Waterloo (ABBA song)

"Waterloo (Swedish version)"
Single by ABBA
from the album Waterloo
B-side "Honey, Honey"
(Swedish version)
Released 4 March 1974[1]
Format 7" single
Recorded December 17, 1973
Metronome Studios, Stockholm
Genre Pop rock
Length 2:42
Label Polar Music
Writer(s) Benny Andersson
Björn Ulvaeus
Stig Anderson
Producer Benny Andersson
Björn Ulvaeus
ABBA singles chronology
"Another Town, Another Train"
(1973)
"Waterloo (Swedish version)"
(1974)
"Waterloo"
(1974)
"Waterloo (English version)"
Single by ABBA
from the album Waterloo
B-side "Watch Out"
Released 12 March 1974
Format 7" single
Recorded 17 December 1973 at Metronome Studio, Stockholm
Genre Pop rock
Length 2:42
Label Polar Music
ABBA singles chronology
"Waterloo (Swedish version)"
(1974)
"Waterloo"
(1974)
"Honey, Honey"
(1974)
Music sample
"Waterloo (English version)"
Alternative covers
30th anniversary single
"Waterloo"
Eurovision Song Contest 1974 entry
Country Sweden
Artist(s) Benny Andersson,
Björn Ulvaeus,
Agnetha Fältskog,
Anni-Frid Lyngstad
As ABBA
Language Swedish
Composer(s) Benny Andersson,
Björn Ulvaeus
Lyricist(s) Stikkan Anderson
Conductor Sven-Olof Walldoff
Finals performance
Final result 1st
Final points 24
Appearance chronology
◄ You're Summer (1973)   
Jennie, Jennie (1975) ►

"Waterloo" was the first single from Swedish pop group ABBA's second album Waterloo, and their first for Epic and Atlantic. This was also the first single to be credited as "ABBA".

The song won ABBA the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest on 6 April and began their path to worldwide fame. The Swedish version single was coupled with "Honey, Honey" (Swedish version), while the English version featured "Watch Out" as the B-side.

The single became their first #1 hit in several countries, reached the U.S. top 10 and went on to sell nearly six million copies making it one of the best-selling singles of all time.

Contents

History

"Waterloo" was originally written as a song for the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest, after the group finished third with "Ring Ring" the previous year in the Swedish pre-selection contest, Melodifestivalen 1973. Since it focused on lead vocalists Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson chose it in place of another of their songs, "Hasta Mañana". "Waterloo" is about a girl who is about to surrender to romance, as Napoleon had to surrender at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.

The song proved to be a good choice. It won Melodifestivalen 1974 (in Swedish) in February and won the Eurovision Song Contest 1974 (ESC) final on 6 April by six points.

"Waterloo" was originally written with simultaneous rock music and jazz beats (unusual for an ABBA song); this was later discarded in favour of more disco-esque rhythms. The song broke the "dramatic ballad" tradition of the Eurovision Song Contest by its flavour and rhythm, as well as by its performance: ABBA gave the audience something that had never been seen before in ESC: flashy costumes (including silver platform boots), a group not singing in their native language, plus a catchy uptempo song and even simple choreography.

Though it isn't well-known, Polar accidentally released a different version of "Waterloo" shortly after ABBA's Eurovision win before replacing it with the more famous version. The alternate version had a harder rock sound, omitting the saxophones, plus an additional "oh yeah" in the verses. The alternate version was commercially released in 2005 as part of The Complete Studio Recordings box set. However, it was this version that ABBA performed in the 1979 Europe/North American tour.

Reception

The "Waterloo" single introduced the world to the phenomenon that was to become ABBA. The song shot to #1 in the UK and stayed there for two weeks, becoming the first of the band's nine British #1's, and the 16th biggest selling single of the year in the UK[2] It also hit the top of the charts in Belgium, Finland, West Germany, Ireland, Norway, South Africa and Switzerland, while reaching the Top 3 in Austria, France, the Netherlands, Spain, and ABBA's native Sweden. (The tune didn't reach #1 in their home country, its Swedish (#2) & English (#3) versions were beat out for the top spot by the Waterloo album [At the time Sweden had a combined Album and Singles Chart].) The song also spent 11 weeks on Svensktoppen (24 March - 2 June 1974), including 7 weeks at #1.[3] Surprisingly, the song never made a huge impact in Italy, only reaching #14. In fact, ABBA would only achieve Top 10 success in Italy 3 times.

