Eagle (song)

"Eagle"
Single by ABBA
from the album ABBA: The Album
B-side "Thank You for the Music"
Released May 1978
Format Single
Recorded 1 June 1977
at Marcus Music Studio
Genre Progressive rock, art rock
Length 5:51 (Album version)
4:25 (Single version)
3:33 (Radio edit)
Label Polar Music
Writer(s) Benny Andersson (music)
Björn Ulvaeus (lyrics)
Producer(s) Benny Andersson
Björn Ulvaeus
ABBA singles chronology
"Take a Chance on Me"/"I'm a Marionette"
(1978)
“Eagle”
(1978)
"Summer Night City"
(1978)
Music video
"Eagle" on YouTube

“Eagle” is a song that was recorded in 1977 by the Swedish pop group ABBA. It was the first track on the group's fifth album, ABBA: The Album and the longest selection they ever recorded (at 5:51, 1 second longer than "The Day Before You Came" at 5:50). The fourth and last official single from ABBA: The Album, it was released only in a limited number of territories, with "Thank You for the Music" as the B-side. “Eagle” was not released as a single in the United Kingdom. It was released in the US, but then withdrawn.[1]

History

"Eagle" was written and composed by Benny Andersson & Björn Ulvaeus, a kind of a tribute to a band that the main composers of the group admired at the time; The Eagles.[2] The recording, which commenced on 1 June 1977, had the working titles of "High, High" and "The Eagle." Lyricist Ulvaeus was inspired by Richard Bach's novel Jonathan Livingston Seagull when he wrote the lyrics for this song. In later years, music critics have hailed "Eagle" as one of ABBA's more outstanding tracks in terms of lyrics.

Reception

"Eagle" was not a major success on the charts. One reason was that the song was already available on The Album; another was the limited release only in countries like Australia, Austria, Belgium (where it did top the charts), France, West Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland. To make the song more radio-friendly it was heavily edited down from 5:51 to 4:25 by omitting an instrumental break and the 3rd chorus. Australia and France even got an edit from the edit, with the song fading shortly after the 2nd chorus making it last just 3:33, 2:18 shorter than the album version. It was released, then withdrawn, as a single in the United States.[3]

The single was released in May 1978 to fill the gap between the previous single, "Take a Chance on Me" and the next, a completely new track, eventually titled "Summer Night City." The B-side of "Eagle," "Thank You for the Music," was later released as a single outright in a few countries after the group had disbanded, namely in the UK, where "Eagle" had not been released as a single.

Music video

The single was promoted with a music video directed by Lasse Hallström, while an earlier, much more interesting video in terms of special effects was included as a part of ABBA: The Movie.

1999 re-edit

The original 4:25 single edit was issued on CD for the first time in 1993 on the compilation More ABBA Gold: More ABBA Hits. However, for the 1999 re-release of this album, plus subsequent releases, a new version based on the 1978 edit was created. Unfortunately, this edit left out a vital instrumental-only section at the end of the second chorus prior to the closing instrumental, thereby sounding disjointed. The original edit—or at least an exact re-creation of it—was finally issued again on the deluxe version of ABBA: The Album in 2007.

Chart positions

Chart Position
Australian Singles Chart 82
Austrian Singles Chart 17
Belgian Singles Chart 1
Dutch Singles Chart 4
French Singles Chart 16
German Singles Chart 6
South Africa 2
Swiss Singles Chart 7

Cover versions

Appearances in other media

References

  1. "ABBA - Eagle (Vinyl)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2016-10-13.
  2. Album's remastered liner notes
  3. "ABBA - Eagle (Vinyl)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2016-10-13.
  4. "Abbacadabra | Eagle". Almighty Records.com. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  5. "Tore Öyens Blackmountain Projects op MySpace Music – Gratis gestreamde MP3's, foto's en Videoclips". Myspace.com. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  6. "ABBATOIR op MySpace Music – Gratis gestreamde MP3's, foto's en Videoclips". Myspace.com. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  7. "Danielson » Moment Soakers 7". Danielson.info. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
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