Sunday, 23 May 2021

An open letter to the U.K. regarding #Eurovision. 🇬🇧

All of those of you who know me know by now that I LOVE the Eurovision Song Contest. Not in a “it’s-one-evening-a-year-and-I-want-to-take-the-piss-out-of-foreigners” way, but I celebrate everything the competition stands for: inclusion, diversity, unity, celebration, music, national pride, equality, excitement, technological advancements, the list goes on…

I listen to Eurovision music all year round. I follow each country’s national selection process (and there is even more musical diversity in the hundreds of songs that don’t make it to the Eurovision stage).

But I want to address the same complaint I hear EVERY year. “Eurovision is political”.

It just isn’t.

There are no countries in the world less popular right now than Azerbaijan, Israel and Russia, and they nearly always do extremely well at Eurovision. We in the U.K. have been fed this imperialist lie that we are somehow better than other countries. Newsflash: every other country feels the same about themselves. As they should.

If Brexit is so important to everyone else, why did 3 EU countries also get 0 points from every country in this year’s televote? And what about the fact that fewer than half of the competing countries are even in the EU?

Yes, Greece and Cyprus exchange 12 points every year. Yes, Moldova and Romania do the same. But how often do any of them win? Greece has won once. The others, not at all. The U.K. is ALSO on that list, by the way. We are nearly always the country that gives the most points to Ireland. Do we do that because of “politics”? No. We have similar tastes, and there is a crossover in celebrity. Newsflash: so do other countries. The Serbian group Hurricane are MASSIVE in the Slavic countries. But we’ll never hear them on Radio 1 because they sing in Foreign. Similarly, we have had a slew of international superstars from former-Soviet countries such as Sergei Lazarev and Ani Lorak, who have done exceptionally well in Eurovision because they’re deservedly-beloved artists. But because we’ve never heard of them, it’s “politics”.

We just use that as an excuse for being half-arsed about our entry and then arrogant enough to think that that will be enough. To get even one point, you need to be in someone’s top 10. After last night’s show, if you can think of 16 countries that deserved to be below us on anyone’s ranking I don’t think you’re being objective. I actually preferred our song to Italy’s, but they won by a landslide so fair play to them. But I definitely can’t think of 16 worse songs out of all 39, let alone just the 26 in the final. If anything, we stood out as the ones that couldn’t be bothered capturing your attention for three whole minutes, and gave nobody a reason to pick up the phone and vote for it.

And yet the U.K. has won 5 times and come second 15 times. That’s an outcome only beaten by Sweden. (Ireland have the most wins, but way more poor results overall). France and Spain haven’t won in my lifetime. Cyprus, Malta and Iceland have NEVER won. Yet these countries don’t bitch about it and cry to pull out; they just seize the opportunity to showcase their artists and culture every year. We have to automatically qualify because the EBU knows we won’t bother watching if we’re not in the final. In Iceland, the viewing figures for Eurovision are nearly 100% audience share every year, even when they don’t make it out of the semifinals.

How many of you even KNEW there were semifinals? Two of them. We are privileged enough to not have to qualify for the final, so the BBC don’t give them the respect they’re due and bury them on BBC4. Multiple of my favourites fall at that stage every year. Frankly, we should be one of them.

Because this is the point: If you’re only watching Eurovision to see what scores the U.K. get, you’re doing it wrong. If you skipped ANY of the songs, let alone all of them, you’re doing it wrong. It is a SONG contest. Listen to all of the songs. Watch all of the performances. Score and rank them. If the U.K. has objectively made your top 10, then by all means feel upset that one of your favourites didn’t do as well as you hoped. But whilst I support the U.K. entry ever year (even when I don’t like it), I care MORE about the songs I LIKE. (In a SONG contest? I know, crazy, right?)

Well every artist that makes it to the competition, wherever they come in the results, is revered by the Eurovision fandom. In many cases, even artists that have never even made it to the Eurovision stage are beheld as legends. You think everyone hates the U.K. entry? Look up any YouTube video of our artists performing at one of the many multi-national fan events, and then tell me that.

