guide - Popbitch
Transcription
guide - Popbitch
Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Eurovision 2014 Hello, Copenhagen! This is Popbitch calling! Here we have your all-in-one guide to the songs, the statistics and the stories of this year’s contest. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Song Profiles ..................... 4-40 In this section, you’ll find all of the essential information on every song in the competition – from the first semi-final to the swaggering Big Six – plus all of the important trivia on the performers. Statistics ...................... 41-51 You want data? We got data. Our deep, theoretical analysis into the last 15 years of Eurovision has thrown up a bunch of colourful infographics, charts and diagrams that will make you a Eurovision expert within minutes. Stories ......................... 52-60 The Best Of The Rest: Five fine songs that didn’t make the final Singing In The Reign: 15 fascinating years of Eurovision history Molly Good Show: We meet the UK’s most hopeful entry in years. Bloggers’ Choice ................ 61-63 We asked some of the best-informed bloggers for their opinions on this year’s underdogs. This is what they had to say. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Contents All 37 entries in alphabetical order. Click the country to be taken straight to their profile. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Albania .........9 SF1 Armenia .........4 SF1 Austria .........25 SF2 Azerbaijan ......11 SF1 Belarus .........29 SF2 Belguim .........13 SF1 Denmark .........35 GF Estonia .........6 SF1 F.Y.R.Macedonia..30 SF2 Finland .........27 SF2 France ..........36 GF Georgia .........23 SF2 Germany .........37 GF Greece ..........32 SF2 Hungary .........19 SF1 Iceland .........8 SF1 Ireland .........28 SF2 Israel ..........21 SF2 Italy ...........38 GF Latvia ...........5 SF1 Lithuania ........26 SF2 Malta ............20 SF2 Moldova ..........14 SF1 Montenegro .......18 SF1 Norway ...........22 SF2 Poland ...........24 SF2 Portugal .........16 SF1 Romania ..........34 SF2 Russia ...........10 SF1 San Marino .......15 SF1 Slovenia .........33 SF2 Spain ............39 GF Sweden ...........7 SF1 Switzerland ......31 SF2 The Netherlands ..17 SF1 Ukraine ..........12 SF1 United Kingdom ...40 GF Semi Final 1 - 6th May Semi Final 2 - 8th May Grand Final - 10th May Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Armenia It’s not uncommon for a country to pick their entrants from their national version of X Factor or The Voice. Armenia have done it, but they haven’t picked a contestant. They’ve picked the host. They’re sending the Armenian Dermot O’Leary. And what’s weirder still? He’s the hot favourite. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Aram MP3 Song Not Alone Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer C minor No Two Yes (Not ideal: minor is good, but C loses more often than it wins) (Good: key changes are death) (Good: one composer / one lyricist) (Good: it always helps to have the writer perform) Sounds Like Something you’d find on a DJ Shadow mixtape Other Notes Aram’s real surname isn’t MP3; it’s Sargsyan. He got his start as a stand up comedian doing humorous covers of popular songs which is where he earned the stage name. The dubstep production sound made its first appearance last year, with six entrants using some wubs and dubs. None of it did very well though. And this year - while the studio version video is racking up unheard of numbers for a Eurovision track on YouTube, like a lot of club-inspired productions, the live version on stage hasn’t been well received. Aram was odds-on favourite before he did his first appearance, but now he’s out to 2-1. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Latvia German-born Jöran Steinhauer and his merry band of Latvian buskers sing this year’s cutesy folk number. Filled with weird references to unicorns, Indiana Jones and the lost city of Atlantis, Cake To Bake is ridiculous, twee and about as catchy as they come. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Aarzemnieki Song Cake To Bake Language English/Latvian Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer F# major No Two Yes (Pretty bad: F# is often a losing key; major is a disaster) (Good: although one semitone up is actually a better key) (OK: it’s usually better to have two songwriters per song) (Good) Sounds Like An over-friendly exchange student, let loose with a guitar at a party. Other Notes The band’s name means ‘Foreigners’ in Latvian. Lead singer Jöran moved to Latvia when he fell in love with Brainstorm’s Eurovision performance in 2000. The band had a surprise hit with a song about the demise of Latvia’s national currency (the lats), and their silly-lyrics busking is growing a big fanbase in Copenhagen. One to enjoy. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Estonia In her homeland, Tanja has made her name in musical theatre, television and pop music, having played leads in numerous musicals, appearing on primetime shows and releasing six albums of her own material. In Eurovision, she is making her name as ‘That one that’s a bit like Lady Gaga’. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Tanja Song Amazing Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer C minor No Two Yes (OK: popular key this year; not traditionally a winner though) (Good: but shifting up a tone would put it in the sweet spot) (Ideal: exactly what you want) (Good: most winners write their own songs; juries seem to like it) Sounds Like Lady Gaga Other Notes Tanja is Russian-Estonian, born in Kaliningrad. It often helps to have an act born in a different country to the one they’re representing but this year the Russian connection might not be so useful... nor the Lady Gaga comparison. If you like upbeat stompers, you might like this. If you don’t like the sound of cats wailing, you might not. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Sweden Sanna Nielsen will have the Fiona Bruce-fancying, Radio 2-listening dad demographic all sewn up before she sings her first note – but as for the rest of us? It’s a pleasant enough Euro-ballad that wouldn’t look too uncomfortable in the top 10. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Sanna Nielsen Song Undo Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer Eb minor Yes Three No (Good: Eb is within the winning range, minor is good too) (Mixed: E minor is a winning key, but key changes are cheap) (They all have pretty solid credentials too - see below) (Sanna’s only real stumbling block...) Sounds Like Celine Dion, moving into radio-friendly ballads Other Notes Sanna is the youngest person ever to have a Swedish language number one, aged 11. Undo’s songwriters include Fredrik Kempe (who also wrote Eurovision runner-up Popular) and David Kreuger (who worked on Boyzone’s Where We Belong and Britney’s ...One More Time album). The juries will love this one, but you might fall asleep while it’s on. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Iceland Beards, bright colours and bouncing about basically sums up the Pollapönk experience. It’s an odd and slightly schizophrenic number that flits between punk, pop and disco and it’s exactly the sort of thing we love Eurovision for. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Pollapönk Song No Prejudices Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer D minor Yes Two Yes (D minor is a great key; but it isn’t very solidly in Dm) (Bad: and, worse, it sort of slips from key to key throughout) (Good: both wrote music and lyrics) (Good) Sounds Like Verses sound like the Hives; the chorus sounds like Sweet Home Alabama and they also break into the most balls-out disco we’ve seen in the competition since Stefan Raab’s Wadde Hadde Dudde Da in 2000. Other Notes Pollapönk are popular among children, kind of like a punk rock Wiggles. They originally sang this in Icelandic for the national heats, but have rewritten it in English for the competition – so everyone can know it’s about a boy being bullied for having a stammer. They have a backing singer who looks like Frankie Boyle freshly discharged from Guantánamo. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Albania Straddling the worlds of pop and classical - like Nigel Kennedy, Vanessa Mae and Myleene Klass before her - Hersi Matmuja is performing one of the most peculiar songs of the contest. One that has undergone quite the transformation since we first heard it. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Hersi Song One Night’s Anger Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer F Yes Two No (Moves between F major and F minor; an unusual technique) (Bad) (Good: one lyricist; one composer) (Not great) Sounds Like A Seal B-side, sung by Shakira Other Notes The original version of this song was very different. Written in Albanian and performed by an orchestra that was dozens strong, it started with rough electric guitar, before blending into something far grander and stirring than the oddly folksy number it has since morphed into. Now, it’s a good spot for a toilet/tea/beer getting break. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Russia D-Wing, rejoice! Junior Eurovision is all grown up! //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Tolmachevy Sisters Song Shine Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer E minor Yes Five No (Good: E has never lost in the 21st Century; minor is good) (Bad: up two semitones to the death-knell of F#) (Not great: two composers; three lyricists) (Bad) Sounds Like Almost every Eurovision song you’ve ever imagined Other Notes It’s more about how badly they are booed than how good the song is. Lyrics are back-of-a-fag-packet Google Translate; the song even less memorable. The Tolmachevy twins have impressive Eurovision credentials though. At the age of nine, they won the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2006 in Bucharest with their song Spring Jazz; and they were also part of the opening act in the second semi-final in Moscow. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Azerbaijan Having already achieved their goal of hosting the Eurovision, you’d think that Azerbaijan would be tempted to phone it in this year, but not a bit of it. In fact, given that their bitter rivals, Armenia, are this year’s early favourites to win, the pressure is back on them to put on a good show. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Dilara Kazimova Song Start A Fire Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer B minor No Three No (Mixed: minor is good, but B is in the losing range) (Good: there’s nowhere to move that would help either) (Mixed: too many, but they’re Swedish and previous winners) (Bad: often the undoing of ballads, this) Sounds Like The kind of song that appears on CD2 of a Disney album. Something from one of the straight to video sequels, but is actually a solid bit of balladry. Other Notes Like most countries, Azerbaijan had televised heats in order to chose their entry. One week, Dilara chose to perform Shirley Bassey’s History Repeating. It was gobsmackingly weird. The song was written by Swedes - including Stefan Örn (who wrote Azerbaijan’s winning entry, Running Scared). It uses a diminished chord, which is unusual for Eurovision, and it also features Azerbaijan’s national instrument, the balaban. Try and forget the awful staging; it’s a very pretty song – and Dilara is one of Baku’s few animal rights campaigners. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Ukraine The good people of Ukraine aren’t letting a little geopolitical trouble worry them. And they’re not trading on pity either. They’ve put in a proper stomper that, despite a little too much whistling, is probably their best chance in ten years at lifting the trophy again. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Maria Yaremchuk Song Tick-Tock Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer F# minor No Two Yes (Good: minor is strong, F# is just inside the winning bracket) (Great: any higher and she’d have been in the losing range) (Good: one composer-lyricist; one lyricist) (Good) Sounds Like Maroon 5. But good Maroon 5. Other Notes The lyrics to this song have had a little tweak since this first earned its place in the competition (presumably the work of the newlyadded second songwriter). Wisely, they’ve changed the first line which was “We belong to each other / Like a sister to a brother”. It just gave the whole thing a slightly unpleasant, incesty feel. Will this get the sympathy vote? The bookies obviously think so, as her odds have slashed in this last week – despite the huge hamster wheel on stage. And that Maria is a supporter of the pro-Russian party in Ukraine. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Belgium The Sunday after the Eurovision final is Mothers Day in Belgium (and 13 other participating countries). Hopefully, Axel Hirsoux’s ode to loving his mother is a cynical attempt to grab votes, and not a genuine love letter. Otherwise he’s going to be turning things hellishly icky... //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Axel Hirsoux Song Mother Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer E minor No Two No (Good: a very solid key to perform in) (Good: you don’t want to move from a key like that) (Good: ideal, in fact) (Bad: hopefully this is enough to jinx his underhand tactics) Sounds Like Russell Watson Other Notes Axel is well known to Belgium TV fans, having appeared in (and failing to win) both Star Academy and The Voice before signing up for Eurosong 2014. The writers of Mother have written entries for Spain and Andorra in the past (none of which did any real business). Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Moldova Strong, imposing women are quite the fixture on this year’s line-up and they don’t come much stronger or more imposing than Cristina Scarlat – with her deep, booming voice and her swirly dubstep stylings. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Cristina Scarlat Song Wild Soul Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer D minor Yes Two No (Good: a key responsible for the most winners in recent years) (Bad: one semitone, to Eb minor) (Good: and with lyrics by her 23 year old niece, which is cute) (Bad) Sounds Like Early Muse, covered by latter day Muse Other Notes Utterly bonkers cyborg styling; shouty song, great voice. Run for the hills! Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories San Marino It’s probably because San Marino has a population of about sixteen people, but this is Valentine Monetta’s third time at the Eurovision – making her the first person to represent a country in three consecutive years since the Sixties. And this time with a song not about Facebook. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Valentina Monetta Song Maybe (Forse) Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer G minor No Two No (Good: G has spawned some winners; minor is good) (Good: going any higher than G# would get you in trouble) (Good: one lyricist; one composer) (Bad) Sounds Like Something your mum likes on Radio 2 Other Notes Bankrolled by German veteran songwriter, Ralf Seigel - rumoured to sub the tiny country 20k euro each time. If she wins, she’ll probably plan on staging Eurovision 2015 in her house. (Clue: she won’t win). Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Portugal Portugal have only qualified three times since semi-finals were introduced in 2004. Probably because of their bloody-minded determination to sing in Portuguese, thereby alienating most of Europe. So are they finally going to blend in with everyone else? Hell, no. This is as Portuguese as it gets. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Suzy Song Quera Ser Tua Language Portuguese Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer Tricky Yes One No (Could be E Major, C#minor or A Major - all are bad) (Bad: one semitone) (Bad: you need more than that) (Bad) Sounds Like The Lambada Other Notes If you’re particularly into cruise ship entertainers, or feeling nostalgic for a holiday on the Algarve back in the 1970s, then maybe this is the one for you. Bad, but it can probably still expect 12 points from Spain. PAEDO POP ALERT: Suzy had her first hit as part of the children’s band Onda Choc, with a single that sounds like a Portuguese teen version of Here Comes The Hotstepper. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories The Netherlands An oddly serious entry from The Netherlands this year – and an oddly American one too. It’s not bad, it just... well, it’s just not Eurovision. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist The Common Linnets Song Calm After The Storm Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer Ab Major No Five Yes (Pretty bad: Ab is skirting near losing keys, major is terrible) (Good: especially so close to the losing range) (Bad: miles too many) (Good) Sounds Like Rilo Kiley covering Every Breath You Take Other Notes After being announced as The Netherlands choice for Eurovision, Ilse and Walyon went to Nashville to prepare themselves for the competition. Yeah. Because the Tennessee sound is one that always kills with Europop fans. The lyrical allusion to storms is good. Weirdly, turbulent weather has historically been good to reference in your lyrics. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Montenegro Christopher Maloney? Is that you? //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Sergej Ćetković Song Moj Svijet Language Montenegrin Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer Eb Major Yes Two Yes (Bad: Eb isn’t great, but major is a big problem) (Bad: one tone up to F Major – another dreadful key) (Good: one composer; one lyricist) (Good) Other Notes Montenegro have put in some superb but cruelly overlooked efforts in the last two years. In 2012, they sent the Montenegrin equivalent of Ian Dury - the magnificently named Rambo Amadeus. Euro Neuro was an under appreciated gem. But that was nothing on 2013’s entry. Who See gave us the intergalactic dubstep track, Igranka. It was gloriously weird, but because of the pathetically boring juries it never made it out of the semi final. Sadly this isn’t in the same league. Another bog-break beckons (unless you like rollerskaters on stage). This also contains a strange Eurovision rarity - a change in time signature. It moves from 4/4 into 6/8. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Hungary Last year’s Eurovision was all about the wubs and dubs. This year there is a bit of a 90s tinge to it. András Kállay-Saundars is leading the charge with a drum-and-bass track about, wait for it.... child abuse. Boooyakah! //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist András Kállay-Saunders Song Running Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer Bb minor No Two Yes (Mixed: Bb has won and lost, but it’s minor – which is good) (Good) (Good) (Good) Sounds Like Baby D Other Notes András was born in New York. He visited Hungary for the first time in 2011, entered the Megasztar contest and came fourth. So he moved to Hungary and had three top tens. His father is Fernando Saunders - Lou Reed’s sideman, who also worked with Jan Hammer, Jeff Beck, Pat Benatar and Heart. His mother is a Hungarian model Katalin Kállay. He’s definitely worth a look, a big favourite in Popbitch HQ. Come on! Vote Hungary! Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Malta Mumford and Cunts. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Firelight Song Coming Home Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer Db Major No One Yes (Bad: Db is bad, major is bad; combined, it’s truly awful) (Good-ish: a semitone shift would put them in D though) (Bad: Not enough) (Good) Sounds Like Mumford and Sons - with Claire from Steps on guest vocals Other Notes The singer Richard Edward Micallef goes by the stage name Richie Edwards. This is his seventh try as a Malta Song contestant. Richie’s dad is a famous Maltese singer and two of his brothers are also in the band. Malta have a good track-record in Eurovision, belying their size and status; and unless you hate Mumfords, you might like this. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Israel Mei Finegold came third in Israel’s equivalent of Pop Idol. Which sort of makes her the Darius Danesh of Israel. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Mei Finegold Song Same Heart Language English/Hebrew Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer B minor Yes One No (Mixed: B is the tonal wilderness; minor is solid though) (Bad: two semitones, to C#m, which isn’t enough to save it) (Not great) (Bad: if she got herself a writing credit, it would really help) Sounds Like A drag Pink impersonator Other Notes Eurovision fans have been flocking to big this one up, but it’s hard to see it winning over Europe. Another poor placing could see the current rumours that this is Israel’s last appearance come true. Shouty pop, competently performed but the English to Hebrew switch half way through jars a little. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Norway Looking like a less grizzly and gnarled Lemmy, Norway’s Carl Espen is the contest’s gentle giant – singing a song that will sound slightly familiar to anyone who watched The Bridge. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Carl Espen Song Silent Storm Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer F# minor No One No (Good: F# is a bit iffy, but minor is good) (Good: going higher from here could cause problems) (Not great) (Bad: his cousin wrote it, but that won’t fool the juries) Sounds Like The theme tune to The Bridge. (Coincidence that the trophy travels from Mälmo to Copenhagen this year – the two cities featured in that series? Hmmm...) Other Notes Storms are excellent to reference in lyrics – references to thunder and rain and lightning have historically done well in the competition – but a silent storm? Carl is a 31 year old carpenter, who grew up on an island in the sea off Bergen. He served in the army in Kosovo, and was doorman in rock club. Eurovision’s huge stage can be a hard place for a rank amateur, but if Carl can hold his nerve (and he’s got the might of Sony Music behind him) this is a very pretty ballad. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Georgia Noodly, folksy, ethno-jazz certainly has its place. Usually it’s on a Saturday afternoon at a festival while waiting for a band that you actually like to come on. But now The Shin and Mariko think that Eurovision could benefit from some yodelling and compound time signatures. Yeah. Of course. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist The Shin and Mariko Song Three Minutes To Earth Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer E Major No Two Yes (Bad: major keys are the concrete boots of E) (But there are a few momentary stretches out of key) (Good: one lyricist; one composer) (Good) Sounds Like Government subsidised ‘art’ music Other Notes For the first minute, the drummer is the lead vocalist. Which probably tells you everything you need to know about their chances of winning. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Poland Poland’s answer to Pink and Bubba Sparxxx combine forces to tell us why Slavic girls are the world’s greatest. The answer? Because they make nice dairy products and are genetically manipulative. Apparently... //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Donatan & Cleo Song My Słowianie (We Are Slavic) Language English/Polish Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer A minor No Two Yes (Not ideal: A has produced a lot of losers, but minor is good) (Good: especially given how close it is to the crap keys) (Good) (Good) Sounds Like Touches of Gwen Stefani’s Hollaback Girl Other Notes The lyrics are all about Slavic prowess and excellence, but it doesn’t do well to be too territorial at Eurovision – especially when you’re relying on the votes of others. Donatan has been criticised for preaching pan-Slavism in the past – as well as paganism, satanism, recommending the Red Army, and promoting communism. Luckily for Poland he seems to be off-stage, leaving it to a cleavage-heavy all-girl performance. One for the dads, but put your fingers in your ears first. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Austria Accused by the Russians of turning the competition into a “hotbed of sodomy”, this year’s lighters-in-the-air anthem is sung by a smouldering raven-haired beauty – with a rather full beard. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Conchita Wurst Song Rise Like A Phoenix Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer D minor No Four No (Perfect) (Sounds like there’s one; it’s actually a slight tweak in melody) (A few too many, especially as all wrote lyrics and music) (Bad: If Conchita had only chucked in a line or two...) Sounds Like A classic Bond theme Other Notes Having irked Russia, Belarus and Ukraine sufficiently for them to to call for Conchita to be banned from their national broadcasts, we can’t help but feel the East – for all of their decent songs and other interesting contributions – are slightly missing the point of Eurovision. Besides, 2014 is not the year the competition became a hotbed of sodomy. Not even close. So when you hosted it in 2005, Ukraine, and you in 2009, Russia, you should know that sodomites were gaying up your capital cities like crazy. We’re sorry to have to break that to you guys but, honestly, we’re a little surprised you didn’t notice. It’s also worth saying this bearded Kim Kardashian-alike would be a worthy winner. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Lithuania Vilija Matačiūnaitė originally envisioned this as a reggae song, which would have been an unbridled catastrophe. However, with the help of a cowriter, she has crafted an electro-pop version which has become a quiet favourite of ours; one we’re really hoping doesn’t get overlooked. