<p>Swedish pop sensation ABBA made a comeback on Friday with their new album <em>Voyage</em>, nearly 40 years after they split up, with a digital avatar concert eventually planned in London.</p>.<p>Agnetha, Bjorn, Benny and Anni-Frid -- forming the acronym ABBA -- have not released any new music since their split in 1982, a year after their last album <em>The Visitors</em>.</p>.<p><em>Voyage</em> went live at midnight Thursday in various time zones, to the delight of longtime fans worldwide.</p>.<p>"It doesn't sound dated, it doesn't sound 40 years ago," ABBA fan Emilie De Laere said at a listening party in Stockholm for the Swedish band's much-anticipated release.</p>.<p>After years of speculation and several dropped hints, the group finally announced the reunion and new album in September, and released the singles <em>I still have faith in you</em> and <em>Don't shut me down</em>.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/abba-thrills-fans-with-comeback-album-after-decades-apart-1026448.html" target="_blank">ABBA thrills fans with comeback album after decades apart</a></strong></p>.<p>The 10-track <em>Voyage</em> is not all the group will be releasing.</p>.<p>They will also unveil digital avatars -- dubbed <em>ABBAtars</em> -- at a concert in London in May, resembling their 1979 selves.</p>.<p>The holograms are the product of a years-long project, designed in partnership with a special effects company of Star Wars creator George Lucas.</p>.<p>Repeatedly delayed by technical difficulties, then by the Covid-19 pandemic, they will finally be unveiled in May.</p>.<p>The group initially dreamed up the idea of avatars, and then the music followed suit.</p>.<p>By 2018, ABBA had confirmed rumours of their return to the studio and that at least two new songs were being recorded.</p>.<p>But great pains were taken to keep the music a secret.</p>.<p>"First it was just two songs, and then we said: 'Well maybe we should do a few others', what do you say girls and they said 'Yeah'," Benny Andersson, 74, explained when the album was announced.</p>.<p>"Then I asked them 'why don't we do a full album?'," he added.</p>.<p>He and Bjorn Ulvaeus, 76, have been promoting the album in recent weeks, with 71-year-old Agnetha Faltskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad, 75, opting to spare themselves from busy promotion schedules.</p>.<p>All promotion was halted for 24 hours this week after two people died at a tribute concert north of Stockholm on Tuesday evening.</p>.<p>In addition to the two songs released in September, a third track from the album was published in October, a modernised version of <em>Just A Notion</em>, originally recorded in 1978 but never before released.</p>.<p>The newly released songs cannot escape being compared to hits like <em>Waterloo</em>, <em>Dancing Queen</em>, <em>Mamma Mia</em>, <em>The Winner Takes It All</em> and <em>Money, Money, Money</em>, but the band members are not worried about disappointing fans.</p>.<p>"We don't have to prove anything, what does it matter if people think we were better before?" Andersson told Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/mamma-mia-abba-to-make-a-musical-comeback-1026115.html" target="_blank">Mamma Mia! ABBA to make a musical comeback</a></strong></p>.<p>To Swedish fan Peter Palmquist at least, the new album has struck just the right note between old and new.</p>.<p>"It's true to ABBA's sound but it's not nostalgic, staying to where they are but to the people that they grown into today," he said.</p>.<p>According to Jean-Marie Potiez, one of the group's most well-known international experts, age has given some of the singers a new edge.</p>.<p>"Agnetha and Anni-Frid's voices have lost their high notes, which is normal given their age, but they have gained in depth and sensitivity."</p>.<p>"When they sing together, both of them, like on <em>Don't Shut Me Down</em>, it's the ABBA sound."</p>.<p>Despite two divorces -- Bjorn and Agnetha and Benny and Anni-Frid were both married for several years -- the four have remained good friends.</p>.<p>But <em>Voyage</em>, the band's ninth studio album, will indeed be their last, the two Bs of the group confirmed in an interview with <em>The Guardian</em> at the end of October.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here:</strong></p>
