Eurovision Song Contest: Annual song competition held among the member countries of the European Broadcasting Union

The Eurovision Song Contest (sometimes shortened to ESC or simply Eurovision) is an international song contest held every year by the European Broadcasting Union since 1956.

Each year, different singers representing countries in Europe perform a song and the winner is decided through voting.

Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format
Eurovision's "heart logo"

Between 160 million and 200 million people watch every year. This makes it the largest music competition in the world. Eurovision has had many famous winners in the past including ABBA, Céline Dion, Sandie Shaw, Bucks Fizz, Alexander Rybak, Conchita Wurst, Netta Barzilai, Duncan Laurence and Måneskin. Other famous contestants that did not win include Olivia Newton-John, Bonnie Tyler, Blue, Jedward, Engelbert Humperdinck and Rosa Linn.

Creation

Top row (left to right):

Middle row (left to right):

Bottom row (left to right):

  • Salvador Sobral is the contestant who won with the most points
  • Johnny Logan is the first person to win twice
  • Loreen is the first woman to win twice and most recent winner

Eurovision started on 24 May 1956. The Eurovision Song Contest was created by the European Broadcasting Union to experiment live television and broadcasting across multiple countries. It was inspired by RAI's Sanremo Music Festival. The first contest was held in 1956 with the aim of uniting the countries of Europe following World War II. Seven countries took part in the first contest, which was hosted in Lugano. It was won by Lys Assia, who was representing Switzerland.

Expansion of the contest

More countries began to join very quickly. In the 1970s, countries from outside Europe began to participate (such as Israel). Morocco also participated once (and is the only African country to do so). The early 1990s saw the fall of both the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, with both split into multiple countries (all in Eastern Europe). All of these new countries wanted to join so the 1993 contest had a separate contest held beforehand between seven new Eastern European countries. The three winners of the contest would participate in the actual Eurovision Contest.

Relegation system (1994—2003)

The 1994 contest introduced a relegation system. This meant that each year, the countries that ranked lowest would not be allowed to participate the following year in order to allow other countries to enter. Eurovision 1999 introduced a new rule where the United Kingdom, Spain, France and Germany (this group was called the "Big Four") were given the right to participate in every contest, even if they ranked at the bottom.

Semi-finals (2004—present)

The relegation system was used until the Eurovision Song Contest 2004, which introduced a semi-final. The Big 4 and the ten highest-scoring acts of the previous contest would automatically qualify to the final while the rest would have to participate in a semi-final (the ten winners of the semi-final would join the others in the final).

In 2008, a second semi-final was introduced. Now, the ten highest-ranking countries from each semi-final join the host country and the Big Four in the Grand Final. The Big Four expanded to the "Big Five" when Italy re-joined the contest.

Current competition format

Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format 
Loreen is the most recent winner

Each year, every country taking part will send in one song which is performed by up to six singers. Each song is performed in a large arena in front of an audience of fans. The winner is decided through a complicated system of voting.

Participation

In the first few years of the contest, a small group of countries competed against each other in one show. As more countries wanted to join, it was eventually decided that there would be two semi-finals, where the ten highest-ranked countries from each semi-final would go into the final. The United Kingdom, France, Spain, Germany and Italy automatically qualify for the final because they give a lot of money to the contest. In addition to this, the host country also automatically makes it to the final. This makes an average of 26 finalists (25 if the host country is a member of the Big Five).

Voting and winner selection

Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format 
Eurovision trophy

Until the late 1990s, the winner was decided by experts from each country, called a jury. The juries awarded points to their favourite songs. The way that the points were awarded changed many times over the years until 1975, where it was decided that each jury awarded 12, 10 and 8—1 points to ten songs (with their favourite getting 12 points, second getting 10 and third to tenth getting 8—1 points).

In the late 1990s, televoting was introduced for some countries while others used juries. From 1998 to 2008, only televoting was used with the same system which had been used since 1975.

In 2009 was decided that the juries would come back because countries kept voting for their neighbours. From 2009 to 2015, the rankings of each country's jury vote and public vote were added together and the top ten songs were awarded with 12, 10 and 8—1 points.

In 2016, a new system was introduced where each country's jury and public awarded separate points to their top ten favourite songs. This meant that countries started scoring far higher than before.