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Vilija Matačiūnaitė Song Attention Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer C# minor No Two Yes (Mixed: C# isn’t great, but minor is a solid choice) (Good not to use one, but it would nudge it up to a good key) (Good) (Good) Sounds Like Like a lead single from one of Girls Aloud’s solo albums Other Notes Has one of the most unlistenable starts to a song. Someone shouting “Attention!” at you repeatedly must go down better in Vilnius than in most cities. But stick with it, there’s something of the Nicola Roberts’ Beat Of My Drum about the chorus. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Finland Ten years ago Softengine would have been on the cutting edge of the contest. Instead, in 2014, their haircut indie makes them sound a little bit stuck in the past. Which is really no mean feat in a competition where one of the favourites to win sounds like a Baby D tribute act... //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Softengine Song Something Better Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer G Major No Two Yes (Not great: G isn’t so bad, but major key is a real problem) (Good) (Good) (Good) Sounds Like The RoMo revival of 1997 Other Notes Their name translates directly from Finnish as ‘Software Engineer’. This is proper synth-rock indie, the kind the Scandis do better than us these days, performed by a cute teenage band recently signed by Sony. Add in a sing-a-long stadium chorus and it’s a breath of fresh rock air for the contest. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Ireland Kasey Smith was part of Louis Walsh’s stalled project Wonderland (or, as they now appear to be styled, the “BT Music Award nominated girlband, Wonderland”). Now solo, she has teamed up with Can-Linn to bring Ireland the glory that so narrowly escaped Jedward. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Can-Linn (feat. Kasey Smith) Song Heartbeat Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer A minor No Four Possibly (Mixed: A skirts with disaster, but it is at least a minor key) (Good: especially in this area of the scale) (Bad: Too many) (Kasey didn’t write it and it’s not clear who’s in Can-Linn) Sounds Like Like a lead single from one of Girls Aloud’s solo albums Other Notes Like The Common Linnets, Kasey Smith has spent some time in Nashville maturing her sound. Between being in a girl band and entering the Eurovision. This song doesn’t resolve. It’s a trick that is on the rise at Eurovision, and this is one of the more obvious examples of a song which ends abruptly on what would traditionally be the penultimate chord. It’s the musical equivalent of a mic drop. Or the series finalé of The Sopranos. It’s also pretty awful, with easily the worst rehearsal performances. Top contender to be this year’s Jemini. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Belarus Name-checking Patrick Swayze, Jennifer Grey and Google Maps, Eastern Europe’s answer to Robin Thicke has a charming little ditty about getting all caught up in a woman’s “sweet cheesecake”. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Teo Song Cheesecake Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer C# minor No Two Yes (Not great: C# is problematic, but the minor is important) (Good) (Good: one lyricist; one composer) (Good) Sounds Like Robin Thicke Other Notes When we initially commented upon the likeness between Teo and Robin Thicke, Teo was very quick to correct us. This is what he said: “I might wear a black suit and a white shirt, but I’m Teo and not Robin Thicke. I’m the one being objectified in the song and video for ‘Cheesecake’, and the lyrics make clear that I don’t like it. The meaning behind ‘Cheesecake’ is simple but a positive song: I’m tired of my ex-girlfriend calling me her ‘sweet cheesecake’ - we all want to be treated with respect.” Anyway, he looks more like Dappy when he’s got his sunglasses on. Come on Europe, vote Teo into the final. It’s charming and silly. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories F.Y.R. Macedonia Usually, F.Y.R. Macdeonia likes to indulge in a bit of point swapping with Croatia, Turkey and Bosnia & Herzegovina – three countries all absent from this year’s party. So it seems poor Tijana will be the one who ends up loitering in the kitchen, checking her Twitter and eating all the nibbles. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Tijana Song To The Sky Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer A Major No Three No (Bad: could hardly be worse actually – the killer key) (Good: but it’s really no saving grace – stays stuck in A Major) (Bad: three’s the bad number) (Bad) Sounds Like Another Pink soundalike Other Notes Composer Darko Dimitrov also wrote FYR Macedonia’s highest scoring Eurovision entry to date - 2006’s Ninananja. That song was performed by Elena Risteska who, relatedly, wrote the lyrics for this year’s entry. One of those tracks you won’t remember 30 seconds after it’s finished. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Switzerland It’s a big year for whistling this year. But where Ukraine have some background whistles very high in the mix, Sebalter has them front and centre – merrily chirruping along with the melody. If you can bear it, you’re stronger than us. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Sebalter Song Hunter Of Stars Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer E minor No One Yes (Good: strong key; minor, as ever, is great) (Good) (Bad: two heads are better than one) (Good) Sounds Like Roger Whittaker guesting on a Dexy’s Midnight Runners track Other Notes Sebastiano Paù-Lessi - 29. Started in a band called The Stalkers, who specialised in covers by Uriah Heep and Deep Purple. And yet this couldn’t be further from Purple. Hand-claps, a fiddle and whistling. This is the what Satan would choose to play to welcome sinners into hell. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Greece Without their usual going to have to do shortfall that will a summery pop smash bumchums Cyprus in this year’s contest, Greece are something pretty special to make up the 12 point incur. The plan? Get the Greek Rizzle Kicks to perform on a massive trampoline. It might just do the trick... //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Freaky Fortune (feat. Riskykidd) Song Rise Up Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer C minor No Three Yes (Good-ish: The key of C seems to be fighting fit this year) (Good) (Mixed: but it’s unclear how much input RiskyKidd has had) (Good) Sounds Like Sam and the Womp; Yolanda Be Cool Other Notes Freaky Fortune are a Greek pop duo who won Perez Hilton’s cover version competition with Katy Perry’s Part of Me. RiskyKidd is actually called Shane. He has a German father, a Jamaican mother, was born in London and moved to Greece as a kid. On a tactical level, it’s helpful to have a geographically diverse background to maximise votes. But Greece will do well enough out of a) their Balkan neighbours, b) the growing post-recession Greek diaspora, and c) because this is loads of fun. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Slovenia For all of her weird, kooky Kate Bush promotional photography, Tinkara is actually quite a standard presence and performer. Except for the fact that she dresses like a giant Quality Street and can play the flute, there’s not really a massive amount to say about this one. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Tinkara Kovač Song Round And Round Language English/Slovene Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer C minor No Four Yes (Good-ish: another C, though this is not the finest example) (Good) (Bad: one composer; three lyrics) (Good) Sounds Like A Slovenian Corrs Other Notes The bridge to this song sounds practically identical to Lithuania’s entry, Attention. Were either of these two in any danger of topping the table with their entries this could have sparked off some plagiarism scandal. But as this is unlikely to make it to the final – and Lithuania will probably languish in the bottom third of Saturday’s table – it’s not really worth getting too fussed about. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Romania It’s a second outing for Paula Seling and Ovi – whose Muse-sounding entry in 2010, Playing With Fire, scored them a bronze. They’re bringing back their neon piano and taking a shot at the top. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Paula Seling and Ovi Song Miracle Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer A Major Yes Three Yes (Bad: really pretty terrible, truthfully) (Quite a flamboyant one; a lot of work for one semitone) (One from Norway; always helpful to bring in outsiders) (Good) Sounds Like Swedish House Mafia Other Notes The song might not stand too much statistical scrutiny, but Paula and Ovi are very visual performers. They put on a striking show, which counts for a massive amount (just ask Jonathan King...) except this time they seem to be using Liberace’s bog-seat as a keyboard. You’re going to love this one - but perhaps not in the way Romania are hoping... There’s a massively extravagant key-change near the end which could go badly wrong for Paula, too. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Denmark //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Basim Song Cliché Love Song Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer Eb Major No Four Yes (Pretty bad: Eb has no winners, major is bad) (Good: but the way he sings ‘cliché’ sounds like ‘key change’) (Bad: Too many) (Good) Sounds Like Bruno Mars Other Notes Anis Basim Moujahid is of Moroccan descent. Ordinarily it’s helpful to have someone from another country to perform your entry, but as Morocco aren’t competing this year it’s not necessarily going to add any votes to their total. Without mentioning that this is the one which might make you want to stick a fork into your eyeball. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories France //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist TWIN TWIN Song Moustache Language French Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer Bb minor No Four Yes (Mixed: Bb not ideal; minor is good) (Good) (Bad: Too many) (Good) Sounds Like LMFAO Other Notes Lorent and Francois are actually twins. Started out as guerilla film makers, before joining up with beatboxer Patrick. Signed to Warner France. Have been accused of lifting big chunks from Belgian star Stromae’s hit Papaoutai. It’s Eurovision’s most hipster act since Sebastien Teller. Loveable, but perhaps doesn’t take itself seriously enough to get the jury vote. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Germany //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Elaiza Song Is It Right? Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer G minor No Three Yes (Good) (Good) (Bad: three has lost more than it has won) (Good) Sounds Like A Bavarian Adele Other Notes Beat many of Germany’s biggest stars in their national final. Got there after winning their ticket via a wildcard contest, beating 2,239 other punter-submitted songs. And yet it’s instantly forgettable - and possibly quite irritating. Another one with a weird timesignature. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Italy //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Emma Song La Mia Città Language Italian Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer A minor No One Yes (Mixed: minor is good, A is a key for losers) (Good) (Not great: usually good to have two) (Good) Sounds Like Republica Other Notes Emma is a multiple platinum seller in Italy, winning a series of Popstars and the prestigious San Remo festival. A creditable performance but 90s influenced pop-rock sung in Italian might be a little too niche for this event. Possibly a little too niche for Bar Italia even. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Spain If you recognise Spain’s entrant ‘Ruth Lorenzo from X Factor’, it’s because you’ve seen her before. She was Ruth Lorenzo from X Factor. Rather than plunder their own reality shows for an act, they plundered the UK’s. Canny move, but it remains to be seen if it will actually motivate Brits to vote. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Ruth Lorenzo Song Dancing In The Rain Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer C Major No Three Yes (Bad: C is dreadful, major is dreadful) (Good) (Bad: One too many) (Good) Sounds Like Ruth Lorenzo from X Factor Other Notes Bitterly divided Spain when this song won, dropping the national language in favour of English. Sounds a bit Andrew Lloyd Webber but it’s not as bad as that sounds. (But still not great.) Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories United Kingdom Finally, after years of sending sweet-but-dusty legends who used the contest to resuscitate their careers, the BBC has seen sense. They’re sending some new blood. The blood of Molly Smitten-Downes. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Artist Molly Song Children Of The Universe Language English Key Key Change Songwriters Writer/Performer Eb minor No Two Yes (Good: strong bit of key choosing, Molly. Keep it up...) (Good: exactly what we want) (Good: traditionally the winning amount) (Good: perform well and the juries will love you too) Sounds Like Florence And The Machine Other Notes Was discovered via the BBC Introducing strand. Was a member of dance act Stunt, whose vocals on Sash’s Raindrops (Encore En Fois) scored a number 9 hit in 2008. Also recorded with Darren Styles and Basshunter. It’s the UK’s best entry in years. Without that dreadful Wolfie Smith “Power to the People” refrain, we could even get behind it. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories The Key To Success There is a common songs are cheery, that the patterns times out of ten; misconception amongst the casual viewer that Eurovision upbeat numbers. A brief look at the past winners show don’t quite support that theory. Major keys lose seven minor keys will win the same amount. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Change In Tactics Most people would consider the key change to be a quintessential Eurovision tool, but the data doesn’t really back that up. In recent years, acts have elected not to use them; winners certainly don’t. The one thing we can see is that the bigger the key change, the worse your chances of winning are. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories How To Use Tongue Once upon a time, every country was forced by official Eurovision rules to sing in their mother tongue. Since 1999 though, entrants have been free to perform using whichever language they so choose. So which has been the most successful? Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 Word Play The Big Six Stats/Stories English is largely a second language to most entrants, which results in fairly safe – and somewhat obvious – lyrics. But there are some critical clangers that the Eurolyricist will want to be aware of, plus a few golden words to drop in. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories The Need For Speed Each country has a maximum of three minutes in which to impress the audience - so there’s not a great deal of time for an act to drag their heels. This is how the song’s tempo (the speed of the beat) affects their chances. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six The Write Stuff Stats/Stories Eurovision rules state that you are allowed up to five songwriters per entry - a mix of composers and lyricists. Does it help to have a full committee working on your song? Or do too many cooks spoil the broth? Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Luck Of The Draw It’s not all to do with the technical skill of your songwriting. Sadly, one of the most crucial elements of succeeding at the Eurovision Song Contest is your placing on the night. Too early on, people forget who you were. Get on later, you hit the sweet spot where people are drinking and still have some stamina. Leave it too long though and the viewers are too saturated to care. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Winning Combination Up to six people can take to the stage per entry - either as singers, dancers, musicians, or a combination of all three. So, given that you have the option to include a half dozen performers, how does a winner use it best? Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories A Bunch Of Losers It’s not just the case that you can use the six-stage-performers rule to your advantage. Choose to get your stagemates doing the wrong thing and it can cost you dearly. This is the sort of thing that losers get up to on stage. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories A Geotrophy Lesson Everyone has their theories on who votes for who and which countries are favourable to certain others. Others suggest that shared or similar cultures can count for a great deal. Can geography tell us anything about where the trophy will end up next? Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Points Of Order “No-one ever votes for us” whinge the UK Eurovision critics. “Everybody hates us, I don’t know why we bother!” And yet a quick look at the voting patterns to see who each country gives the lion’s share of their points to tells quite a different story. The country with the most loyal benefactors? The UK... Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Best Of The Rest Though the UK has stopped staging national heats, the Song For Europe strand of programming is still big in the rest of the continent. Most of it is only of interest to the most dedicated of Eurovision fans, but there are the occasional gems that are deserving of a much wider audience. Here are some of 2014’s. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Ace Wilder - Busy Doin’ Nothing A number of songs in this year’s competition take a while to get started. Hot favourite Armenia takes a good minute before we hit the drop. Hungary takes as long until the beat kicks in. This track by Ace Wilder suffers from the same thing. The verses are, frankly, a little dull – but the “Don’t wanna work, work, work!” chorus could have been huge in the clubs. Imagine Cher Lloyd, if Cher Lloyd wasn’t making such absolute shit. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Sonny - Feeling The You Last year, Sonny would have looked hopelessly out of place. This year, with the strange 90s throwback sounds, Sonny would have slotted in pretty nicely. He looks like a ski instructor who has been left in charge of the group’s apres ski entertainment. His speciality? Cheap Danish Prince karaoke. Especially the bit where he sings “I feel for you” in almost exactly the same way that Chaka Khan does in the Prince song I Feel for You. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Dr Alban - Around The World Dr Alban is still a well respected force in leisure centre dance music. Jessica Folcker garnered international acclaim for her vocals on a Bomfunk MCs track. Together, the two of them would be unstoppable, right? Erm, well. No. Not quite. You don’t need to know the first thing about singing to know that this is one of the most out of tune live performances since Jemini’s Cry Baby. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// MadCraft - Shining Bright Every year needs its band who think they’re a cool street punk band, but who actually sound more like Busted. You can’t knock MadCraft for trying though. They threw the kitchen sink at this, BMXers and all, but were sadly bested by a band who’d just signed to Sony. What was Finland thinking? //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Sasha - My Lesbian Girl Long-time Eurovision aficionados will remember Sasha. Every year he enters a song for Moldova’s consideration and every year he gets just that little more bizarre. Previous attempted entries from the dark lord of Moldovan goth pop have included I Love The Girls Of 13 Years Old and Do You Like My Sexy Lips? We’re glad he hasn’t given up though as regional Eurovision would be a duller place without him. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Singing In The Reign History was made when Eurovision last the first time that a country from the the prize. 13 years later, Eurovision Europe, and the contest, looking very hit Copenhagen, in 2001, as it was wrong side of the Berlin Wall took is heading back to Denmark – with different. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// These last 15 years have seen some fascinating developments take place in the world of Eurovision. Among the newly created states of the east the contest became the epicentre of an intense scrambling for position and an outpouring of national pride. And now, huge drama is playing out across the continent as two of the major players are virtually at war, many of the keenest participants have stopped even bothering to compete and others have had their reputations tainted by corruption. Meanwhile, the British media remains resolutely fixated by a 1970s view of the contest as just a camp piece of light entertainment, so all we seem to hear is mildly xenophobic whinging about how cheating Johnny Foreigner is nixing our chances of winning. In focusing on that, we’re missing everything interesting that’s going on. So as 37 nations prepare to take to the stage, we feel it’s time to properly review the 21st Century Eurovision. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 Back From The Brink In the 1990s, Eurovision was dying. A largely ignored, dull-as-ditchwater show for your granny, contested by disinterested national broadcasters who were desperate to avoid hosting the damn thing. While much of Europe was spending its Saturday nights in warehouses, pilled up to the eyeballs and dancing to four-to-the-floor house tunes, every Eurovision entry was forced to play with an orchestra and conductor. Everyone had to sing in their national language, after which a hand-picked jury of elderly experts from each nation would decide which worthy tune should win. It was usually Ireland. This primetime TV show had been held hostage by nationalist elements in the European Broadcasting Union who drafted up regulations that would almost bring the show to its knees. But then the EBU chose to put the contest into the hands of some clever Scandinavians – people who genuinely cared about the show – and four things happened to turn this laughing stock into the world’s biggest non-sporting TV event. First: they did away with the orchestra and conductor. Second: they changed the language rule. Where once only UK and Ireland could sing in a language most people could understand, now everyone could. Third: a televote was introduced. People could text in their votes, just like on Pop Idol, quickening the move towards more commercial pop sounds. Finally: we saw the new countries of Eastern Europe rushing to join in, eager to be part of the continent’s wider cultural traditions. Why was Eurovision so important for New Europe? With the re-drawing of the map there weren’t The Big Six Stats/Stories too many opportunities for these fledgling governments to shine a light on their newly formed, or newly liberated, states. It’s not true to say everyone in the east jumped in. Some nations simply didn’t need Eurovision. The Czech Republic had Prague, Vaclav Havel and the European Championships football runners-up of 1996. Why would they bother with a pop contest? And Hungary? They had hundreds of years of empire, tradition and culture to offer. Hungary didn’t really bother to take part, until Victor Orban took over again in 2010 and made everyone wonder if Hungarians were in fact uncultured racists after all. It’s no coincidence that since then they’ve sent serious contenders, not least for 2014. Poland is a political powerhouse so their contribution has been less than minimal. Even their entry this year is about how great it is to be Slavic. Russia, on the other hand, cared. For them, Eurovision was another opportunity to hammer home their continued cultural domination of the region. But this is one area where Russia hasn’t had it all its own way. Many countries quickly identified Eurovision as the place in which their small, new, poor country could compete on a level playing field with the big, historic, rich countries of Europe. Politics and sport were dominated by the same old players, but a European-wide TV show? Well, that gave everyone a chance to show off. Eurovision now comes with a bigger global live audience than the Oscars (whatever the Academy Awards PR department try and claim). Winning therefore became a holy grail, as this would mean the following year’s show would be broadcast from the winner’s country. It also gives the lie to that hoary old myth that non-one wants to host Eurovision because of the bill. It’s a license to print tourist money. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 A New Century The seismic change to hit Eurovision actually started in Stockholm in 2000. Denmark may have won that year, but the next three on the scoreboard were Russia, Latvia and Estonia. The new lines of the contest had been drawn – it was every new state for itself. And Russia, second with billionaire oligarch’s daughter, Alsou, were absolutely certain that this was a fight they would win, just like every other one in their region until the collapse of communism. That they didn’t has been described by more than one of their neighbours as a contributing factor to their aggression every since. So, Eurovision 2001. Perhaps it was no real surprise that one of the more advanced, Scandi-leaning Baltic nations won over Europe’s hearts. And this made history for two reasons. Not just being the first postcommunist entry to win, but the first (and, to date, only) black artist, Dave Benton, to win. So Estonia, a tiny country of just over one million people took the prize. A country that had barely existed as a Republic before its 1991 liberation, this win gave their Russian oppressors a massive poke in the eye. Tallinn rejoiced, and showed the west that the new Europeans could host an event to rival anyone’s the following year. This time, Estonia’s equally vibrant neighbours Latvia won. Knocked back twice, Russia now threw everything they could at the contest, entering first red-hot global pop stars Tatu, and then their biggest male singer, Dima Bilan. Neither managed to win. Instead it was Ukraine who became the next eastern winners, in 2005. And not just any-old Ukraine, but anti-Russian Orange Revolution Ukraine. A few weeks after Viktor Yushchenko’s election, Kiev hosted its biggest ever street parties. The capital was euphoric The Big Six Stats/Stories with pro-western sentiment, celebrations carried on into the small hours lead by Ruslana, their winning entry, herself a vociferous pro-democracy campaigner and then-MP, and generally surrounded by both of the Klitchkos and the President himself. The whole of Kiev came to a standstill for two weeks. Kreschytyk Boulevard hosted a party every night, where the youth of Kiev loudly shouted their European aims, and kicked off their Russian shackles. Russia retreated to lick its wounds. Belarus poured millions and millions into their entries, to try and show Europe that Lukashenko’s dictatorship was working... but they flopped year after year. But by now all eyes were instead on the post-war Balkan nations. Serbia won the battle to be the first to host the contest in this region, in 2007. A few years on, with war a more distant memory and tourism and EU membership spreading ever further to the south-east, only little Montenegro and Macedonia have even bothered to enter the contest in 2014. For the Balkans, Eurovision as a cultural necessity is already over. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 Mother Russia’s Pride Russia finally got its win in 2008 in Belgrade. This time they’d really thrown the kitchen sink at it. You could call it winning by default. Dima Bilan (again), with a Timbaland song, accompanied by a famous violinist with a Stradivarius, and an appearance on stage by Olympic gold medal ice skater, Evgeny Pluschenko. Newly crowned president Dmitry Medvedev rushed to congratulate the new national hero, but no-one else really cared. Putin never forgave Ukraine for this indignation. And on this logic, we fear for Estonia’s territorial integrity too. After Russia got its win, and the contest started to revert back to some normality, you’d think there was no more political drama left to play for. But there was one more big battle to be fought, right out on the edges of Europe. Armenia vs Azerbaijan. Two countries who are, technically, still at war with each other. With the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, internecine squabbles broke out all over the area. Some small; some serious. Stalin’s policy of messing up ethnic groups has had a long-lasting effect. Armenia went to war with its neighbour over a disputed territory, Nagorno-Karabakh. By the time a ceasefire was brokered in 1994 more than 30,000 people had been killed and more than a million displaced. As you can imagine, beating the other side at Eurovision became an obsession for both countries. In the late part of the last decade Eurovision watchers became almost inured to the millions spent on their campaigns by both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Neither side seemed to mind the bad publicity they incurred over numerous incidents where one country’s campaign belittled the other. Azerbaijan summoned its citizens who The Big Six Stats/Stories dared vote for their enemy at Eurovision to explain to the government why they had been “unpatriotic”. Add to this the growing allegations that they’d been trying to buy up votes, allegations that, when you look at voting patterns over the last years don’t actually look very far-fetched, and you can see how seriously the Azeris took winning Eurovision. And how seriously they adhered to other European norms such as democracy and fair play. This proxy war came to an end in 2010 when the petrodollars of Azerbaijan took the crown. But did Eurovision help heal these old wounds? Absolutely not, Armenia declined to appear in Baku. They blamed their withdrawal on the border shooting of an Armenian soldier. Only to have to admit he was killed by another Armenia soldier, not anyone from Azerbaijan. Still, those petrodollars brought about Eurovision spending on a scale that had never been seen. Baku was transformed. A whole region of the startlingly impressive city was razed, and neighbourhoods displaced. To create a white elephant to rival Beijing’s Bird’s Nest Hall. Since May 2012 the Crystal Hall has sat unused and unloved. But Azerbaijan found that not all publicity is good publicity. Europe’s attention was drawn more to its human rights abuses than its tourist potential – a situation even the highly paid strong arm tactics of Freud Communications, acting on behalf of the ruling Alievs – couldn’t halt. It’s something that has not gone unnoticed by the less progressive regimes of the region and, by bringing themselves to the fore by winning, rumours of corruption and cheating are continuing to dog the nation. So, with all the major local battles won and lost across the region, where now for Eurovision? Well, it finds itself at a bit of a crossroads. Viewing figures across the Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 continent are sky high. The semi-detached UK even gets 9 million watching. More than watch X Factor and Strictly. And in the smaller nations, upwards of 90% of country sit down to watch the Saturday show. Even the much-derided music has made a huge commercial impact. Since iTunes enabled instant downloads Eurovision has created hit after hit. Loreen’s 2012 winner Euphoria was a Europe wide chart smash. As this year’s entry for UK, Molly Smitten-Downs, told us, “even if only 1% of people watching take any notice of you... that’s a million people!” And yet in some way, the Eurovision era is over. The political significance has been superseded by real politics. With EU membership won, or on the cards, TV publicity is less important. You can sense that Armenia and Belarus are still desperate to win, but the game they are playing is just catch up. The stakes are pretty low. Ukraine and Russia may be playing on the same stage this week but beyond the television studio and bureaucratic platitudes of peace, conflict comes ever closer. For once Russia don’t appear to have spent any time on their contest entry. Then again, when you’ve got actual countries to invade, dance routines for the right boyband probably don’t feel like much of a priority. Vladimir Putin might have lost the Eurovision battle to his neighbour but he’s likely to have better luck in the real war. Maybe this will go back to being a simple song contest again? We hope not. The Big Six Stats/Stories Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Molly Good Show When Molly Smitten-Downes was declared our entrant for this year’s Eurovision, the announcement was met with a resounding “Who...?” Yet this previously-unknown singer-songwriter has presented us with one of the best chances we’ve had in at least a decade. So we wanted to get to know her. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// It’s been a long while since the BBC has taken a punt on an up-and-coming singer-songwriter. How did that all come about? They approached BBC Introducing who had been putting forward people they thought were alright, and I was one of them. So obviously that was really flattering. I think they’d been approaching other people, because they said to me “Would you be interested in hearing other people’s songs?” If I hadn’t written the song, I wouldn’t be doing it. I wasn’t interested in doing it as a singer. I’m doing it very much because it’s a songwriting competition. We’ve sent a lot of people who haven’t written their own material, but our research shows that the songs that do best are the ones performed by their writers. You know, I think that’s true in general. I know there’s a lot of massive pop stars who are doing really well singing other people’s songs but I happen to really believe in singersongwriters. And I feel like too much emphasis is sometimes put on the showbiz side of it, and not enough on the lyrical content. If you look at some of the greatest songwriters of our time, they’re not always the best vocalists but they a quality and because they’re singing about something they mean I Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 I just think that carries weight. It’s something I value. So even outside the competition I’d like to think that’s got an element of truth. Our research showed us something else. Your song sounds – and do correct us if this is wrong – as if it’s in Eb minor. God, I’ve not worked it out but that sounds very likely. We found that D minor is the most successful key. Yours is incredibly close to that. Was that a deliberate choice? Oh, wow. You really are getting nerdy. I feel like I should have written out my score before this interview. So, not deliberate then? No. Have you been listening to many of the other songs? Yeah. At first I wasn’t. People were saying “Don’t listen to the other entries. It’ll just distract you.” But then it felt a little bit rude, because I was meeting all of these people and having to tell them that I hadn’t actually heard their songs, and it made me look like a twat. So I had a listen. There’s some really good songs. I’m really impressed with the calibre of music that’s in the competition. Any particular favourites? Norway, Silent Storm is a really good one, I think. Armenia is obviously a favourite and it’s wicked. Spain, Ruth Lorenzo, she’s got a wicked voice. That French entry is really good fun. Was Eurovision something you’d watched much before? Yes and no. I mean, it’s a bit of a tradition in the UK, isn’t it? When I was younger I remember watching it – Gina G and all that The Big Six Stats/Stories sort of stuff – but the last few years I haven’t really been engaged with it at all, if I’m honest. And I had such reservations about being a part of it – I guess in a sort of snobby way, really. I hate to admit it but I was kind of thinking that it didn’t have much credibility. Then, when they were interested in me as a songwriter, I realised that it was up to me what I chose to submit and I just had to make sure that I would submit a song I was really happy with. Who knows if anyone else is going to like it. In a sense you’ve been quite unlucky, because this is quite a strong year. Last year, you’d have walked it, but there’s some real quality in there this year. To be honest, people keep asking me what I’m going to do if I don’t win and I’m not really thinking about it because it feels like a personal achievement. All those people will hear my song – and even if only one percent of the audience like it, that’s still a million people. What’s happening when you get back? Do you have any plans for the summer? Well, I’ve just signed an album deal – which is a dream come true – so we’ve been recording with an orchestra for that which has been amazing. In the summer I’ll have single two, and single three after the summer, so it’s probably going to be non-stop from now. And this might sound like a silly question, but are you looking forward to it all? Yeah. I’m really happy at the minute. I bet that sounds smug. But I really am. Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Bloggers’ Choice Though the UK has stopped staging national heats, the Song For Europe strand of programming is still big in the rest of the continent. Most of it is only of interest to the most dedicated of Eurovision fans, but there are the occasional gems that are deserving of a much wider audience. Here are some of 2014’s. //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Oliver Rau, Aufrechtgehn - LATVIA “Cake to Bake is a cute and lightweight, yet philosophical singalong ditty about overcoming the fear of asking for help. In a year filled to the brim with dark, melancholic ballads, the song’s heartwarmingly innocent jolliness and church convention quality might just do the trick.” //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Ewan Spence, ESC Insight - ESTONIA “Amazing has something that every song needs - a horribly annoying hook in the lyrics that your brain refuses to let you forget, even if you hate it. It’s memorable, it will stir memories at the reprise, and in a contest full of rippling torsos and eye candy for the clichéd Eurovision fan, Tanja is ‘something for the Dads’.” //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Nick Deller, OnEurope - UKRAINE “I’m generally looking for three things in a winner: an above average song with not much competition in its genre, an arresting stage presentation that you can’t take your eyes off for a second, and – this is a dirty little secret known only to the entire world – a country that Europe is feeling somewhat well-disposed towards. Ticking all my boxes for 2014 is Ukraine, innocuously tucked in behind a set of market leaders that are predominantly slow and a bit grim. Expect rock-solid Top 5 at minimum!” //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Andy Mikheev, ESCKaz - MOLDOVA “A lot of people underestimated Zlata Ognevich last year, and she finished in a strong third place. Cristina has the same or even better vocal capabilities and she is working really hard on getting her act together as well. So this is one of the contenders for top places in Copenhagen.” Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Schlager Boys, Schlagerblog - PORTUGAL “It sounds like a Steps B-side, it has camp dancers banging giant drums and a bloke with his top off gyrating his bongos next to Suzy. She looks fab, uses a wind machine, and has fab schlager windmachine hair. Most importantly the song has a key change. In the right place. It’s going to stand out a mile considering all the dull and earnest ballads surrounding it this year, and romp home to victory!” //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Phil Colclough, OnEurope - MALTA “Although more lemongrass than bluegrass, it has slightly fragrant notes of rockabilly country mixed with a half-decent old-fashioned Eurovision builder. The Juries who will see this song as modern chart fodder that should get their juices flowing, while real punters will like it because it just sounds nice. Mix the two together and you have a pungent cocktail that will knock your socks off and rocket up the scoreboard.” //////////////////////////////////////////////////// William Lee Adams, WiWiBloggs - ISRAEL “In a sea of aspiring pop stars, Israel’s Mei Finegold is one of the few artists. Her song “Same Heart” channels anger but isn’t angry. In Mei’s deft hands we see how frustration can lead to empowerment, and how the victim can become the victor. It’s a fierce breakup song that screams, “emancipated female.” Shalom, and work it!” //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Garrett Mullhall, Eurovision Ireland - AUSTRIA “For once the Wurst song at Eurovision is a compliment! A sassy Bassey belter of a Bond song is set to Rise Like a Phoenix and resurrect the fortunes of Austria at this year’s contest. A voice Dion would kill for these days, a figure every Kardashian would pay for, a dress collection Posh Spice would certainly give a zigga zig ahhhh for and a 5’o’clock shadow that Pitt and Clooney could only wish they had! The voice, the talent, the dress and the beard - Conchita Wurst and Austria are the full package this year at Eurovision.” Semi Final 1 Semi Final 2 The Big Six Stats/Stories Emma Backfish, ESCxtra - FINLAND “Finland’s Softengine are a young band who have sent, quite possibly, the most pop radio friendly song to Eurovision this year. Something Better might be able to rise above those being touted to win and live up to its title on the 10th of May, due to its catchy sound and the band’s fresh look.” //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Hacksaw, Eurovision Apocalypse GREECE “In years where there’s no obvious favourite, the contest is usually won by a sweet old timer or a dumb fun pop song. And as there’s no delightful old duffer in sight, there’s nothing dumber and funner than this one. The juries will hate it, but the punter love might just drag it through.” //////////////////////////////////////////////////// Gavin Lambert, ESC Tips - UK “We expected Vera Lynn, or some other relic to be dusted down and wheeled out of the BBC’s broom cupboard. In Molly SmittenDownes, the UK has a current and relevant artist that should appeal to Eurovision’s main voting demographic. This is the UK’s best chance of winning for over a decade and Eurovision’s 60th anniversary has London calling!” ////////////////////////////////////////////////////