<p>Swedish pop sensation ABBA made a comeback on Friday with their new album <em>Voyage</em>, nearly 40 years after they split up, with a digital avatar concert eventually planned in London.</p>.<p>Agnetha, Bjorn, Benny and Anni-Frid -- forming the acronym ABBA -- have not released any new music since their split in 1982, a year after their last album <em>The Visitors</em>.</p>.<p><em>Voyage</em> went live at midnight Thursday in various time zones, to the delight of longtime fans worldwide.</p>.<p>"It doesn't sound dated, it doesn't sound 40 years ago," ABBA fan Emilie De Laere said at a listening party in Stockholm for the Swedish band's much-anticipated release.</p>.<p>After years of speculation and several dropped hints, the group finally announced the reunion and new album in September, and released the singles <em>I still have faith in you</em> and <em>Don't shut me down</em>.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/abba-thrills-fans-with-comeback-album-after-decades-apart-1026448.html" target="_blank">ABBA thrills fans with comeback album after decades apart</a></strong></p>.<p>The 10-track <em>Voyage</em> is not all the group will be releasing.</p>.<p>They will also unveil digital avatars -- dubbed <em>ABBAtars</em> -- at a concert in London in May, resembling their 1979 selves.</p>.<p>The holograms are the product of a years-long project, designed in partnership with a special effects company of Star Wars creator George Lucas.</p>.<p>Repeatedly delayed by technical difficulties, then by the Covid-19 pandemic, they will finally be unveiled in May.</p>.<p>The group initially dreamed up the idea of avatars, and then the music followed suit.</p>.<p>By 2018, ABBA had confirmed rumours of their return to the studio and that at least two new songs were being recorded.</p>.<p>But great pains were taken to keep the music a secret.</p>.<p>"First it was just two songs, and then we said: 'Well maybe we should do a few others', what do you say girls and they said 'Yeah'," Benny Andersson, 74, explained when the album was announced.</p>.<p>"Then I asked them 'why don't we do a full album?'," he added.</p>.<p>He and Bjorn Ulvaeus, 76, have been promoting the album in recent weeks, with 71-year-old Agnetha Faltskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad, 75, opting to spare themselves from busy promotion schedules.</p>.<p>All promotion was halted for 24 hours this week after two people died at a tribute concert north of Stockholm on Tuesday evening.</p>.<p>In addition to the two songs released in September, a third track from the album was published in October, a modernised version of <em>Just A Notion</em>, originally recorded in 1978 but never before released.</p>.<p>The newly released songs cannot escape being compared to hits like <em>Waterloo</em>, <em>Dancing Queen</em>, <em>Mamma Mia</em>, <em>The Winner Takes It All</em> and <em>Money, Money, Money</em>, but the band members are not worried about disappointing fans.</p>.<p>"We don't have to prove anything, what does it matter if people think we were better before?" Andersson told Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/mamma-mia-abba-to-make-a-musical-comeback-1026115.html" target="_blank">Mamma Mia! ABBA to make a musical comeback</a></strong></p>.<p>To Swedish fan Peter Palmquist at least, the new album has struck just the right note between old and new.</p>.<p>"It's true to ABBA's sound but it's not nostalgic, staying to where they are but to the people that they grown into today," he said.</p>.<p>According to Jean-Marie Potiez, one of the group's most well-known international experts, age has given some of the singers a new edge.</p>.<p>"Agnetha and Anni-Frid's voices have lost their high notes, which is normal given their age, but they have gained in depth and sensitivity."</p>.<p>"When they sing together, both of them, like on <em>Don't Shut Me Down</em>, it's the ABBA sound."</p>.<p>Despite two divorces -- Bjorn and Agnetha and Benny and Anni-Frid were both married for several years -- the four have remained good friends.</p>.<p>But <em>Voyage</em>, the band's ninth studio album, will indeed be their last, the two Bs of the group confirmed in an interview with <em>The Guardian</em> at the end of October.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here:</strong></p>