Eurovision_Song_Contest Eurovision_Song_Contest

Eurovision Song Contest - Definition and Overview

Running since 1956, the Eurovision Song Contest (in French: Grand Prix Eurovision de la Chanson) is an annual televised song contest with participants from numerous countries whose national television broadcasters are members of the European Broadcasting Union. The contest is broadcast on television and also radio throughout Europe. More recently, the contest has also been televised in other parts of the world and broadcast on the internet.

The contest's name comes from the Eurovision TV Distribution Network, which is run by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and can reach a potential television audience of more than one billion. Any member of the EBU may participate in the contest. This also includes countries of Africa and Asia such as Israel, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Egypt, Lebanon, Libya and Syria. Of these non-European nations, only Israel and Morocco have participated in the contest and Lebanon will participate for the first time in 2005.

The EBU is unconnected to the European Union.

Contents

History

Based on the San Remo Music Festival, the first Eurovision Song Contest was the brainchild of the European Broadcasting Union. The first contest took place May 24, 1956, when seven of the original invitees participated (the other three were disqualified for late entry). The original participants were France, West Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium, and Switzerland. They were joined the next year by the United Kingdom, Denmark, and Austria ("the Procrastinators"), and in 1959 by Monaco.

For the 2002 edition, the Spanish TVE created a reality show Operación Triunfo that showed the selection and training of unknown singers. At the end, one of them would be elected by the public to represent the country in the contest. The format was an enormous success in Spain and is being exported. One of the first of these exports was the Irish You're A Star, run on Radio Teilifís Éireann over Winter 2002/'03 for the 2003 Contest.

Up until 2003 entry to the Eurovision song contest also required the country to have performed with a reasonable amount of success for the previous few years. Because of the size of their contribution to the EBU budget, France, Germany, Spain and the UK automatically qualify regardless of how poorly their songs perform.

At the beginning of 2003 the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) decided to make the Eurovision Song Contest a two day event as of 2004. This means that the previous restrictions on the number of countries that can participate will be dropped. Any EBU member country will be able to participate in any given year. The new format calls for the 10 most successful countries from the previous year along with the four biggest budget contributors to directly qualify for the final show. The remaining countries go through a qualification round from which the 10 best advance to the 24-26 nation final show,

Rules

Number of songs

Initially each country was allowed to submit two three-minute (or less) songs, performed by inhabitants of the respective country. By the 1960s, entries were limited to one song per country (participation in the contest had almost doubled). Participation continued to grow through the 1980s, and by the turn of the century the rules had been changed several times to both limit the number of finalists and to allow for the new independent republics that arose from the former Eastern bloc nations.

Performers

Current rules state that countries are only allowed to have six performers on stage and that performers must be aged 16 or more, on the 31st of December in the year of the contest. It is worth noting that under the current rules there is no restriction on the nationality of the performers, allowing the Canadian Céline Dion to represent Switzerland, amongst many others. If an EBU country does not broadcast the Song Contest they are automatically disqualified for the next year.

Among the famous performers that have graced the Eurovision stage, we find Cliff Richard, Nana Mouskouri, The Shadows, Vicky Leandros, t.A.T.u., Mocedades, Baccara and the previously mentioned Canadian star, Céline Dion.

Languages

Following the dominance of English language songs, particularly Sweden's 1974 victory (with Abba's Waterloo), a rule was passed in 1977 that the song had to be sung in one of the official languages of the performing country. This resulted in rumours of some smaller countries declaring English an official language.

The rule was quashed in 1999, and Sweden immediately won again with another English song (Take Me To Your Heaven by Charlotte Nilsson).

Many small countries sing in English to reach broader audiences, though in bigger countries this is sometimes looked upon as unpatriotic.

Judging

An international process

The winner of the contest is decided by each country assigning points (currently 1 to 8, 10 and 12) to their favourite ten entries. In most countries, national telephone polls are held during the broadcast in order to determine the number of points to be awarded to songs. Countries are not allowed to vote for themselves.

