Hasta Mañana

{{Distinguish|Hasta Mañana (Luv' song)}}

{{More citations needed|date=December 2009}}

{{Infobox song

| name = Hasta Mañana

| cover = ABBA - Hasta Mañana (Italy).jpg

| alt =

| caption = Italian picture sleeve

| type = single

| artist = ABBA

| album = Waterloo

| A-side = "Honey, Honey" (Netherlands, Spain)

| B-side = "Watch Out" (Italy, South Africa)

| released = 1974

| recorded = {{Start date|1973|12|18}}

| studio = Metronome, Stockholm, Sweden

| venue =

| genre = Pop, Europop

| length = 3:09

| label =

| writer = Benny Andersson, Björn Ulvaeus, Stig Anderson

| producer = Benny Andersson, Björn Ulvaeus

| prev_title = Honey, Honey

| prev_year = 1974

| next_title = So Long

| next_year = 1974

| misc = {{External music video|header=Audio|{{YouTube|tpedbPUzLvQ|"Hasta Manana"}}|type=song}}

}}

"Hasta Mañana" (Spanish for "Until tomorrow" or "see you tomorrow") is the fourth track on Swedish pop group ABBA's second studio album, Waterloo. It was released in 1974 as the album's third and final single.

Background

Initially fearing that "Waterloo" might be too risky to enter for the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest, the group considered performing the ballad "Hasta Mañana" instead, as they thought that it was more in style with previous Eurovision winners. Eventually, they decided on "Waterloo", primarily because it featured Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad sharing lead vocals, whereas "Hasta Mañana" had Fältskog as the sole lead vocalist. ABBA believed that this would give the wrong impression of them to the world.{{citation needed|date=April 2021}}

The song was still known under its original working title "Who's Gonna Love You?" when the backing track was recorded. The lyrics were later written by Stig Anderson while on a Christmas holiday to the Canary Islands and dictated over the telephone.

While the song was being recorded, they decided to give up on it at one point because none of them could sing it properly. Agnetha alone was in the studio and decided to play around with it. She felt that if she could sing it in a Connie Francis style it would work — and it did.ABBA - In Their Own Words, compiled by Rosemary York, 1981, p. 65, Omnibus Press, {{ISBN|0 86001 950 0}}

In Australia, "Hasta Mañana" was used as a B-side on the "So Long" single (which never charted). After being featured in the popular The Best of ABBA TV Special, broadcast in March 1976, the song was re-released and became a Top 20 hit in Australia and Top 10 hit in New Zealand.

It reached number 2 on the charts in South Africa in November 1974.{{cite web|url=http://rock.co.za/files/springbok_top_20_(A).html |title=South African Charts 1969-1989: Artists (A)|website=Rock.co.za|access-date=23 April 2021}}

Charts

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"

!Chart (1974)

!Peak
position

scope="row"|Italy (Musica e dischi)Spinetoli, John Joseph. Artisti In Classifica: I Singoli: 1960-1999. Milano: Musica e dischi, 2000

|28

scope="row"|South Africa (Springbok Radio){{cite web|title=SA Charts 1969–March 1989|url=http://www.rock.co.za/files/springbok_top_20_(A).html|access-date=23 June 2021}}

|2

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"

!Chart (1976)

!Peak
position

scope="row"|Australia (Kent Music Report){{cite book|title=Australian Charts Book 1993—2005|author=David Kent|isbn=978-0-646-45889-2|year=2006|publisher=Australian Chart Book Pty Ltd, Turramurra, N.S.W.|page=10}}

|16

{{singlechart|New Zealand|9|artist=ABBA|song=Hasta Mañana|rowheader=true}}

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"

!Chart (1980)

!Peak
position

scope="row"|Argentina (CAPIF){{Cite web|title=Cash Box - International Best Sellers|url=https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Cash-Box/80s/1980/CB-1980-11-01.pdf|website=worldradiohistory.com|publisher=Cash Box. 1 November 1980. p. 66.}}

|align="center"|4

;The Boones cover

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"

!Chart (1977)

!Peak
position

scope="row"|Canada Adult Contemporary (RPM){{cite web|url=https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/films-videos-sound-recordings/rpm/Pages/image.aspx?Image=nlc008388.5252&URLjpg=http%3a%2f%2fwww.collectionscanada.gc.ca%2fobj%2f028020%2ff4%2fnlc008388.5252.gif&Ecopy=nlc008388.5252|title=Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada |website=Collectionscanada.gc.ca |date=1977-06-25 |access-date=2019-06-23}}

|37

scope="row"|US Easy Listening (Billboard)

|32

Release history

class="wikitable"

!Region

!Date

!Title

!Label

!Format

!Catalog

!Reference

South Africa, Madagascar

|Sep 1974

| rowspan="2" |"Hasta Mañana" / "Watch Out"

|Sunshine, EMI

| rowspan="7" |7-inch vinyl

|SUN 8, GBS 101

|

Italy

| rowspan="3" |1974

|Dig-It International Records

|MM 0031

|

Japan

| rowspan="2" |"Hasta Mañana" / "Honey, Honey"

|Philips

|SFL-1867

|

Portugal

|Polydor

|2040 124

|

New Zealand

|1975

|"Hasta Mañana" / "So Long"

| rowspan="3" |RCA Victor

|102560

|

Argentina

| rowspan="2" |1980

| rowspan="2" |"Hasta Mañana (Spanish version)" / "Al Andar"

|41A-3209

|

Chile, Peru

|31028

|

Cover versions

  • A recording by ABBA featuring Polar Music artist Lena Andersson on lead vocals was a 1974 Svensktoppen hit, as well as a cover version by dance band Schytts the same year. Lena Andersson also recorded German and Swedish language versions of the song, all using the original ABBA backing track. This recording was a Swedish #1 single in 1975.Scott, Robert (2002), ABBA: Thank You for the Music - The Stories Behind Every Song, Carlton Books Limited: Great Britain, p. 49, {{ISBN|978-1847323309}}
  • In 1992, Swedish dance group Army of Lovers released a version on the Swedish compilation ABBA - The Tribute.Oldham, A, Calder, T & Irwin, C: ABBA: The Name of the Game, p. 209. Sidgwick & Jackson, 1995, {{ISBN|9780330346887}}

References

{{Reflist|refs=

{{cite web|url=https://abbasite.com/articles/hasta-manana-the-song-that-didnt-enter-eurovision/|website=ABBA - The Official Site|title=In focus: Hasta Mañana – The song that didn't enter Eurovision|date=13 June 2012|access-date=2020-06-09|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200511164113/https://abbasite.com/articles/hasta-manana-the-song-that-didnt-enter-eurovision/|archive-date=2020-05-11|quote=The new ballad was still entitled ‘Who’s Gonna Love You’ when its backing track was recorded. [..Stig Anderson..] was just about to leave for a Christmas holiday trip to the Canary Islands [with a cassette and] the instructions: “Please write some lyrics for this!” [..] Stig [dictated] the lyrics very loudly down a crackly telephone line between Spain and Sweden. [..However..] they just couldn’t find the right way to interpret the song. [..Agnetha..] "fooled around a bit, thinking that I might do it like Connie Francis would [and] we found that we were on the right way.”}}

}}