In 2023, the "Rest of the World" vote was introduced for the public vote, which allowed viewers from other countries to vote. This gave the public 50.6% say in the voting while the juries now have 49.4%.

Hosting

Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format 
The four hosts of the Eurovision Song Contest 2019

According to the Eurovision rules, the winner of each contest will host the next year's contest. This rule has been applied most of the time, with a notable exception being the 2023 contest, which was hosted in the United Kingdom because the previous year's winner, Ukraine, was unable to host.

Each year, the contest is hosted by a number of presenters. Usually, these are celebrities from the hosting country or can also be past winners and contestants.

The presenters will usually speak in English or the language of the host country. In addition to the presenters, each participating country has a "commentator" who narrates the event for the viewers in their language.

Contestant selections

Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format 
The European Broadcasting Area

In order for a country to participate, it must be a part of the European Broadcasting Union. This includes all of Europe, some Asian and African countries as well as Australia. Each country has a television channel (called broadcasters) which broadcasts the Contest in that country. The only European countries which have never participated are Liechtenstein and the Vatican. The only African country to have ever participated was Morocco.

Entry selections

There are three main types of selections which choose who will represent what country:

  • An internal selection is when the channel showing the Contest in a country chooses the contestant and song. For example, the BBC (which airs the Contest in the UK) has chosen the song and contestant without involving the public for several years.
  • A national selection is where a country holds its own competition to decide who will represent them in Eurovision. For example, Sweden's national selection is Melodifestivalen, which is the most watched national selection.
  • A combination of both selections is a rare method. It is often when the broadcaster chooses the contestant and lets the public vote on the song.

Recent history

The Eurovision Song Contest 2020 was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This is the first time the contest was cancelled. It was replaced by a replacement show called Eurovision: Europe Shine a Light. It showed the selected entries in place of the Grand Final on 16 May 2020. The BBC also organised an all-stars contest, where ABBA's "Waterloo" was voted best Eurovision song. That same year, a film named Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga was released starring Will Ferrell and Rachel McAdams.

Slogans

Starting in the Eurovision Song Contest 2002, each contest was given a different theme and slogan. This stopped when it was announced that the same slogan would be used every year starting from the Eurovision Song Contest 2024.

Year Slogan
2002 A Modern Fairytale
2003 A Magical Rendez-vous
2004 Under The Same Sky
2005 Awakening
2006 Feel The Rhythm
2007 True Fantasy
2008 Confluence of Sound
2010 Share The Moment
2011 Feel Your Heart Beat
2012 Light Your Fire
2013 We Are One
2014 #JOINUS
2015 Building Bridges
2016 Come Together
2017 Celebrate Diversity
2018 All Aboard!
2019 Dare To Dream
2020 Open Up
2021
2022 The Sound Of Beauty
2023 United By Music
2024

List of contests

The first Contest was won by Swiss singer Lys Assia with the song "Refrain". The first man to win (André Claveau) won the third Contest. ABBA was the first group to win. The first person to win the Contest twice was Johnny Logan. The first woman to win twice was Loreen, whose second win is the most recent victory.

