Tracklist
A1 | The Visitors | 5:49 | |
A2 | Head Over Heels | 3:45 | |
A3 | When All Is Said And Done | 3:20 | |
A4 | Soldiers | 4:38 | |
B1 | I Let The Music Speak | 5:20 | |
B2 | One Of Us | 3:55 | |
B3 | Two For The Price Of One | 3:36 | |
B4 | Slipping Through My Fingers | 3:51 | |
B5 | Like An Angel ing Through My Room | 3:25 |
Companies, etc.
- Phonographic Copyright ℗ – Polar Music International AB
- Copyright © – Polar Music International AB
- Published By – Union Songs AB
- Recorded At – Polar Studios
- Mixed At – Polar Studios
- Lacquer Cut At – Cutting Room
- Printed By – SIB-Tryck AB
- Pressed By – Skandinaviska Grammophon AB
Credits
- Artwork [Painting In Background] – Julius Kronberg
- Bass – Rutger Gunnarsson
- Design [Album Design] – Rune Söderqvist
- Engineer – Michael B. Tretow
- Guitar [Acoustic] – Lasse Wellander
- Guitar [Electric] – Lasse Wellander
- Keyboards, Synthesizer – Benny Andersson
- Lacquer Cut By – PS*
- Percussion – Åke Sundqvist
- Photography By – Lars Larsson (2)
- Written-By, Arranged By, Producer – Benny Andersson & Björn Ulvaeus*
Notes
Digitally recorded and mixed at Polar Music Studios, Stockholm.
Photo at Julius Kronenbergs Atelje, Skansen, Stockholm.
℗ & © 1981 Polar Music International AB, Stockholm.
Released with a printed cardboard inner sleeve with lyrics.
Runouts are stamped, except for the part "OR" and "POLS 342 B"
The painting seen in the background is in fact - The God Eros at Dawn (1905) by Swedish artist Julius Kronberg.
Photo at Julius Kronenbergs Atelje, Skansen, Stockholm.
℗ & © 1981 Polar Music International AB, Stockholm.
Released with a printed cardboard inner sleeve with lyrics.
Runouts are stamped, except for the part "OR" and "POLS 342 B"
The painting seen in the background is in fact - The God Eros at Dawn (1905) by Swedish artist Julius Kronberg.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Rights Society: n©b
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 1): POLS-342-A CUTTING ROOM PS Å OR
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 1): POLS 342B CUTTING ROOM SWEDEN Å
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, variant 2): POLS-342-A CUTTING ROOM PS OR
- Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, variant 2): POLS 342 B CUTTING ROOM SWEDEN Å
Other Versions (5 of 252)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
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The Visitors (LP, Album, Stereo) | Epic | EPC 10032 | UK | 1981 | ||
Recently Edited
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The Visitors (Cassette, Album) | Polydor | 3100 622 | Netherlands | 1981 | ||
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The Visitors (LP, Album, Stereo, Injection Moulded Label) | Polydor | 2311 122 | 1981 | |||
Recently Edited
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The Visitors (LP, Album, Stereo) | Vogue | 540020 | 1981 | |||
Recently Edited
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The Visitors (LP, Album, Stereo, SP - Specialty Pressing) | Atlantic | SD 19332 | US | 1981 |
Recommendations
Reviews
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Contrary to the previous reviewer, and with respect to subjectivity and personal taste, for me this LP is superlative of its genre. Far from being ‘half baked’ with genius ‘sparsely diluted throughout it’, I have always found this work deeply moving and for what was considered their swan-song for over 40 years an entirely appropriate and superlative end point to a staggeringly brilliant library of pop music. The personal nature of these songs shines through in every song. Indeed by the time the metronome stops at the end of the final track it seemed as though we would never hear from them ever again. It is no surprise that the awesome London ‘Voyage’ stage show starts with ‘The Visitors’ and the reception this always gets is indicative of the affection ABBA fans have for this album. Back in the 70’s and early 80s the band’s records weren’t always treated with the respect time has conferred upon them - and many considered their songs as lightweight. However cultural popularity and longevity has surely proved these considerations to be an underestimation. Though my record collection is not inconsiderable having kept everything since my first single in 1969 ‘The Visitors’ is way up there in my Top 10 favourite LPs of all time. An emotional tour de force it is as close to pop perfection as many will ever get - in short, a masterpiece.
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By the time of their last (for nearly 40 years) album, Abba’s expertise in crafting successful music was as sharp as a knife. It was time for them to face the challenge of remaining relevant in the uncertain ‘80s.
Despite it’s not their best record by any means, the musical genius of Björn and Benny is still there in “The visitors” lp, though sparsely diluted throughout it.
The title track is the modern clever electronic feel the band should have persued if Abba was to continue on. The lyrics tell about the fears of change and menaceful outsiders, a cold war paraphrase, it refers indeed to what the band knew best, the music business war fought to stay at the top in a brand new decade of new sounds when lacereted by the strains of two estranged couples.
“Head over heels” is the baroque delight for reassuring the traditional Abba fan, it’s not a leap forward but neither a step back, it’s simply a contemplation of an achieved status.
“When all is said and done” is a nice epic with an electronic sensibility, but yet another marital disillusion manifesto.
“Soldiers” is fascinating and gets back on the right track, while “I let the music speak”, beautifully sung by Frida, has a stage melodrama construction that so much anticipates the musical ambitions later displayed in the “Chess” opus.
“One of us” is a sign of mercenary routine, as bland as unnecessary could be this very simple and cheesy melody that’s heading nowhere.
“Two for the price of one” is an ironic number that masks a failure in building a concrete social observation song.
“Slipping through my fingers” is a good performance from Agnetha but the song moves a bit tired and too lighthearted, similarly to “Like an angel ing through my room”, another half baked ballad and a subdued demise.
In the end, although this album carries the seeds of how Abba could have evolved, it justifies the fact the band was put on a hold because it’s ultimately an unfulfilled promise. 3 stars out of 5. -
Edited 7 years agoThe music industry's first ever album released on compact disc, the group's swan song record with a new wave flavour (traces of Sparks, Gary Numan, Ultravox and Data are particularly daring and clever). Personally, I was never into ABBA, despite respect and iration for them although respect and iration was never actually a conscious perception. I guess, thanks are partially due to Erasure - who remain the perfect mirror image of the Swedish hit factory, a shadow of which is very evident in the UK duo's witty electro-pop catalogue.
Love ABBA or not, there is no hit of theirs you wouldn't occasionally whistle along - their 70s stuff so pure and honest, carefree and bittersweet, but it is "The Visitors" with an edge they only partially showed in their previous, and much beloved hit records. Here the melancholy cries volumes and while in typical ABBA fashion, the arrangements/lyrics are added a stronger scent of darkness. The cover photo adds to the tone as the music's perfect match. A snapshot of the group absent from each other - a farewell to it all, the success and the heartbreak, a four letter word that now stands for "eternity". -
This album is Abba's most sophisticated work. The album feels very musical and grown up (except for "Two For The Price Of One"). The album sounds like it is a mini musical (not suprising that benny and bjorn would create "Chess" with Tim Rice three years later). The album is full of elements ranging from musical theatre, opera, classical music, moods and atmospheres mixed with a pop sensibility. This is the only album I can listen to by Abba and not hear Eurovision cliche's, with the exception of "Two For The Price Of One", the worst part of the album. This is an album that is worth listening to once in your life. An interesting album full of sophistication and well crafted pieces from an established pop act.
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