Stig Anderson

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Bust of Stikkan Anderson in his native Hova.
Bust of Stikkan Anderson in his native Hova.

Stig 'Stikkan' Erik Leopold Anderson (né Andersson) (January 25, 1931September 12, 1997) was born in Hova, Sweden, and is best known as the manager of the the pop group ABBA.

As well as being the manager of the Swedish supergroup, Anderson was also the founder of the Polar Music record label. Initially beginning his career as a chemistry and mathematics teacher after leaving school at the age of 15 [1], Anderson soon migrated to the Swedish music scene, becoming a music producer, manager and also occasional performer. He had begun writing songs as early as 1951, and in 1959 he got his breakthrough with the song "Är du kär i mig ännu, Klas-Göran?" ("Are You Still In Love With Me, Klas-Göran?"), written for Swedish singer Lill-Babs. During the 1960s he was one of Sweden's most prolific songwriters, producing more than 3,000 published titles. Anderson also founded Sweden Music in 1960, as well as several other companies. By the late 1960s, he was the manager and producer of Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson (the two main song writers of ABBA), joining the careers of these two after Anderson managed the Hootenanny Singers. Later in 1972 he began managing Anni-Frid Lyngstad, and finally in 1980 Agnetha Fältskog (until December 1979, Faltskog was still bound to Cupol/CBS Records under a contract). In the early stages of ABBA, Anderson co-wrote some of the songs' lyrics.

Anderson was one of the dominant figures behind ABBA, representing their commercial interests and global success through successful record deals. At the same time, he also managed the investment of funds and the enormous financial incomes of Polar Music. However, in the mid 1980s a considerable part of ABBA's fortune was lost by mismanagement, bad investments, high demands for tax and the rise of credit rates. Co-operation between three of the four ABBA members with Stig Anderson was terminated when it turned out that Anderson took for many years, a percentage of profits at a value of 4.5 million euros. A complaint against Anderson was submitted to the Stockholm District Court in June 1990 by Agnetha Fältskog's company Agnetha Fältskog Produktion AB, Benny Andersson's company Mono Music AB, as well as a Dutch company holding Björn Ulvaeus' rights. Anni-Frid Lyngstad had sold all her shares in the Polar Music company in 1982 as she moved abroad. In the end the dispute was settled out of court in July 1991 - the terms of the settlement remain undisclosed, however.

In 1989, Anderson made a substantial financial donation and founded the Polar Music Prize. The following year, shortly before the ABBA members took him to court over royalty back payments, he sold the Polar Music company (with nearly all utilisation and license rights and the registered ABBA trademark for an unknown sum of money) to PolyGram. Previously, Anderson licenced ABBA and the members' solo releases to various labels worldwide as a way to earn more royalties. In 1998, PolyGram was in turn sold to Seagram and merged into what is now one of the Big Four record labels, the Universal Music Group, the company that today holds the rights to the entire ABBA back catalogue.

Anderson's daughter, Marie Ledin (wife of Swedish star and ABBA concert backing vocalist Tomas Ledin) started a new, highly successful record label in the mid 1980s, Record Station (sold to German BMG in the early 90s), followed by Anderson Records, which released Anni-Frid Lyngstad's Swedish comeback album, Djupa andetag, in 1996.

Stig Anderson was married to Gudrun Anderson, and also had two sons, Anders and Lasse. Anderson died on September 12, 1997 (aged 66) from a heart attack.

  1. ^ ABBA: The Lovers Who Conquered The World - Harry Edginton ISBN 0905018 7 45

  • Carl Magnus Palm: Bright Lights - Dark Shadows, Omnibus Press UK 2001, ISBN 0.7119.8389.5
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