ABBA's fifth album was a marked step forward for the group, having evolved out of Europop music into a world-class rock act over their previous two albums, they now proceeded to absorb and assimilate some of the influences around them, particularly the laid-back California sound of Fleetwood Mac (curiously, like
ABBA, then a band with two couples at its center), as well as some of the attributes of progressive rock. That they did this without compromising their essential virtues as a pop ensemble makes this album seem even more extraordinary, though at the time nobody bothered to analyze it -
The Album was simply an incredibly popular release, yielding two British number one singles in "
The Name of the Game" and "
Take a Chance on Me" (which made the Top Five in America, their second-best showing after "Dancing Queen"), and achieving the quartet's highest-ever showing on the U.S. LP charts, reaching the Top 20 and selling a million copies in six months. The opening number, "
Eagle", dominated by synthesizers and soaring larger-than-life vocal flourishes, is followed by the more lyrical "
Take a Chance on Me", with its luminous a cappella opening. The whole album is like that, effortlessly straddling hard rock, pop/rock, dance-rock, and progressive rock - though the hits tend to stand out in highest relief, there are superb album tracks here, including the driving, lushly harmonized "
Move On" and "
Hole in Your Soul", which provides guitarist Lasse Wellander with a beautiful showcase for his lead electric playing. The second side of
the album is dominated by material from a "mini-musical" called Girl with the Golden Hair that Benny Andersson and Bj?rn Ulvaeus wrote for the concerts on their just-ended tour intended to be used in a dramatically coherent storytelling context. Two of its songs, "
Thank You for the Music" and "I Wonder (Devotion)", are less exciting than the straight rock material found elsewhere on
the album, though the former became a popular concert number for the quartet, while the latter is the kind of lushly melodic, moodily reflective song that could easily have graced a Barbra Streisand album of the era. The closer, "
I'm a Marionette", however, is a startlingly bold attempt to recast the influence of Kurt Weill in a hard rock mode, ending
The Album on a high note, musically and artistically. [
The Album was reissued in October 2001 in a gatefold format in remastered 24-bit digital audio, which reveals extraordinary detail and richness in every track, and with one delightful bonus cut, Agnetha F?ltskog's beguiling Doris Day-style interpretation of "
Thank You for the Music".]
The Album review by allmusic.com