Even Graham Norton is dropping the Wogan-esque snark and sour grapes from his commentary and is now celebrating every entry in its own right, as he should. Because they deserve it. And when we enter a song that is objectively popular across the continent(s), we will deserve it too.

NB None of this is intended to disrespect any of the U.K. entries that performed poorly. James Newman absolutely made me a proud Brit last night, but I am also proud of the audience’s repturous, encouraging response to him accepting his last place.

THAT is the true “politics” of Eurovision.

Saturday, 18 May 2019

The Eurovision Cong Contest 2019 Tel Aviv Grand Final (Preview)



So it’s been a while since I’ve done this, but since I won’t be tweeting during the show, I thought I’d give it another whirl.

Firstly, a lot of the crazy, quieter and more puzzling entries (not to mention “Sandstorm” legend Darude) have stumbled at the semifinals. But if you are interested in seeing what you missed, I have made a YouTube playlist of the 15 fallen songs here...

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLGsn5xQ8IusbMxXy061-RJp4RatPSCvew

That leaves us with a pretty solid and diverse lineup for the final. The first half is quite ballad-heavy, but the second half brings the party and a whole lot more. There has been a #1 favourite to win since the song was released, but this year is generally regarded as the most open field in years.

1. Malta - Michela - Chameleon


An up-tempo, contemporary pop banger, this is a youthful, colourful burst of energy. Don’t take your eyes off the screen, this is a visual feast, and X Factor Malta winner Michela is clearly having a ball.

Which one is this? “Chama-Chameleon” (do-do do do).

2. Albania - Jonida Maliqi - Ktheju Tokës (Return To Your Land)

The first non-English language song of the night, this is a plea to the Albanians around the world to come home, performed very professionally by an Albanian superstar.

Which one is this? The ethnic wailing one.

3. Czech Republic - Lake Malawi - Friend of a Friend

A bouncy, colourful and energetic synth pop song performed by a charismatic indie trio. It’s catchy as hell, and has a weird talky bit in a strong London accent.

Which one is this? “Friend of a friend of a friend of a friend”.

4. Germany - S!sters- Sister

No, they’re not sisters, the song is about sisterhood in general, but not the only Girl Power ballad of the night. It's a pretty decent song, considering it's expected to come last.

Which one is this? The two “sisters” shouting at each other.

5. Russia - Sergey Lazarev- Scream

2016’s televote winner returns, this time with an epic ballad. Whilst it desperately needs more of a chorus, it still packs plenty of drama and Sergey's vocals are always terrific.

Which one is this? The multiple man in white.

6. Denmark - Leonora - Love Is Forever

Saccharine sweet, this is twee personified. Whether or not that’s a good or bad thing is up to you, but don't be surprised if you find yourself singing and swaying along.

Which one is this? The one with the giant chair.

7. San Marino - Serhat - Say Na Na Na

A huge fan favourite who didn’t qualify from the semifinals a few years ago, Serhat may not be the best vocalist in the world, but he has brought us one of the most fun, up-tempo party songs this year. One to enjoy in a very ironic way.

Which one is this? The middle-aged bald man.

8. North Macedonia- Tamara Todevska - Proud

The second Girl Power ballad of the night, this one is much more simple and yet way more dramatic. Tamara’s vocals are impressive and emotional. Pure class.

Which one is this? The woman with the mirrors.

9. Sweden - John Lundvik - Too Late For Love

An epic gospel track that will at the very least get you bopping your shoulders along. John, who also co-wrote the UK entry this year, is a very likeable performer, and this is expected do very well.

Which one is this? The gospel one.

10. Slovenia - Zala Kralj & Gašpar Šantl - Sebi (To Myself)

A simple, sparse but melodic electroballad. The two just stare into each other’s eyes and while the song doesn’t really go anywhere, you’ll either love it or be bored by it. Personally, I love it.

Which one is this? The starey hipster couple.

11. Cyprus - Tamta - Replay

A fan favourite, this is a blatant replay (cough cough) of last year’s iconic entry "Fuego", which came second. An up-tempo Latin-infused banger, it’s bold and brassy.

Which one is this? “You need my love on replay”.

