Monday, August 25, 2025
Little Crumbs and ABBA
Here's another picture I've been meaning to take for a while, and I finally had the opportunity on Saturday. I passed this little shop many months ago while exploring this area but it was closed. I thought it was a cafe, and only later on Google Street View did I see it was actually a junk/furniture shop that regularly spread out its wares on the sidewalk. So I wanted to go back and catch it while it was open.
Given the sign, with a little cup of steaming something over the word CAFE, I deduced with the confidence of Dr. Watson that it perhaps had been a cafe at some point in the past. And indeed, Google shows it as such way back in 2016. Two years later, it was looking more like a vintage/junk shop. Now it's positively crammed and, inside, a bit dark and musty.
I didn't buy anything, but this item was intriguing -- a small bedside cabinet decorated with stencils of Audrey Hepburn as Holly Golightly. I might have bought it if I were 30 years younger (and it was really inexpensive). Now I need it like a hole in the head.
Yesterday I finished my book, "My My!: ABBA through the ages," by Giles Smith. I must say I was a bit surprised when I mentioned reading a book about ABBA a few posts back, and no one challenged me about it. No one said, "You're reading what?!"
Of course it could be that none of you particularly care about my reading habits, which I TOTALLY understand. But I must tell you, this was a very enjoyable book. It wasn't an encyclopedic dissection of the lives and recordings of the ABBA musicians, at least not in any dry, referential sense. It was very readable, more a story of Smith's personal experience with ABBA (like most of us, he discovered them as a young teenager) interspersed with information about the musicians and the records and the photos and the concerts. As Smith himself put it on page 302, the book isn't for die-hard fans so much as "for people who find they have had the members of ABBA and their music in their heads, on and off, practically all their lives without really trying, and might be curious about how that's come to happen."
Having said that, it does go on some peculiar tangents. There's pretty much a whole chapter discussing the wisdom of the line "feel the beat of the tambourine" in "Dancing Queen," ABBA's signature song. Apparently there is no actual tambourine in "Dancing Queen," which I must admit I never knew, and although it sounds like a throwaway rhyme about a silly grade-school instrument, Smith points out that properly playing a tambourine is actually more complicated than one might imagine. Besides, as he says, "feel the beat of the drum machine" doesn't sound nearly as good.
I became an ABBA fan around the time I was 14, when I asked for and got the K-Tel album "The Magic of ABBA" for Christmas. A couple of high school friends were also very into ABBA -- we were not a rebellious crowd -- and I spent hours talking to my friend John on the phone in the evenings, planning ABBA mix tapes that we never made. A few years later I bought their album "The Visitors" at the mall. This was relatively late to ride the ABBA bandwagon, given that they broke up right around that time, but I went on listening to them and I've never really stopped. Their music is still in my iTunes. They really did have a knack for writing and performing musically perfect, if sometimes linguistically awkward, pop songs.
It was always cooler to listen to the Ramones or the Sex Pistols or even Blondie, but I was never a fan of harder-edged music. (I did eventually own Blondie's "Greatest Hits," but I wouldn't call them particularly hard-edged either.)
Anyway, you've probably read some of this before, in my posts about going to the ABBA exhibit or the ABBA Voyage concert in East London. Smith also discusses ABBA Voyage as well as the music's use in the musical "Mamma Mia" and the movies "Muriel's Wedding" and "Priscilla, Queen of the Desert," which as you know are two of my favorites. Those ABBA musicians, who are all now approaching 80 years old, just keep popping up like groundhogs in our cultural landscape.
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I remember when ABBA won in Brighton, I was woken up to join the celebrations! And since then they go “On and on and on” (favourite song). So quite a normal topic to write and read about. :)
ReplyDeleteI can't say that I was ever a fan of ABBA. I did enjoy their music and would happily sing along when they were played on the radio but I never bought any of their records. They were just always there as a background to my youth.
ReplyDeleteGoodness......must be a labour of love to put all that furniture etc. out every day!
ReplyDeleteI never liked ABBA and cannot understand the fuss that still surrounds them. To me it was formulaic pop music with dull lyrics created by two men who were not writing in their native language. If I never hear another ABBA song in my life I will be happy.
ReplyDeleteAh, a London Brocante!! They need a bigger premises, but obviously that is beyond their means as yet.
ReplyDeleteI suppose old furniture and effects can be crumbs from the past?!
