AGNETHA FÄLTSKOG: I STAND ALONE (1987)
1) The Last Time; 2) Little
White Secrets; 3) I Wasn't The One (Who Said Goodbye); 4) Love In A World Gone
Mad; 5) Maybe It Was Magic; 6) Let It Shine; 7) We Got A Way; 8) I Stand Alone;
9) Are You Gonna Throw It All Away; 10) If You Need Somebody Tonight.
A properly laconic review of this album would
only need to state three things. One: Look at that new hairstyle. Two: Produced
by Peter Cetera of Chicago fame, the author of ʽIf You Leave Me Nowʼ. Three:
Two of the songs are co-credited to Diane Warren. Now multiply these three, calculate
the cheese factor, and pre-draw your own pre-conclusions.
On the other hand, this laconicity would be
just a tad too cruel. Although it is true that the title of the album is fairly
stupid — it would be far more
interesting if Agnetha actually dared to stay alone, rather than in the company
of Pete Cetera, Diane Warren, and her latest hairdresser — it is also true that
all of this album could have been
very easily dedicated to lethargic adult contemporary and embarrassing power
ballads. Fortunately, coming from an ABBA background and all, Agnetha is so
used to pop hooks and so not used to
the generic power ballad format, that even Diane Warren cannot spoil things too
bad: those last two songs, although I'd rather have her save them for Celine
Dion, are formulaically romantic, but never try to go for that «storm in a
teacup» approach that Warren's power ballads usually surmise — flat and forgettable,
but not sickeningly exaggerated.
Furthermore, if we close our eyes on Cetera's
soft-rock / synth-pop production, there is a small bunch of friendly, catchy,
inoffensive pop songs here: ʽLet It Shineʼ, written in the old tradition of
Carole King and Christine McVie, is arguably the best (but I'd so much rather see it produced by the
likes of Lindsey Buckingham — then again, not in 1987, I guess, remember Tango In The Night?), but ʽLove In A
World Gone Madʼ is also salvageable; curiously, its lyrics were written by Pete
Seinfeld of King Crimson fame, who had apparently sold out in the 1980s and
switched from "the rusted chains of prison moons are shattered by the
sun" to "love in a world gone mad, the best thing we'll ever have,
it's so precious what's between us two". Then again, why should poets be
any different from musicians when it comes to survival?
ʽThe Last Timeʼ, ʽLittle White Secretsʼ, and
ʽWe Got A Wayʼ are all decent pop songs as well, with fairly strong choruses,
but always suffering from the «Eighties' bane» — faceless, stillborn
production, with sterile keyboards and processed guitars (one interesting
aspect, though, is that there are no drum machines, and relatively few drum
parts suffer from electronic enhancement). And, no getting away from it, they are regularly interspersed with too
overtly dramaticized, wishy-washy ballads, including a particularly disgusting
bombastic duet with Cetera (ʽI Wasn't The Oneʼ) and songs with titles like
ʽMaybe It Was Magicʼ that are unjustly deprived of ironic subtitles (ʽBut, Most
Likely, It Was Just Crapʼ or something like that).
Nevertheless, even if the record still gets a thumbs down
(it must take real magic for an LP to earn a «thumbs up» rating if it has Diane
Warren on it), I must stress that it is not
the proper epitome of a real bad mainstream 1980s pop record, and that my original
expectations were set lower than that: in particular, I was not expecting any upbeat, traditionalistic power-pop
cuts here, but there they are, supporting our faith in the overall decent taste
of the ABBA crew. And, for what it's worth, I also have to add that Agnetha's
singing is always lovely, properly restrained, and never overdone even on the
worst songs here.
What is even more interesting is that,
apparently, Agnetha was rather reluctant to record the album (apparently,
Cetera had to press really hard to convince her to fly out to California and do
it), and, once it came out, refused to engage in any promotional activities and
went into a 14-year period of retirement from an active music career — a
respectable decision if there ever was one. All of which gives us complete
freedom of choice: we can take the album if we are Eighties buffs and like it,
or we can pretend it never happened because somebody just didn't have the
proper strength to say no at a certain point in time, or happened to be in need
of a California vacation.