12. The Netherlands - Duncan Laurence - Arcade

This simple, but heartfelt ballad touched a nerve upon its release, and has led the betting odds ever since. Duncan’s vocals cover a wide range, and he delivers them flawlessly. You can usually hear a pin drop when this one is on. If it does win, I can see it being a credible hit that may even rise above the negative connotations the UK usually associate with Eurovision.

Which one is this? The bloke at the piano.

13. Greece - Katerine Duska - Better Love

Katerine has a very distinctive tone to her voice, and this mid-tempo balllad is definitely very strong. The performance is very pink and feminine, but in a grown-up way.

Which one is this? The pink one.

14. Israel - Kobi Marimi - Home

Eurovision goes all musical theatre on us, with a soaring male vocal ballad that wouldn't sound out of place in a West End musical.

Which one is this? The musical theatre one.

15. Norway - KEiiNO - Spirit In The Sky

The song that you could most accurately label “a Eurovision song”, this one is as catchy as it is cheesy. It features some indigenous singing, known as yoiking, which merries perfectly alongside the up-tempo pop song.

Which one is this? The one with the yoiking.

16. United Kingdom- Michael Rice - Bigger Than Us

Our own Michael brings some big vocals to this big pop ballad, with a slight gospel feel. I can’t help but feel this has been unfairly overlooked this year, and will definitely be forgotten, given what comes next.

Which one is this? “BIGGER!”

17. Iceland - Hatari - Hatrid Mun Sigra (Hate Will Prevail)

An anti-capitalist Industrial Goth BSM group, with throat-strippingly shouty vocals on the chorus and male falsetto on the chorus. This may not be the favourite to win, but this is THE one to watch.

Which one is this? The Industrial Goth one.

18. Estonia - Victor Crone - Storm

A palette cleanser, this one is a pretty standard mid-tempo pop song sung by a handsome Swede. Victor serves lots of eye contact and will do his best to draw you in, if you’ve stopped talking about Iceland.

Which one is this? “A storm like this could break a man like this”.

19. Belarus - Zena - Like It

A very wordy, catchy, up-tempo dance-pop song. Zena’s vocals and stage presence are impressive for a 16-year old. Fun fact: She voiced the Russian version of Moana.

Which one is this? “Yes you’re gonna like it”.

20. Azerbaijan - Chingiz - Truth

A moody, futuristic mid-tempo track that builds to a very memorable chorus. Chingiz’s range is as impressive as his biceps as he nails the falsetto in the chorus without sounding like nails on a blackboard.

Which one is this? “Shut up about it!”

21. France - Bilal Hassani - Roi (King)

A mid-tempo RnB-infused anthem straight out of the Greatest Showman playbook about struggling against negativity. Bilal is something of a millennial Conchita, sporting a long, blonde wig, and plenty of attitude. He has a tale to tell and a point to make, with the help of two individually unique dancers. The overall effect is quite moving, and could make this a dark horse.

Which one is this? The boy in the blonde wig with two dancers.

22. Italy - Mahmood- Soldi (Money)

Leaning a bit harder on the RnB, this one is heavy in the bass, as Mahmood rap-sings his way through a very cool and catchy song, sung mostly in Italian. Some well-timed hand claps mean there are some amusing opportunities for audience participation.

Which one is this? The one with the claps.

23. Serbia - Nevena Božović - Kruna (The Crown)

Sung mostly in Serbian, but with some lines in English, Nevena’s phenomenal vocals and swirly staging elevate this Balkan ballad. Another returning artist, this is the first time she has made it to the final, and with a song she wrote herself.

Which one is this? Darryl Hannah.

24. Switzerland - Luca Hänni - She Got Me

This modern pop banger is catchy as hell, and clearly should have been called Dirty Dancing, but wasn’t for (what I’m assuming are) legal reasons. Featuring some very frenetic choreography, Luca does a pretty decent job singing and dancing at the same time.

Which one is this? “Dirty Dancing!”

25. Australia - Kate Miller-Heidke - Zero Gravity

This pop-opera hybrid was not expected to make it to the Grand Final, until the first rehearsal blew everyone away. This has now been elevated into a potential winner as the impressive staging takes the song very literally, if people can finally stop whining "but they're not even in Europe..."

