| | |

Kitsch and karaoke: the ABBA Museum, Stockholm

Admit it: You like ABBA.

Okay, maybe you don’t like ABBA, but you catch yourself singing along when you hear an ABBA song on the radio.

L-F: Bjorn Ulvaeus, Agnetha Faltskog, Frida Lyngstad and Benny Anderson. They're all wearing mostly white spandex jumpsuits. Benny has a light blue jacket over his. The wax figures in the ABBA Museum Stockholm look extremely lifelike.
ABBA, or rather, wax figures of them.

Disclosure: I received free admission to the ABBA museum as part of a TBEX conference in Stockholm. All opinions, however, are my own.

A second disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. That means that if you click on the link and make a purchase, I wil receive a small commission. This will not affect your price.

Love them or hate them, unless you’re truly allergic to the sound of their music, you’ll enjoy ABBA The Museum in Stockholm, Sweden.

(If you do love them, here’s their official fan site.)

ABBA The Museum

To some extent, how much you enjoy the ABBA Museum in Stockholm depends not on how much you like ABBA, but on how much you’re willing to make a spectacle of yourself. If you tend to be self-conscious, it might be wise to have a glass or two of wine in the bar upstairs before venturing into the museum.

In other words, it’s a highly interactive museum. It begins with some displays about the six Swedish bands that have won the Eurovision contest, then moves on to the star attraction: ABBA.

The entrance, looking down at it from upstairs, is framed in brightly-colored cubes of glass, lit from within. Beyond the entrance several visitors are visible.
The entrance to ABBA The Museum takes you right to the age of disco.

ABBA is an acronym for the four performers who made up the band: Agnetha Fältskog, Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson, and Anni-Frid Lyngstad. One of the most successful pop groups in history, the group took off when they won the Eurovision song contest in 1974 with the song Waterloo.

ABBA’s history and career are chronicled in great detail through a combination of video, images and objects. You can see the outfits they wore for their winning Eurovision performance, as well as the instruments they played.

L-R: clothing on mannequins
Bjorn's outfit is black with shiny stars on the shirt and silver-colored shoulder plates. Knee-high boots in silver with platform heels.
Agnetha's outfit is a blue top with silver spots and purple pants with a shiny purple frill above the ankles. Silver platform boots.
Frida's outfit: off-white shirt with multi-colored spots and a brownish collar, orangy-brown flowy skuirt to above the ankles, brown boots.
Bennie's outfit: silver-gray jacket with shiny spots over a white shirt with a big collar, black pants tucked into high silver platform boots.
The Eurovision outfits at the ABBA Museum in Stockholm.

(Was that the style in those days or were they particularly kitschy?) Videos show early pre-Eurovision and later post-Eurovision recordings. Instruments, gold records, ABBA merchandise: it’s all here.

An electric guitar lying on top of a piece of red velvet cloth. The guitar body is shaped like a gold-colored star with 13 points, some long and some short.
the guitar from the Eurovision performance

An interactive museum

What makes ABBA The Museum interactive is that visitors can face challenges, like a quiz about ABBA’s history (which I failed). Or you can master a song and compare it to the recorded song. (I didn’t do so well there either.)

A digital image of a woman whearing white spandex skintight jumpsuit, laced up the belly and chest, with a three frills below the knees, a light green cape attached around her shoulders, 3/4 sleeves, again with a frill at the end of the sleeves. Here arm are raised outward, bent upward at the ellbow. Her hair is light brown and the face is mine, lookng a bit greenish.
This was a gimmick where I could have my picture taken, then choose an outfit and move around in it. So this is ABBA me.

And here’s where it gets really embarrassing. In a “sound booth” (that other visitors can hear), you can “audition” to be the fifth member of the band, singing along to one of their songs. (I sang Mamma Mia with two other bloggers. I hate to think how I must have sounded, given that I can’t sing.)

You might also enjoy these other posts from Stockholm: Skansen Open-Air Museum, The Nordic Museum, or The Vasa Museum.

You can dance and sing along with projections of the band, with other visitors as your live audience. You can appear in a music video with members of the band. (Now, that was awkward!)

The members of Abba stand in their white spandex outfits against a black background. They are busy performing. Between the left-most ABBA member (Bennie) and Frida are two people, looking orangy under the lights. They appear to be about the same size as the band members.
Visitors perform with “ABBA.”