Until recently, votes were decided by small juries in each country rather than telephone polls. Since the advent of telephone voting, politics and geography have become increasingly important in the voting. Cyprus almost always gives its 12 points to Greece, and vice versa. Turkey always gets many points from Germany and the Netherlands, since many Turks live there and vote for their country. In 2004, France got 12 and 10 points respectively from its francophone neighbours Monaco and Belgium - more than half of its total points. The Baltic states always give many points to each other, as do the Scandinavians and the Balkan states. Despite this, the 2004 winner, Ukraine, was not part of any major voting bloc, receiving full marks from such diverse nations as Iceland, Israel, Estonia and Turkey. Many have criticized this system as with the exception of Ruslana's win, the same countries in the same area will win consistently.

The presenters of the contest connect by satellite to each country's jury in turn, inviting the spokesperson for each national jury to read out that country's votes in French or English. The presenters then repeat the votes in both English and French, following the formula: "Country name, number points. Nom du pays, nombre points".

Nul points

Since each of the entrant countries casts a series of votes, it is only rarely that a song has failed to have any votes at all cast for it - under the modern rules this means that the song failed to make the top ten most popular songs in any country. This is also known as receiving nul points, from the practice of reading results in French as well as English during the broadcast.

Entries which received no points, or nul points, are as follows:

  • In 1978, Jan Teigen for his song, "Mil etter mil", for Norway.
  • In 1989, the Icelandic entry, "Það sem enginn sér", sung by Daníel Ágúst Haraldsson.
  • In 2003 the UK contestants, Jemini, scored no points for their entry. This caused slight consternation in the UK (see the Eurovision Song Contest 2003 entry for more details).
  • In the 2004 semi-final (a new procedure), Switzerland's performance, "Celebrate".

Politics

It has been observed, most notably by Terry Wogan, the BBC TV presenter that politics dictate a lot of the voting. Cyprus and Greece usually give maximum points to each other, regardless of the quality of their songs. Similarly, the Scandinavian and Baltic countries stick together. Ireland as a neutral country, often does well. The last time the United Kingdom won the contest was just after the EU-sceptic Conservative administration of John Major was heavily defeated by the more EU-friendly Tony Blair (although the country had came second in 1993, during the Major administration).

The counter-argument to this is that it is natural for people of similar cultures within Europe, sharing common borders where the TV and radio stations of a number of countries can be received, to like similar styles of music. That said, even though voting is now done by public telephone poll rather than by jury, political voting does seem to persist.

Hosts

Hosting the Eurovision Song Contest is an honour accorded to the winners of the previous year -- although it means that the winner's home broadcaster actually incurs heavy expenses as a result of winning and this has led to suggestions that some nations deliberately choose substandard acts so as to ensure they do not win. In the early 1990s the Irish broadcaster RTÉ was reported to have experienced financial difficulties through having to host the contest four times in five years. The 2004 ESC has been allocated a budget of some €15 million and is the most expensive edition ever. However, the contest is considered a unique show case for launching the host country as a tourist destination.´

Many pop singers and groups have begun the path to fame with a win at the contest. However ABBA and Céline Dion are the only contest winners to have had significant international success.

Music

The maximum duration of each song is three minutes, and the musicians and songs selected for the contest tend towards very commercial pop, although there are exceptions. Many viewers of the contest view the event as a combination of camp entertainment and a musical train wreck (a fact played upon in the English-language broadcast with the sardonic BBC commentary of Terry Wogan) and a subculture of Eurovision song contest drinking games and the like has evolved in some countries.