Which one is this? The operatic one.

26. Spain - Miki - La Venda

If any song truly represents its country, it’s this. A full-on carnival party song with a flair of Mardi Gras, this one is infectious. I just hope they haven't overdone the staging, as Miki has more than enough charisma to carry the song on his own.

Which one is this? The carnival one with the house.

Friday, 12 May 2017

Eurovision Song Contest 2017 Kyiv Grand Final - Preview




Eurovision Song Contest 2017 Kyiv Grand Final

BBC One, Saturday May 14th 2017 8pm


1. Imri Ziv - I Feel Alive (Israel)

Kicking the show off with a bang, this irresistible up-tempo party song is all smiles, claps and dance moves with its clubby production and Eastern instrumental break. He may not hit every note - and there are a fair few big ones - but he knows his audience, so wears an almost see-through black vest to make up for it. (Rab C Nesbitt he is not.)

Fun fact: This is Imri's third consecutive year at Eurovision representing Israel, but the previous two were as a backing vocalist. And he's definitely worth following on Instagram.

Catchy bit: "Breaking me to pieces"

Which one is this?
The up-tempo club banger by the guy with the sleeveless top.

2. Kasia Mos - Flashlight (Poland)

A pretty nondescript ballad that does that thing of rhyming words like "fire, higher, desire, wire" and "eyes, hypnotised, surprise". It's not bad, but it's Poland so will do well with the public vote. Kasia has a seriously powerful voice without being too shouty, and does her utmost best to sell the song, even altering (dare I say improving) the melody in the second half.

Fun fact: Kasia is a big animal rights advocate, dedicating this song to the cause- hence the animal imagery in the background of her staging.

Catchy bit: "They'll never catch us, take us by surprise"

Which one is this?
The blonde in the white dress with the violinist and starry animal images.

3. NAVIBAND - Story of My Life (Belarus)

A duo dressed in white bring us a relentlessly cheery and catchy song in their own language. I only wish I was having as great a time with the song as they clearly are. Still, it's something different and the kind of thing I would never hear outside of this competition, although their live performance of this has been somewhat painful.

Fun fact: This is the first time the Belarusian language has ever been sung at Eurovision.

Catchy bit: "Hey! Hey! Ay-ay-ay-ah-oh!"

Which one is this?
The cheery folksy foreign one. On a boat.

4. Nathan Trent - Running On Air (Austria)

A bright and breezy, summery, semi-acoustic folksy number that's almost guaranteed to put a smile on your face. Resembling a more naively youthful Justin Timberlake, Nathan has a great voice and fantastic diction (in multiple languages - check out his YouTube covers). I really feel I should like this more than I actually do.

Fun fact: Nathan is Austrian, but entered the German national selection competition. Once the Austrian delegation found out, they offered him a guaranteed spot representing his home country instead.

Catchy bit: "Hey now..."

Which one is this?
The folksy one by the man in the moon

5. Artsvik - Fly With Me (Armenia)

And now for something completely different. Pulling the classic ballad fake-out, it moves into a an unexpectedly ethnic vibe with some complicated choreography, in particular some Bollywood-style intricate armography and finger work. Definitely a performance to be seen rather than just heard, as there's not much to the song, but there's drama aplenty on-stage. It's a definite grower, and could prove to be a dark horse.

Fun fact: Artsvik was the first artist announced as a 2017 competitor, but the last to release their song.

Catchy bit: "Fly with me, high, oh high"

Which one is this?
The Bollywood-influenced one.

6. O'G3NE - Lights and Shadows (The Netherlands)

Wilson Phillips are back! Hold on... not really, but they may as well be. Three sisters (two are twins) sing with beautifully tight harmonies an emotional ballad written by their father about their gravely ill mother. The song is very basic, and doesn't really go anywhere, but their immaculate vocals make it a captivating three minutes.

Fun facts: O'G3NE (pronounced Oh-Jean) are so named as they are linked by their mother's genes - "O" is their mother's blood type and there are 1.. 2.. 3 of them. They also entered Junior Eurovision 10 years ago, and won "The Voice of Holland".