Year Host city Winner
Country Performer Song
1956 Lugano Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format   Switzerland Lys Assia Refrain
1957 Frankfurt Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Netherlands Corry Brokken Net als toen
1958 Hilversum Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  France André Claveau Dors, mon amour
1959 Cannes Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Netherlands Teddy Scholten Een beetje
1960 London Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  France Jacqueline Boyer Tom Pillibi
1961 Cannes Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Luxembourg Jean-Claude Pascal Nous les amoureux
1962 Luxembourg Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  France Isabelle Aubret Un premier amour
1963 London Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Denmark Grethe & Jørgen Ingmann Dansevise
1964 Copenhagen Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Italy Gigliola Cinquetti Non ho l'età (per amarti)
1965 Naples Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Luxembourg France Gall Poupée de cire, poupée de son
1966 Luxembourg Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Austria Udo Jürgens Merci, Chérie
1967 Vienna Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  United Kingdom Sandie Shaw Puppet on a String
1968 London Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Spain Massiel La, la, la
1969 Madrid Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  France[1] Frida Boccara Un jour, un enfant
Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Netherlands[1] Lennie Kuhr De troubadour
Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Spain[1] Salomé Vivo cantando
Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  United Kingdom[1] Lulu Boom Bang-a-Bang
1970 Amsterdam Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ireland Dana All Kinds of Everything
1971 Dublin Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Monaco Séverine Un banc, un arbre, une rue
1972 Edinburgh Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Luxembourg Vicky Leandros Après toi
1973 Luxembourg Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Luxembourg Anne-Marie David Tu te reconnaîtras
1974 Brighton Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Sweden ABBA Waterloo
1975 Stockholm Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Netherlands Teach-In Ding-a-Dong
1976 The Hague Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  United Kingdom Brotherhood of Man Save Your Kisses for Me
1977 London Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  France Marie Myriam L'oiseau et l'enfant
1978 Paris Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Israel Izhar Cohen & Alphabeta A-ba-ni-bi (א-ב-ני-בי)
1979 Jerusalem Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Israel Gali Atari & Milk and Honey Hallelujah (הללויה)
1980 The Hague Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ireland Johnny Logan What's Another Year?
1981 Dublin Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  United Kingdom Bucks Fizz Making Your Mind Up
1982 Harrogate Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Germany Nicole Ein bißchen Frieden
1983 Munich Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Luxembourg Corinne Hermès Si la vie est cadeau
1984 Luxembourg Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Sweden Herreys Diggi-loo diggi-ley
1985 Gothenburg Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Norway Bobbysocks! La det swinge
1986 Bergen Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Belgium Sandra Kim J'aime la vie
1987 Brussels Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ireland Johnny Logan Hold Me Now
1988 Dublin Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format   Switzerland Céline Dion Ne partez pas sans moi
1989 Lausanne Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Yugoslavia Riva Rock Me
1990 Zagreb Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Italy Toto Cutugno Insieme: 1992
1991 Rome Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Sweden Carola Fångad av en stormvind
1992 Malmö Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ireland Linda Martin Why Me?
1993 Millstreet Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ireland Niamh Kavanagh In Your Eyes
1994 Dublin Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ireland Paul Harrington & Charlie McGettigan Rock 'n' Roll Kids
1995 Dublin Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Norway Secret Garden Nocturne
1996 Oslo Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ireland Eimear Quinn The Voice
1997 Dublin Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  United Kingdom Katrina and the Waves Love Shine a Light
1998 Birmingham Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Israel Dana International Diva (דיווה)
1999 Jerusalem Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Sweden Charlotte Nilsson Take Me to Your Heaven
2000 Stockholm Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Denmark Olsen Brothers Fly on the Wings of Love
2001 Copenhagen Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Estonia Tanel Padar, Dave Benton & 2XL Everybody
2002 Tallinn Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Latvia Marie N I Wanna
2003 Riga Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Turkey Sertab Erener Everyway That I Can
2004 Istanbul Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ukraine Ruslana Wild Dances
2005 Kyiv Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Greece Helena Paparizou My Number One
2006 Athens Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Finland Lordi Hard Rock Hallelujah
2007 Helsinki Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Serbia Marija Šerifović Molitva (Молитва)
2008 Belgrade Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Russia Dima Bilan Believe
2009 Moscow Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Norway Alexander Rybak Fairytale
2010 Oslo Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Germany Lena Meyer-Landrut Satellite
2011 Düsseldorf Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Azerbaijan Ell & Nikki Running Scared
2012 Baku Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Sweden Loreen Euphoria
2013 Malmö Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Denmark Emmelie de Forest Only Teardrops
2014 Copenhagen Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Austria Conchita Wurst Rise Like a Phoenix
2015 Vienna Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Sweden Måns Zelmerlöw Heroes
2016 Stockholm Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ukraine Jamala 1944
2017 Kyiv Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Portugal Salvador Sobral Amar Pelos Dois
2018 Lisbon Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Israel Netta Barzilai Toy
2019 Tel Aviv Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Netherlands Duncan Laurence Arcade
2020 [2] [2] [2] [2]
2021 Rotterdam Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Italy Måneskin Zitti e buoni
2022 Turin Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Ukraine Kalush Orchestra Stefania
2023 Liverpool Eurovision Song Contest: Creation, Expansion of the contest, Current competition format  Sweden Loreen Tattoo
2024 Malmö TBA

International versions

There are some other versions of Eurovision including:

Notes

  1. ^ In 1969 four countries were joint winners as there was no rule for a tie.
  2. ^ Cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Replaced by a programme called Eurovision: Europe Shine a Light.

References

Other websites

Tags:

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