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| Tour by ABBA | |
| Associated albums | |
|---|---|
| Start date | January 28, 1977 |
| End date | March 12, 1977 |
| Legs | 2 |
| No. of shows | 28 |
| ABBA concert chronology | |
ABBA: European & Australian Tour, [1] also known as ABBA: Live In Australia - 1977 and ABBA: Live 77, was the second concert tour by the Swedish pop group ABBA. Primarily visiting Europe and Australia during 1977, the tour supported the group's fourth studio album, Arrival (1976), and later their compilation Greatest Hits (1975-1976). The tour opened in Oslo, Norway, on 28 January 1977, and the tour closed with two shows on 12 March 1977 in Perth, Australia, having performed 28 shows in 18 cities across 8 countries. It was ABBA's first international concert tour, and was made immortal thanks to the concert film ABBA: The Movie, filmed during the concerts in Australia.
| Date | City | Country | Venue | Total Attendance / Total Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Europe | ||||
| January 28, 1977 | Oslo | Norway | Ekeberg Idrettshall | 6,000 / 6,000 [2] |
| January 29, 1977 | Gothenburg | Sweden | Scandinavium | 10,0000 / 10,0000 [2] |
| January 30, 1977 | 10,0000 / 10,0000 [2] | |||
| January 31, 1977 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Brøndby Hallen | 4,500 / 4,500 [2] |
| February 1, 1977 | 4,500 / 4,500 [2] | |||
| February 2, 1977 | Berlin | Germany | Deutschlandhalle | sold out [2] |
| February 3, 1977 | Cologne | Sporthalle | sold out [2] | |
| February 4, 1977 | Amsterdam | The Netherlands | Jaap Edenhal | 4,000 / 4,000 [2] |
| February 5, 1977 | Deurne, Antwerp | Belgium | Arenahal | — |
| February 6, 1977 | Essen | Germany | Grugahalle | — |
| February 7, 1977 | Hannover | Eilenriedehalle | sold out [2] | |
| February 8, 1977 | Hamburg | Congress Center Hamburg | sold out [2] | |
| February 10, 1977 | Birmingham | United Kingdom | Birmingham Odeon | 2,500 / 2,500 [2] |
| February 11, 1977 | Manchester | Free Trade Hall | — | |
| February 12, 1977 | Glasgow | Apollo Theatre | — | |
| February 14, 1977 (18:00) | London | Royal Albert Hall | 5,600 / 5,600 [2] | |
| February 14, 1977 (21:00) | 5,600 / 5,600 [2] | |||
| Australia | ||||
| March 3, 1977 | Sydney | Australia | Sydney Showground | 20,000 / 20,000 [2] |
| March 4, 1977 | ||||
| March 5, 1977 | Melbourne | Sidney Myer Music Bowl | 14,500 / 14,500 [2] | |
| March 6, 1977 (14:30) | 14,500 / 14,500 [2] | |||
| March 6, 1977 (20:30) | 14,500 / 14,500 [2] | |||
| March 8, 1977 | Adelaide | West Lakes Football Stadium | 21,000 / 21,000 [2] | |
| March 10, 1977 (18:00) | Perth | Perth Entertainment Centre | 8,000 / 8,000 [2] | |
| March 10, 1977 (21:00) | 8,000 / 8,000 [2] | |||
| March 11, 1977 | 8,000 / 8,000 [2] | |||
| March 12, 1977 (18:00) | 8,000 / 8,000 [2] | |||
| March 12, 1977 (21:00) | 8,000 / 8,000 [2] | |||
One of the concerts at the Royal Albert Hall on 14 February was recorded on behalf of Atlantic Records [3] . A 15-minute excerpt of this recording was said to get a digital release along with 2014's Live at Wembley Arena, but it ultimately wasn't. [2]
"I Wonder (Departure)" (possibly recorded at the show in Sydney on 4 March [4] ) was released on 17 October 1977 as the B-side to "The Name Of The Game". This version featured heavy overdubs, and replaced the saxophone solo with a piano solo by Benny.
Excepts of "Fernando" (Melbourne, 5 March [5] ), "Rock Me" (Sydney, 4 March [6] ), "Why Did It Have To Be Me" (Sydney, 3 March [7] ), "Money, Money, Money" (Sydney, 4 March [8] ) and "Waterloo" (Sydney, 4 March [9] ) were released on a promotional flexi-disc for Jultidningsförlaget.
"Fernando" and "Money, Money, Money" were released in 1986 on the live album "ABBA Live".
Concert footage from the Australian leg of the tour was featured in the 1977 movie "ABBA: The Movie". It contains excerpts from: "He Is Your Brother" and "Why Did It Have To Be Me" (Sydney, 3 March), "Waterloo", "Money, Money, Money", "Rock Me" and "Intermezzo No. 1" (Sydney, 4 March), "Fernando" (Melbourne, 5 March), "Tiger", "SOS", "When I Kissed The Teacher", "I've Been Waiting For You", "Get On The Carousel" and "So Long" (Adelaide, 8 March). The dates for "Mamma Mia" and "I'm A Marionette" are unknown. "Knowing Me, Knowing You" from the 8 March Adelaide concert was also mixed for possible inclusion in the movie, but was ultimately not used. [10]