Catchy bit: "Cry no more"

Which one is this?
The Wilson Phillips one, i.e. three girls with the incredible harmonies.

7. SunStroke Project - Hey, Mamma! (Moldova)

The token comedy song. Cue long sax solos, repetitive nonsensical lyrics in terrible English, silly dance moves, and a costume change for the ladies. Catchy, in an irritating way, but it's the favourite of my 10-year-old niece.

Fun Fact: The band entered Eurovision in 2010 with the song "Run Away". They came 22nd, but inadvertently gifted the world of the "Epic Sax Guy" meme. And he's back!

Catchy bit: "Mamma, mamma don't be so mad"

Which one is this?
Epic Sax Guy and dancing brides.

8. Joci Papai - Origo (Hungary)

A nice change of pace with a stirring ethnic ballad, sung mostly in Hungarian, but with a Romani chorus. The lyrics translate into his tale of facing prejudice and turning to God for comfort. You may not understand a word, but you will feel every word and sing along with ease. If it doesn't click with you, you will probably hate it. I could live without the rap break, mind.

Fun fact: Joci is of Romani descent.

Catchy bit: "jálomá lommá"

Which one is this?
The Eastern-sounding one by the Asian man with the musical milk jug and dancing girl.

9. Francesco Gabbani - Occidentali's Karma (Italy)

Sung in Italian (with the odd English and French phrases thrown in) by a lively, charismatic performer, this amusingly clever song about how Westerners (Occidentali) fashionably adopt elements of culture from the East. One of the phrases in the chorus translates as "the naked ape dances", so from the second chorus that is taken literally as he is joined by a dancing gorilla doing a choreographed routine that anyone can join in on. The song itself, is feel-good, up-tempo pop song with a classic feel, and is catchy as hell.

Fun fact: The amusing music video for this is the most-viewed Eurovision video on YouTube EVER, with over 100 million views so far. This came into the contest as the hot favourite, and was only overtaken by Portugal since the second semifinal results.

Catchy bit: "Occidentali's karma" and a catchy instrumental bit.

Which one is this?
The one with the dancing gorilla.

10. Anja Nissen - Where I Am (Denmark)

A glossily-produced contemporary mid-tempo pop ballad, Anja pretty much starts at 11 and goes up from there. Her voice is enormous, and the song's chorus is as big as her voice. Lyrically, the song strikes a chord me, but I'll say no more about that.

Fun fact: Anja has Danish parents, but was born and raised in Australia, where she won The Voice. She entered the Danish national final last year too, but came runner-up.

Catchy bit: "I'm laying down my armour, laying down my gun"

Which one is this?
The big, contemporary ballad by the blonde girl in the red dress with the gap in her teeth.

11. Salvador Sobral - Amar Pelos Dois (Portugal)

Having recently overtaken Italy as the bookies' favourite, this is a very old-fashioned song, in the classic chanson sense. If you heard this on a Eurovision playlist set to shuffle, you could be forgiven for thinking this from one the first ever contest in 1956. For me, it has been a very slow grower. Salvador is a very odd performer, pulling strange faces and doing weird things with his hands, and at times even recoling from the microphone, but his high, ethereal voice is immaculate. How well it will go down with a modern mainstream audience is a complete mystery at this point... but the fans, bookies and journalists seem confident it'll do very well.

Not-at-all-fun fact: Salvador has been absent from rehearsals due to ill health, his baggy clothing apparently concealing some post-operation strapping. His sister Luísa, who wrote the song, stood in for him during the first week of rehearsals in Kyiv while he recovered in Portugal. But fear not, he has been in Kyiv for the last week, and his performance has not suffered one bit.

Catchy bit: "Meu bem, ouve as minhas preces"

Which one is this?
The very old-fashioned Portuguese ballad by the scruffy bearded guy.

12. DiHaj - Skeletons (Azerbaijan)

An atmospheric electro-ballad with synth sounds, crashing drums and utterly head-scratching lyrics. Some examples include, "Have my lungs, my millions", "surrounded by thorn jeans" and "fuss and fight won't get you tons". But the weirdness doesn't stop there. Looking like someone from the cast of Orange is the New Black, she sings at a blackboard, with a man on a ladder, wearing a horse head. Brilliantly weird.