But the song's appeal transcended Europe; unlike other Eurovision-winning tunes, which are usually ignored outside the continent, "Waterloo" also reached the Top 10 in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Zimbabwe and even the United States (it remains the only Eurovision winner to be an American Top 40 hit, peaking at #6). "Waterloo" is the only Eurovision song to reach the Top 10 in 15 countries.

The Waterloo album performed similarly well in Europe, although in America it failed to match the success of the single. Though it would be another year before the group repeated their success, "Waterloo" introduced the world to a fresh-faced, vibrant group of individuals who were determined not to be Eurovision one-hit wonders.

ABBA had originally cited the Wizzard song "See My Baby Jive" as influences; in the wake of their Eurovision victory, were quoted as saying that it would not surprise them if artists such as Wizzard would consider entering the Eurovision contest in future.

In 1994, "Waterloo" (along with several other ABBA hits) was included in the soundtrack of the film Muriel's Wedding. It was re-released in 2004 (with the same B-side), to celebrate its 30th anniversary, reaching #20 on the UK charts.

On 22 October 2005, during the 50th celebration of the Eurovision Song Contest, "Waterloo" was chosen as the best song in the competition's history.

Tracklisting

Swedish Version

a. Waterloo (Swedish Version) b. Honey Honey (Swedish Version)

English Version

a. Waterloo (English Version) b. Watch Out

Official versions

Release history

Region Date Title Label Format Catalog
Sweden 4 March 1974 "Waterloo" (Swedish) / "Honey, Honey" (Swedish) Polar Single POS 1186
Sweden 4 March 1974 "Waterloo" (English) / "Watch Out" Polar Single POS 1187
UK 1974 "Waterloo" / "Watch Out" Epic Single EPC 2240
USA 1974 "Waterloo" / "Watch Out" Atlantic Single 45-3035
West Germany 1974 "Waterloo" (German) / "Watch Out" Polydor Single 2040 116
France 1974 "Waterloo" (French) / "Gonna Sing You My Lovesong" Vogue Single 45. X. 3104

Chart positions

Chart (1974) Position
Australian Singles Chart 4
Austrian Singles Chart 2
Belgian Singles Chart 1
British Singles Chart 1
Canadian Singles Chart 7
Dutch Singles Chart 2
Finnish Singles Chart 1
French Singles Chart 3
German Singles Chart 1
Netherlands 1
Irish Singles Chart 1
Italian Singles Chart 14
New Zealand Singles Chart 3
Norwegian Singles Chart 1
Rhodesian Singles Chart 2
South African Singles Chart 1
Spanish Singles Chart 3
Swedish Singles Chart 2 (Swedish)
3 (English)
Swiss Singles Chart 1
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 6

Remakes

Live cover performances

Appearances in other media

External links

References

Preceded by
"Devil Gate Drive" by Suzi Quatro
Norwegian VG-lista Singles Chart number-one single
8 April 1974 – 27 May 1974
Succeeded by
"Seasons In The Sun" by Terry Jacks
Preceded by
"Tchip Tchip" by Cash & Carry
Swiss Singles Chart number-one single
24 April 1974 – 19 June 1974
Preceded by
"Seasons In The Sun" by Terry Jacks
Irish Singles Chart number-one single
30 April 1974
Succeeded by
"Any Dream Will Do" by Joe Cuddy
Preceded by
"The Most Beautiful Girl" by Charlie Rich
Belgian Flemish VRT Top 30 number-one single
27 April 1974 – 25 May 1974
Succeeded by
"Seasons In The Sun" by Terry Jacks
Preceded by
"Seasons In The Sun" by Terry Jacks
UK Singles Chart number-one single
4 May 1974 – 17 May 1974
Succeeded by
"Sugar Baby Love" by The Rubettes
Preceded by
"Seasons In The Sun" by Terry Jacks
German Singles Chart number-one single (first run)
7 June 1974
Succeeded by
"Seasons In The Sun" by Terry Jacks
German Singles Chart number-one single (second run)
21 June 1974 – 7 July 1974
Succeeded by
"Sugar Baby Love" by The Rubettes
Awards
Preceded by
"Sommaren som aldrig säger nej" by Malta
Melodifestivalen winners
1974
Succeeded by
"Jennie, Jennie" by Lasse Berghagen
Preceded by
"Tu te reconnaîtras" by Anne-Marie David
Eurovision Song Contest winners
1974
Succeeded by
"Ding Ding-A-Dong" by Teach-In