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1-46 of 46
- An incompetent radio DJ tries to get an interview with the Swedish pop group during their famous week-long 1977 tour of Australia.
- Music video for Madonna's massively successful first single from the 'Confessions On A Dance Floor' album.
- The history of ABBA's success told in retrospective by its former members.
- A collection of videos spanning Madonna's career, from 1983 to 2009.
- ABBA's 1979 tour of North America and Europe, with emphasis on performances at Wembley Arena, London.
- Video promo for ABBA's "The Day Before You Came".
- The music video for the song "Dancing Queen" by the Swedish pop group ABBA from the 1976 album "Arrival".
- A compilation of music videos by ABBA.
- This documentary reflects the peaks and troughs of the Swedish super group's popularity over the decades, as well as the quartet's turbulent years together.
- "Lay All Your Love on Me" is a song by Swedish pop group ABBA from their seventh studio album, Super Trouper.
- "Gimme. Gimme. Gimme. (A Man After Midnight)" was written and composed by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus, with the lead vocal sung by Agnetha Fältskog. Agnetha, as the narrator, weaves the image of a lonely young woman who longs for a romantic relationship and views her loneliness as a forbidding darkness of night, even drawing parallels to how the happy endings of movie stars are so different from her own existence.
- "Under Attack" was the last widely released single by Swedish pop group ABBA.
- "The Winner Takes It All" is a song recorded by the Swedish pop group ABBA. Released as the first single from the group's Super Trouper album on 21 July 1980, it is a ballad in the key of F-sharp major, reflecting the end of a romance. A music video to promote the song was filmed in July 1980 on Marstrand, an island on the Swedish west coast. It was directed by Lasse Hallström.
- "Waterloo" is the first single from the Swedish pop group ABBA's second album, Waterloo and their first under the Epic and Atlantic labels. This was also the first single to be credited to the group performing under the name ABBA. "Waterloo" was written specifically to be entered into the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest. "Waterloo" is about a woman who "surrenders" to a man and promises to love him, referencing Napoleon's surrender at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
- The video for "Money, Money, Money" was inspired by the film Cabaret, showing Frida wearing a hat typical of the 1920s. The video varies from her determined presence in reality during the verses, to the dream sequences about money and "the good life" in the chorus. The video's director, Lasse Hallström, later acknowledged "Money, Money, Money" as the best ABBA video he ever directed.
- Video promo for "Head Over Heels" by Swedish pop group ABBA from their final studio album, The Visitors.
- "One of Us" is the first single from Swedish pop group ABBA's final studio album The Visitors.
- "SOS" was the third single from Swedish pop group ABBA's self-titled 1975 album.
- "Take a Chance on Me" is a song by the Swedish pop group ABBA. It was released in January 1978 as the second single from their fifth studio album ABBA: The Album. The song has been featured on a number of ABBA compilations such as Gold: Greatest Hits. Written and recorded in 1977 by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus, it opens as a cold intro and was sung by Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad, with Fältskog delivering the solo passages.
- This 1981 television special features the Swedish pop group being interviewed by American television personality Dick Cavett. ABBA also took to the stage, performing nine songs in a so-called "mini-concert".
- Spanish version of "Happy New Year" by ABBA.
- The music video for "Super Trouper" used the largest number of artists that ABBA ever used in a music video. The spotlight featured throughout the video is, in fact, a CCT Silhouette follow spot, as opposed to a real Super Trouper. The city of Glasgow mentioned in the lyric was suggested by Howard Huntridge who worked with their then-UK publishers Bocu Music. Parts of the video were later reused in the clip for the song "Happy New Year". The music video was directed by Lasse Hallström.
- "Happy New Year" is a song by Swedish group ABBA from their 1980 album Super Trouper. The lead vocals are by Agnetha Fältskog. The song's working title was the more festive and humorous "Daddy Don't Get Drunk on Christmas Day". Although recorded in 1980, the English-language song was released as a single in Europe in 1999.
- The second single from ABBA's album Voulez-Vous.