[1] Smoke On The Water / Mamma Mia - 4:29
[2] Woman From Tokyo / Does Your Mother Know - 3:36
[3] Tush / I Do I Do I Do I Do I Do - 4:35
[4] Enter Sandman / Take A Chance On Me - 3:53
[5] The Winner Takes It All - 4:25
[6] God Of Thunder / S.O.S - 4:03
[7] Ballroom Blitz / Dancing Queen - 3:08
[8] Ain't Talking About Love / Money Money Money - 3:40
[9] Breaking The Law / Ring Ring - 3:15
[10] Heartbreaker / Knowing Me Knowing You - 4:09
[11] The Winner Takes It All - 4:26
I have had this album for nearly a year now (thanks Phil!) and have put
off doing a review, due to the cult nature of the album and the fact
that there always seemed something more pressing that needed the
attention. But after putting up a soundbyte last week of the Enter
Sandman track, and the unequivocally enthusiastically unanimous
response, here is a full review of the album I describe as the ultimate
cult classic. I can't fault a single aspect of this release and feel it
is well worthy of the mark imposed upon it and will live up to your
expectations, as long as you have a sense of humor and a sense of
adventure! The Black Sweden are a group of top Swedish session
musicians that masquerade as a band and play the odd summer festival
and random gigs paying tribute to the ultimate in Swedish musical acts
- Abba.
Those responsible for this remain a mystery. Their names in the liner
notes are there to put us off the scent - Dr A Force, Sir Richard
Fireburn, Johnny Flash & Steve Speed. Only one name can be placed
elsewhere. Steve Speed is the drummer for new Swedish rock Gods Kharma.
Firstly a thought or two on Abba. There is no denying that the nucleus
of that group, Benny and Bjorn wrote over many years, some of the best
pop songs ever. I rate them as in the same bracket as Lennon/McCartney
as far as their ability to be able to sculpture a great hook out of
thin air. The band were also light years ahead of their time in their
usage of studio technology, overdubs, harmony vocals and mutli-layered
vocals. That knack has allowed the songs to endure over the decades to
a point where they are still very relevant today and have not even
dated. That's the pop angle covered. So how many of you rockers out
there have been closet fans and have always wished to hear the same
passion in those songs, yet with a hard edged guitar or pounding rhythm
section added for good measure?
Abba have been the subject of a thousand cover versions, including even
Yngwie Malmsteen and a more recently released heavy metal tribute to
them. But for us melodic rock heads, this is it. This is the mother of
all tribute albums. This rocks hard. This album turns Abba songs into
something that wouldn't sound out of place on a Van Halen or Night
Ranger album. This is not you average tribute. You can't help but
listen to this with a grin on your face. Plus every time I play it in
public or to a mate, the reaction is always the same. What the *#@&
is this??!! And - where can I get a copy? Why the such enthusiastic
reaction?
Well, with this tribute to Abba, there is a twist in the tale. These
guys are classic rockers, and what better way to pay tribute to their
rock peers as well as their countries best selling export, than to
combine them in the one album. That's right, each track is not just a
straight rocked up version of a Abba song. Each track is a combination
of a classic hard rock song and one Abba song. This is where the
brilliance of the album, the concept of it and indeed the guys playing
this is found. The intro to every song is a classic rock song, before
they break into the Abba track. But it doesn't end there. During
instrumental breaks, chorus bridges, lead guitar solos and even at the
end of some tracks, the guys break back into that classic rock song.
Added to that, each Abba song is basically played out in the style,
pace and rhythm of the original rock track. Brilliant! Genius!
This review is getting way to long, so let's talk tracks...
The album opens with the unmistakable riffs from Smoke On The Water.
But it's hardly a minute before the harmonies of Mama Mia take over. I
have never heard the song sung with such conviction and passion!
Next victim and the second Deep Purple song of the album, Woman From
Tokyo heads into a dark and heavy and more uptempo version of Does Your
Mother Know.
Next track starter Tush soon breaks into a fired up version of the very
poppy and quite cheesy I Do I Do I Do. Just what the original deserves!
One of the best tracks of the album is this one. The pounding beat of
Enter Sandman intertwined with the harmonies of Take A Chance On Me.
This version I have to say - rocks big time!
