ABBA is trying to prove disco will never die.
The Swedish pop group on Friday announced it has reunited after a 35-year hiatus to record a new album and tour the world — but with a 21st-century twist. The quartet is to be replaced on stage by digital avatars of their former selves.
Hologram-style recreations of Agnetha Faltskog, Bjorn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad is to perform a couple new songs in a TV special later this year in the build-up to the tour.
Simon Fuller, the creator of American Idol, is organizing the concert series using a mix of virtual reality (VR) and artificial intelligence.
“The decision to go ahead with the exciting ABBA avatar tour project had an unexpected consequence,” the band wrote on its Instagram. “We all four felt that, after some 35 years, it could be fun to join forces again and go into the recording studio.”
Bands can make hundreds of millions of dollars from reuniting for a global tour. The Guns N’ Roses reunion last year grossed US$292.5 million, making it the biggest tour of the year after U2.
The potential windfall from a hologram tour is less clear.
Promoters and artists have used holograms for stunts, including a performance at the Coachella Music Festival by deceased rapper Tupac Shakur.
However, ABBA is perhaps the first major music group to tour the world in a digital form.
ABBA rose to fame after winning the Eurovision Song Contest in 1974, and went on to record hit songs Dancing Queen, Take A Chance on Me and Mamma Mia.
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