I still enjoy the ABBA songs on my playlists and my kids grew up hearing ABBA who came on the scene when my eldest was about four. I'd love a good scrounge in Little Crumbs, but you mentioned it's musty and I'm allergic to mould 😒, it looks like they have interesting stuff.
ReplyDeleteI thought reading a book on ABBA was something you of course would do. ABBA has had an incredible career and several rebirths. It is kind of ironic that there’s no tambourine in Dancing Queen. You’d think they would have slipped one in. Come to think of it, I don’t remember a tambourine being played in Hey Mr. Tambourine Man.
ReplyDeleteI can imagine the smell of that shop. People who earn their living finding and selling such items deserve success - it's not an easy life.
ReplyDeleteAbba was played at top sound in the car journey yesterday. They maybe old but they are not dead yet ;)
ReplyDeleteMy fsve songs are " Chuquutita" and "Fernando", its so lovely songs ever
ReplyDeleteAbba was a phenomenon that has lasted to this day. I wouldn't question anyone's interest in the group. Though it is a pity that neither blokes were particularly hot.
ReplyDeleteThe front of Little Crumbs looks like unwanted junk put out for a council rubbish collection.
Like you, I am not a fan of hard edged music. As you described buying their album at the mall, I realized just how much things have changed!
ReplyDeleteI made my daughter and myself satin shorts, which we donned and danced in our lounge to Abba on any occasion!
ReplyDeleteI like that little shop ... lots of treasures and, sure, lots of junk.
ReplyDeleteHaving never been an ABBA fan I didn't want to put that into your post. There a lots of musicians and singers and such that I like and others turn their noses up at the mere mention.
I'm not much for reading about entertainers. Their lives aren't as interesting as their music for me. I've noticed quite a few references lately to ABBA and that's sent me to listen to them!
ReplyDeleteYes, ABBA has been present in my mind for much of my life. I guess I never stopped to ponder why or thought a book could be written about it.
ReplyDeleteI like ABBA - they have a distinctive sound that I enjoy. But for some reason they don't live in my head. I think I have the Indigo Girls or Bonnie Raitt instead. Ha!
ReplyDeleteI love junk stores like, even if I never buy anything. I don't need anything either.
ReplyDeleteAs for ABBA, I love them too. And your last paragragh, with the movies, three of my favorite movies.
Well, I am an ABBA fan, and I have a couple cassette tapes, maybe a CD, of them. They are so easy to listen to ... like Enya, and they can be pulled up on YouTube for a quick listen!
ReplyDeleteI will admit that I never did work up much excitement for ABBA. They just weren't in my radar, really. Of course I heard their music and I did not find it unpleasant at all. It just wasn't what I listened to. Nor were the Ramones, for that matter!
ReplyDeleteCrumbles looks like a good place to spend an hour or so. At least.
I always wonder about antique shops that leave stuff outside all of the time. I imagine people just walking off with some of it when the shop is closed. Maybe there are cameras watching?
ReplyDeleteMy opinion of ABBA music - Like they used to say on American Bandstand, "It's got a good beat and it's easy to dance to!" ;)
I still listen to ABBA. I should load some more of it. I'll pass on the book.
ReplyDeleteI also have fond memories of ABBA.
ReplyDeleteThe stage ABBA performance, I am told, is fantastic and well worth seeing.
ADDY of "Alcoholic Daze" blog writes a great review.
I was never an ABBA fan since I preferred (and still do) what's called classic rock over pop. What does Dave think of ABBA? I feel somewhat claustrophobic in shops like that although it's interesting to look around!
ReplyDeleteLooks like a good little junk/antique shop. I like ABBA alright but I was never 'into' them.
ReplyDeleteI never question what other folks read. I'm still hoping you'll get to that middle grade book I read earlier in the year before I forget everything about it!
ReplyDeleteI can't say I care for the side table considering I didn't particularly care for the book. (and never saw the film)
LOVE ABBA! I first heard them when they won EuroVision contest, I think I was in Australia at the time, '74. I would be interested to read the book. i am sure. When I hear them on occassion out in the workd of elevator musak, I get giddy, and happy- like a rush of sugar! Abba is the fountain of youth!
ReplyDeleteI love little junk shops like that, there's always the possibility of some piece of good stuff and a good price.
ReplyDelete