Winners

YearCountrySongPerformerArticle
1956SwitzerlandRefrainLys AssiaESC 1956
1957NetherlandsNet Als ToenCorry BrokkenESC 1957
1958FranceDors mon amourAndré ClaveauESC 1958
1959NetherlandsEen beetjeTeddy ScholtenESC 1959
1960FranceTom PilibiJacqueline BoyerESC 1960
1961LuxembourgNous les amoureuxJean-Claude PascalESC 1961
1962FranceUn premier amourIsabelle AubretESC 1962
1963DenmarkDanseviseGrethe & Jørgen IngmannESC 1963
1964ItalyNon ho l'etàGigliola CinquettiESC 1964
1965LuxembourgPoupée de cire, poupée de sonFrance GallESC 1965
1966AustriaMerci ChérieUdo JürgensESC 1966
1967UKPuppet on a stringSandie ShawESC 1967
1968SpainLa, la, la ...MassielESC 1968
1969#SpainVivo cantandoSaloméESC 1969
1969#FranceUn jour, un enfantFrida BoccaraESC 1969
1969#NetherlandsDe troubadourLennie KuhrESC 1969
1969#UKBoom bang a bangLuluESC 1969
1970IrelandAll kinds of everythingDanaESC 1970
1971MonacoUn banc, un arbre, une rueSévèrineESC 1971
1972LuxembourgAprès toiVicky LeandrosESC 1972
1973LuxembourgTu te reconnaîtrasAnne-Marie DavidESC 1973
1974SwedenWaterlooABBAESC 1974
1975NetherlandsDing-a-dongTeach-InESC 1975
1976UKSave Your Kisses for MeBrotherhood of ManESC 1976
1977FranceL'oiseau et l'enfantMarie MyriamESC 1977
1978IsraelA-ba'ni-bi Izhar Cohen & AlphabetaESC 1978
1979IsraelHallelujahGali Atari & Milk and HoneyESC 1979
1980IrelandWhat's another yearJohnny LoganESC 1980
1981UKMaking your mind upBucks FizzESC 1981
1982GermanyEin bisschen FriedenNicoleESC 1982
1983LuxembourgSi la vie est cadeauCorinne HermesESC 1983
1984SwedenDiggi-loo-diggi-leyHerrey'sESC 1984
1985NorwayLa det swingeBobbysocksESC 1985
1986BelgiumJ'aime la vieSandra KimESC 1986
1987IrelandHold me nowJohnny LoganESC 1987
1988SwitzerlandNe partez pas sans moiCéline DionESC 1988
1989YugoslaviaRock MeRivaESC 1989
1990ItalyInsieme 1992Toto CutugnoESC 1990
1991SwedenFångad av en stormvindCarolaESC 1991
1992IrelandWhy meLinda MartinESC 1992
1993IrelandIn your eyesNiamh KavanaghESC 1993
1994IrelandRock'n Roll kidsPaul Harrington & Charlie McGettiganESC 1994
1995NorwayNocturneSecret GardenESC 1995
1996IrelandThe voiceEimear QuinnESC 1996
1997UKLove shine a lightKatrina & The WavesESC 1997
1998IsraelDivaDana InternationalESC 1998
1999SwedenTake me to your heavenCharlotte NilssonESC 1999
2000DenmarkFly on the wings of loveOlsen BrothersESC 2000
2001EstoniaEverybodyTanel Padar, Dave Benton & 2XLESC 2001
2002 Latvia I wanna Marie NESC 2002
2003Turkey Everyway That I Can Sertab ErenerESC 2003
2004Ukraine Wild Dances RuslanaESC 2004
2005???ESC 2005

Note: (#) In 1969 four countries were joint winners as there was no rule for a tie.

As of 2004, the most successful country in the song contest has been Ireland who have won seven times. Close behind them with five wins each are France, Luxembourg and the UK.

Junior Eurovision Song Contests

Denmark originally held a song contest for children in 2000 then it organised a Nordic Children's Eurovision. The EBU saw clips of the show and liked it so decided to create an official Children's Eurovision.

From 2003 a Eurovision Song Contest for children was also held called Junior ESC in Denmark.

Intervision Song Contest

Between 1977 and 1980 the countries of the former Eastern bloc had a song contest of their own, known as the Intervision Song Contest. Organized by the Intervision Network and held in Sopot, Poland, it replaced an earlier event - the Sopot International Song Festival.

See also

External links

Example Usage of Eurovision

eurovisionteam: New on Youtube - Reactions from Alexander Rybak during the Eurovision Song Contest week http://bit.ly/1qMONf
eurovisionteam: New on Youtube - Greenroom reactions at the Eurovision Song Contest Final 2009 (Part II) http://bit.ly/4dQuOU
poppostergirl: On one hand, Eurovision winner Alexander Rybak covering 500 Miles for his next single was a brilliantly ridiculous choice--voice matches...
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