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'Food Fight
Battle of the Bands
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"Björn Again: The ABBA
Experience" comes to Centennial
Hall tonight. It's a stage show
that goes beyond the music of
the 1970s-'80s super group to
explore the egos and
relationships of the Swedish
foursome - Benny Andersson,
Björn Ulvaeus, Anni-Frid
Lyngstad and Agnetha Fältskog.

The origin of ABBA's name has
two stories: One, they used the
initials of their first names; and
two, the name is a play on a
popular Swedish company
named Abba.

Both are true. The band was
originally named after the
Swedish company, but when
their career was booming
internationally - they went on to
become one of the most
successful international pop acts
ever - they realized no one
outside their native Sweden
would get the name play. So they
held a contest with fans to come
up with a name before settling
on ABBA. They eventually had to
negotiate with the company to
use the name ABBA.

Here's our question: In what
business was the Swedish
company?

Those who answer correctly will
have a chance to win a cookbook.

Click here to submit your
answer.

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Caliente Cover
Click image below to download a PDF of this week's Caliente cover.

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Aznightbuzz Calendar
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New album finds Juliana Hatfield blue

By CHRIS TALBOTT
Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 08.19.2008
Listening to Juliana Hatfield's new album, "How to Walk Away," is like reading the diary of that girlfriend you cruelly dumped, full of melancholy and a little bit of acid.
Hatfield's 10th solo album marks her 20th year as a recording artist and coincides with the release of her autobiography, "When I Grow Up." It's as if we've watched her grow up in that time. She came onto the scene in the 1980s with Boston's Blake Babies, a teen looking frail and sweet but tough as nails. She morphed into Evan Dando's "Drug Buddy" in the 1990s, an edgy 20-something with the voice of an angry fairy.
Two decades later, she's more mature and self-assured, but more vulnerable on "How to Walk Away," her first release since 2005's "Made in China."
In many ways, this confessional album parallels the emotions you feel after being dumped, alternating from depression to caustic bitterness. Producer Andy Chase brings a lushness to "How to Walk Away," with occasional piano and strings that deepen the emotional impact.
The best songs here are the ones in which Hatfield's a little bit angry, like "Just Lust," and it's chorus that comes like a slap in the face: "It's just lust/It doesn't mean I love you." Or the slamming door of "Now I'm Gone."
Depression, a problem Hatfield struggled with even at her most successful, seeps into almost every song and it can be a bummer. And though generally beautiful, it's a hard album to listen to at times. But like Beck's "Sea Change" or Bob Dylan's "Tangled Up in Blue," it's worth wading into, especially if you're heart's been broken recently.
CHECK THIS TRACK OUT: Hatfield is at her most upbeat musically and heartbreaking lyrically on "So Alone," a song most folks who've battled depression will find distressingly easy to identify with. She sings: "It's late at night and you need somebody to talk to/But who are those people that you once knew?/And if you called just what would you say/Would you break down right away?/You're so alone, you're so alone, you wanna die and nobody knows."

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