You can also save any and all of these interactive elements for later viewing. (No, I haven’t saved any of them. It would be just too embarrassing for words to let anyone see them!)

One smallish, circular room looks like a 70s disco, with a disco ball and colored lights. Video screens show ABBA performances, and visitors can dance likes it’s the 70s. Most of them when I was there, though, just stood around and chatted or took pictures.

I mostly use Booking.com to book hotels. Click on the banner below!

Booking.com

The Swedish Music Hall of Fame

After the ABBA section of the museum, it seemed a bit of a letdown to visit the Swedish music hall of fame and see the exhibits on the history of Swedish popular music.

Yet many of my fellow bloggers spent a lot of time there. With a separate alcove for each decade of Swedish popular music, hundreds of musicians are represented. Visitors can push a button to select each musician or group and hear one of their songs and/or watch them in a video. Perhaps because I’m not particularly musical, this part didn’t interest me, but if you are curious to hear some musicians that are new to you, you could easily spend hours in this section.

The history section also has a separate room that looks like a studio, and when I visited, some people were making music there. It wasn’t clear to me what the story was. Were they just visitors and anyone can go in there, pick up a guitar and start playing? Or do they hire musicians to hang out there for the benefit of the tourists? No idea.

Seen through a glass wall, two guitarists sit, back to the camera, each holding and playing a guitar. Beyond them are four other people. Two, on the right, are just standing and watching the guitarists. So are the two on the left, but one is taking a picture as well. A piano stands behind them, and the far wall is covered with photos. In the ABBA Museum Stockholm.
the studio space in the ABBA museum, Stockholm.

Should you visit ABBA the Museum?

Click here to get skip-the-line tickets.

Should you go to the ABBA museum? If you are a fan, definitely. You’ll love this.

If you’re not a fan, it depends. Don’t go if you hate ABBA—people seem to have particularly strong feelings about this band, much like they do about, say, Barry Manilow or Justin Bieber.

If you’re sitting on the fence on this one, then go. If nothing else, you’ll get a kick out of the karaoke and dancing, whether you do them yourself or you watch someone else make a fool of themselves, all in good fun.

In any case, go with a friend, or a group of friends. This is most definitely not a museum to be taken too seriously.

So what do you think? Would you go?

Pinnable image
Text: ABBA, the museum in Stockholm, Sweden. Kitsch and Karaoke! (and the Rachel's Ruminations logo). 
Image: wax figures of the band, all wearing spandex.

Abba the Museum: Djurgårdsvägen 68 in Stockholm. Check website for hours. Admission : Adults SEK310 (€30/$35), children 7-15 SEK155 (€15/$17) (open tickets, without a set date or time, good for a year) or Adults SEK250 (€24/$28), children 95 (€9/$11) (for a specific date and time).

JOIN MY FREE NEWSLETTER

Never miss the latest travel news, tips, reviews and amazing finds. Sign up for free and be the first to know when I publish something new!

about Rachel

Hi, I’m Rachel!

Rachel’s Ruminations is a travel blog focused on independent travel with an emphasis on cultural and historical sites/sights. I also occasionally write about life as an expatriate. I hope you enjoy what I post here; feel free to leave comments!  Read more…
Subscribe
Notify of
16 Comments
Oldest
Newest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

I want to see Rachel the Dancing Queen!!!!

That’s some serious seventies fashion! So jealous, we walked past the ABBA museum on our first visit to Stockholm, but didn’t have time to stop in.

I love ABBA! I’d love to go to the ABBA museum in Sweden (if I ever have the money to go there – I hear Sweden’s not cheap!)

I WANT to go to the ABBA museum. I want to be THAT dancing queen and more. Totally jealous

I’m a great fan of ABBA! My favourite song as a child was “Dancing Queen” Oh yeah! I’d probably be one of those people putting all caution to the wind and just singing and dancing along with my air guitar and microphone!

‘Love it!

I haven’t yet been to Sweden, but you can be sure that when I do, I wouldn’t miss it for the world lol!

Yeah, I’d be all over that museum. Can you say, “Mamma Mia!”?

I love the music of ABBA. This looks like such a fun place to visit!