Fun Fact: DiHaj is technically the name of the band, but the name is a contraction of the lead singer's name, Diana Hajiyeva.

Catchy bit: "Bad boy, drum drum drum bring out the guns"

Which one is this?
The girl with the nose ring, blackboard and horse-man

13. Jacques Houdek - My Friend (Croatia)

One of the night's big talking points has arrived, as a man duets... with himself; half in a cheesy English-language pop voice, the other half in his Italian-language operatic voice. Sadly, the performance is nowhere near as entertaining as it sounds, though he has made a bit of attempt at the classic Kenny Everett two-costumes-in-one-if-you-turn-to-the-side thing, but it's subtle enough to miss. The song is called "My Friend" and is every bit as sugary sweet as you may expect. With the addition of a spoken intro, rainbows and sunflowers, proceed with caution as you may get type 2 diabetes. His live vocals are, however, incredibly impressive.

Fun fact: He's a coach on The Voice of Croatia.

Catchy bit: "I pray you see the light and find your way"

Which one is this?
The half-opera one-man duet

14. Isaiah - Don't Come Easy (Australia)

A slick, modern pop ballad sung by a 17-year old boy of Indigenous Australian descent with an incredibly huge, soulful voice. He performs the song from a revolving turntable in front of images of himself. It represents his inner turmoil, apparently. The song itself is a bit of a grower. It sounds great on the album, but the live version falls flat for me, especially as he goes off-melody ("making it your own" as Louis Walsh would say). He hit a particularly bad note in the semis that was used in the recap, making this a surprise qualifier. I really want this to do well, and it can...Dude, just sing this song as you did in the studio and you'll do fine. If you don't, you're more likely to achieve recent UK-levels on the scoreboard.

Fun fact: He is the most recent winner of The X Factor Australia, and his mentor was American Idol runner-up and current Queen frontman Adam Lambert.

Catchy bit: "It don't come easy, it don't come cheap"

Which one is this?
The Indigenous Australian guy on the turntable.

15. Demy - This Is Love (Greece)

After another ballad-fakeout intro, this bursts into a surprisingly tedious attempt at anthemic dance pop. It should be right up my street, but just isn't. The staging is very much a retread of Ruth Lorenzo's entry for Spain a few years ago - rain and splashing water, but with added raining fire and two shirtless adonises dancing by Demy's side. However, she's been consistently missing the big notes in the rehearsals and the semi, and her backing vocalists' attempts to cover have not sounded good either. This could turn out to be rather embarrassing...

Fun fact: The chorus lyrics were changed for Eurovision from "This is love, rain falls from above, can you feel the love?" to the equally meaningless "This is love, reaching out for the stars, you and I as one".

Catchy bit: "This is looooooooooooooooooooooooooooove" (when it's on-key)

Which one is this?
The stunning brunette with the water effects and two adonis dancers

16. Manel Navarro - Do It For Your Lover (Spain)

A surfer dude with an acoustic guitar and a few similar mates sing this repetitive, summery, repetitive, feelgood, repetitive, catchy, repetitive and repetitive song. For good or for bad, it will definitely get stuck in your head. Oh, and it's quite repetitive.

Fun fact: At the Spanish national selection, Manel was not very popular with the Spanish public, but when it came to a tie their vote was overruled by the three-person jury. Needless to say, it did not go down well. The runner-up song, "Contigo", was an infinitely better song, if a more of a predictable Spanish Eurovision entry.

Catchy bit: "Do it for your lover" (ad nauseum)

Which one is this?
The repetitive summery folksy one with the surfers.

17. JOWST - Grab The Moment (Norway)

A modern pop-dance track that has pseudo-rapped verses and a catchy chorus followed by even catchier vocal effects. The staging is pretty straightforward - men twiddling knobs behind a singing frontman, but they spruce things up with some on-screen effects.

