. A German-language version of the song was also recorded, and was released in what was then
West Germany, but failed to chart. A Spanish version was also recorded (with lyrics by Doris Band), but this was not released until the 1993 CD compilation
Más ABBA Oro in selected countries, and internationally on the 1999 edition of
ABBA Oro: Grandes Éxitos.
The master tapes of the 1974 remix were presumed missing, or at least unobtainable, for some years. For this reason, it did not appear on the 1994 4-CD box-set
Thank You for the Music. In 1999, a CD box-set of singles was released. The 1974 single remix was included, but had been mastered from a vinyl single as the master tape was still not available. However, in 2001,
The Definitive Collection was released which finally included the 1974 single remix sourced from the master tape. It was later revealed on Carl Magnus Palm's website that
Polar Music had acquired the single master tapes from
Epic Records in the UK. This had presumably occurred between 1999 and 2001.
Track listings[edit]
No comments:
Post a Comment