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PIRACY

‘Gimme gimme gimme more money money money’

Freelance writer Gene Oberto isn't buying the anti-piracy arguments put forward by Abba's Björn Ulvaeus.

Far be it from me to question the motives of a millionaire recording artist from declaring his fans and potential future buyers cheap for utilizing file sharing. But what I will say is the tirade from Abba’s Björn sounds like so much “Gimme Gimme Gimme”.

Ulvaeus also wondered why it was “so damn hard to understand” that an idea would only see the light of day if copyright holders and their financiers knew they stood a chance of getting paid for their work. I can imagine that there are many artists who perform and write for a creative release that is not based on the idea that he will get paid for it.

What must be apparent to a businessman as astute as Ulvaeus is that recorded music is like any other commodity. It is only worth what the consumer is willing to pay for it. Studies made show that people are willing to pay for their musical enjoyment. But what the public is telling the music companies is the music is not worth what you are charging me for a rapidly fading technology.

Björn might not be so strident if he looked at the situation from the consumer’s side. How many times do we need to pay premium price for a song that has been issued, and re-issued ad nauseum? Is Dancing Queen worth more now then it was in the 1970s? Björn and the record company think so. The audience says it’s not.

More people are listening to more music then at any other time in history. File sharing is not the cause of the music industry’s problems. Their problem is their apparent inability to adapt their business to new delivery methods.

ABBA

ABBA’s first album in 40 years shoots to the top of the UK charts

ABBA's first studio album in nearly 40 years has made it to the top of the UK charts, becoming the fastest seller of the year so far, the Official Charts Company said on Friday.

ABBA's first album in 40 years shoots to the top of the UK charts
ABBA's new album, 'Voyage' for sale in Stockholm at the start of this month. Photo: Jonatan Nackstrand/AFP

“Voyage” by the Swedish quartet of Agnetha, Bjorn, Benny and Anni-Frid racked up 204,000 chart sales in the seven days since it was launched last Friday.

Sales gave the supergroup the biggest opening week on the UK album chart in four years since Ed Sheeran’s “Divide”, and fastest-selling album by a group in eight years.

The last fastest-seller was One Direction’s “Midnight Memories” in November 2013.

READ ALSO: Abba’s new album has arrived – tell us, what do you think?

ABBA, propelled to global fame by their 1974 Eurovision Song Contest win with “Waterloo”, split in 1982, a year after their last album, “The Visitors”.

“Voyage” is their 10th number one album in the UK: only seven other acts — The Beatles, Elvis Presley, the Rolling Stones, Robbie Williams, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen and David Bowie — have had more.

The group said in a statement: “We are so happy that our fans seem to have enjoyed our new album as much as we enjoyed making it.

“We are absolutely over the moon to have an album at the top of the charts again.”

The 204,000 sales comprise 90 percent physical copies, including 29,900 on vinyl, making it the fastest-selling vinyl release of the 21st century.

The previous record holder was the Arctic Monkeys’ “Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino”, which sold 24,500 vinyl copies in 2018.

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