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Abba-esque is an (EP) by English duo Erasure. Released on 1 June 1992, the EP was Erasure's first and only number one on the UK Singles Chart and also became a number-one hit in Austria, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Ireland, and Sweden.

As big fans of the Swedish group , Erasure ( and Andy Bell) had often performed ABBA songs in concert over the years. They had originally planned to release an album of ABBA but instead opted to release an EP of four of ABBA hits.


Background
released Abba-esque in the UK, while released it in the US. Music videos were produced for all four tracks, and issued as a video EP on VHS. A EP was also released by Mute Records in the UK which featured the same four songs in heavily reworked form. Shortly after the release, ABBA's album was released, sparking a revival of ABBA's music that has endured well into the 21st century.

After peaking at number two twice (with "Sometimes" in 1986 and Crackers International in 1988), Erasure finally reached number one in the UK with this release, remaining there for five weeks. In the United States, where EPs chart on the Billboard 200, Abba-esque peaked at number 85. Although never officially released as a single by itself, the song "Take a Chance on Me", which features a guest rap by , received significant radio play in the US, allowing it to peak at number 52 on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart. In Sweden, the EP peaked at number one, staying there for six consecutive weeks, and it also peaked atop the charts of Austria, Denmark, Finland, Greece and Ireland.

The release of the Abba-esque EP in due course precipitated the release of a similar EP, Erasure-ish, by the ABBA tribute band Björn Again, which features two Erasure tracks ("A Little Respect" and "Stop!") performed in the style of ABBA as an .


Critical reception
Joe Brown from The Washington Post wrote, "To promote its summer tour, reportedly a camp extravaganza surpassing the last one, electroduo Erasure offer a sweet, cool pop-sicle – a four-song EP of faithful covers, delivered without perceptible irony. Like , who sang a slew of beloved '70s songs on his most recent tour, Andy Bell gets to pretend he is ABBA – specifically Frida and Agnetha. You can imagine Bell singing "S.O.S." and "Lay All Your Love On Me" in front of his bedroom mirror (complete with faintly phonetic English), while synthmeister handles the Bjorn-and- parts singlehandedly – dense, bleeping-and-whooshing synth textures that sound like 's late-'70s settings for . Erasure drags yet another guilty pop pleasure out of the closet – what's surprising now is how grown-up and complex these ABBA songs really were beneath their candy coatings."Brown, Joe (17 July 1992). "Moving the Feet, Shaking the Mind". The Washington Post.


Music videos
The music video for "Take a Chance on Me" was directed by Philippe Gautier, and the other three were directed by Jan Kounen.


Track listings
All tracks written by and Björn Ulvaeus; "SOS" was co-written with .

Abba-esque

  1. "Lay All Your Love on Me" – 4:45
  2. "SOS" – 3:49
  3. "Take a Chance on Me" – 3:43
  4. "Voulez-Vous" – 5:35

Abba-esque – The Remixes

  1. "Voulez-Vous" (Brain Stem Death Test Mix) (remixed by Fortran 5) – 5:46
  2. "Lay All Your Love on Me" (No Panties Mix) (remixed by Fortran 5) – 5:10
  3. "Take a Chance on Me" (Take a Trance on Me Mix) (remixed by Philip Kelsey) – 13:23
  4. "SOS" (Perimeter Mix) (remixed by Chris & Cosey) 5:17


Charts

Weekly charts


Year-end charts


Decade-end charts


Certifications

Release history
13 July 199212-inch vinyl

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