The Winner Takes It All is the only track on the album that is played
in a straight fashion. This is an acoustic driven rock ballad version
of the song, in full serious heartfelt manner. It's the only track that
doesn't take the piss.
Next track they are right back into it. Kiss' God Of Thunder intro's
into the classic hit SOS, sung as you have never heard it before. This
is a personal favorite along with Enter Sandman / Take A Chance On Me.
The raw vocal passion on this is sensational and the song is
transformed into a dark moody rocker.
Another unmistakable intro, this time from Ballroom Blitz leads into a 70's glam rock version of the cult classic Dancing Queen.
Another of my personal favorites is an uptempo rocking version of Money
Money Money, done with the intro to Van Halen's classic Ain't Talking
About Love. The whole song features Eddie VH like guitar riffing and
refrains from the track.
Judas Priest's Breaking The Law is used briefly to introduce Ring Ring,
which plays out as expected, just with an obviously harder rock edge.
Led Zeppelin's Heartbreaker starts of a much darker and heavy rocking
Knowing Me Knowing You. Another light pop song turned into a
gut-wrenching dark rock track. Another classic!
The final track is a softer totally unplugged version of The Winner
Takes It All. Not sure why it has been repeated, but maybe this was
launched as a single in Sweden.
Either way it is a little bit of a disappointing way to end an
otherwise totally flawless album. We'll take off one point for that.
BOTTOM LINE: If you love classic hard rock, love a catchy pop tune,
love a good party album and have a seriously warped sense of humor,
this is an essential purchase. If only just to put on and watch your
friend's faces turn in horror when they hear their favorite rock tracks
go sour. Just fantastic. The ultimate party record.
ESSENTIAL FOR: Every rock fan with a sense of humor and an ear for the classics
Like Abba? Like Metallica? Ever wish you could hear the two
together? The Black Sweden has made that wish a reality.
Borrowing their album title from the Abba greatest hits collection of
the same name, these Swedes have concocted a riotous collection of
heavy metal Abba songs. How? First, imagine the riff for
Metallica’s “Enter Sandman”. Now imagine the
opening chants of “Take A Chance On Me” getting louder in
the mix as “Enter Sandman” comes crashing to life.
You should get the picture. Now repeat with such pairings as
“Woman From Tokyo/Does Your Mother Know” and
“Ain’t Talking About Love/Money, Money, Money”.
In the few instances where the combination sounds awkward, it may only
be because the songs are so familiar that they’re expected to
sound a certain way. This would be a great party album, if
you’d like to mess with peoples’ heads. For fans of
Sweet, Deep Purple, Metallica, Kiss, Judas Priest, Led Zeppelin and ZZ
Top. Oh yeah, and ABBA!
Manchmal ist die Idee so einfach. Allerdings muß man erst einmal
drauf kommen. So wie die Jungs von THE BLACK, die auf „Sweden
Gold“ Abba coverten. – Jetzt dürften einige stutzen.
Abba covern? Das macht so ziemlich jede vierte Band auf der Welt.
Sicher, allerdings mixen die nicht „Mamma Mia“ mit
„Smoke On The Water“ von Deep Purple oder „Take A
Chance On me“ mit „Enter Sandman“ von Metallica oder
„S.O.S.“ mit „God Of Thunder“ von Kiss. Geht
nicht? – Doch. Und es ist unterhaltsam, wie kaum eine Cover-Idee
zuvor. Mit dieser CD mischt man jede Party auf, selbst dort, wo
Heavy-Metal-Fans eher spärlich gesät sind, die Gäste
sich aber halbwegs mit Abba-Hits auskennen.
Logisch, daß solch musikalische Verquickungen wie auf
„Gold“ ein gewisses musik-theoretisches Wissen
voraussetzen. Das haben die Mannen von THE BLACK, ebenso wie ein gutes
Gefühl für die dosierte Härte zum jeweiligen Song, denn
man kann Kiss ja nicht spielen wie Judas Priest („Breaking The
Law/Ring Ring“) oder Metallica. Ihre Instrumente beherrschen sie
sowieso perfekt, daß man meinen möchte, die könnten
selbst die Backstreet Boys mit Dream Theater kreuzen.
Unbedingt reinhören und am besten kaufen. Ist ein absoluter Knaller.