Fun facts: JOWST is actually the masked DJ/producer who later hits the drum. The uncredited singer is Aleksander Walmann. They had to have special permission from the EBU to use the sampled vocals, as all vocals -including backing - are supposed to be performed live. They successfully argued it was no different from a sampled instrument.

Catchy bit: "I'm, I'm gonna, gonna kill, kill, kill, kill, that voice in my head"

Which one is this?
The electro-pop group with the masked man and the one in the hat

18. Lucie Jones - Never Give Up On You (United Kingdom)

A subtle ballad that builds and builds, as Lucie sings from within giant clam shell-shaped reflective monitors, exploding into the darkness with golden stars. It's a pretty stunning visual that lets Europe know that the UK delegation means business this year. Fortunately, Lucie's vocals are consistently perfect, and she emotes the story well. Forget Brexit, and "they all hate us", this could do surprisingly well.

Fun facts: The song was co-written by Emmelie DeForest, who won Eurovision for Denmark in 2013. I was in the audience when Welsh girl Lucie auditoned for The X Factor in Cardiff. She made the live shows, but was knocked out in a head-to-head against Jedward, who have since represented Ireland at Eurovision twice.

Catchy bit:"I will never give up on you, I don't care what I have to lose".

Which one is this?
The golden girl with the sparkly clam. (No, not a vagazzle. Not that I know of anyway)

19. Hovig - Gravity (Cyprus)

With a bassline straight out of Rag 'N' Bone Man's "Human", this stompy, mid-tempo track is heavy on beats and sweeping electric strings. It's a decent enough song, but the staging really sells this, thanks to some interesting choreography, visuals and camerawork.

Fun fact: The song was written by Thomas G:Son, who also co-wrote 2012 winner "Euphoria" for Loreen. "Gravity" is his 13th song to make the competition.

Catchy bit: "Let me be, be your gravity"

Which one is this?
The stompy one by the Peter Andre lookalike.

20. Ilinca ft. Alex Florea - Yodel It! (Romania)

Yes, you read that right... Yodelling is back!! With rap!! Wait, what? Yes, seriously, and you won't believe how well it works! Catchy as hell, it manages to also be surprisingly contemporary. So wrong in so many ways, and yet so right... Your biggest WTF moment of the night has arrived. And if you're not singing along by the end, you're just not listening.

Fun fact: The original lyrics featured the lines "feel like sh*t", now replaced with "feeling incomplete".

Catchy bit: Yodelling, but you will be joining in, trust me.

Which one is this?
The rap-yodelling one. With cannons.

21. Levina - Perfect Life (Germany)

Once you get over how much the intro is a blatant rip-off of David Guetta's "Titanium", the song takes its own path with an uplifting, catchy song about seeing the positive in the negative. It's decent, but desperately bland. As for the staging, it opens strongly as she lies on the illuminated floor, but then she stands against a simple, silver-patterned screen that just underlines the blandness of the song.

Fun fact: Levina also came second in Germany's national final, with the song "Wildfire"

Catchy bit: "I've been walking asleep, dreaming awake..."

Which one is this?
The blonde girl with the quiff

22. O.Torvald - Time (Ukraine)

The only rock song this year, and they go pretty hard for a pop contest. The staging features an illuminated human head with spotlights for eyes, and the floor displays the rest of the body from a certain angle.

Fun fact: During the performance at the Ukrainian national selection, some squibs were used to imply that the lead singer had been shot. This was later dropped from the performance and official video, as it was deemed a bit too gory from Eurovision.

Catchy bit: "Time... to look into your eyes"

Which one is this?
The rock one. Yes, the only rock one. With the giant silver head.

23. Blanche - City Lights (Belgium)

This was an instant fan-favourite, but I'm a bit more skeptical. It's a decent, mid-tempo pop song, nicely modern with a slick production and the 17-year old girl who sings it has a surprisingly deep voice. Unfortunately, that voice lacks any power or passion, and she herself lacks charisma and stage presence. It could come across as a likeable vulnerability, but it feels more like watching a child at a school play; you're willing them to do well when you know deep down that they just don't belong there.

Fun Fact: Blanche is actually one of her middle names.

Catchy bit: "All alone in the danger zone"

Which one is this?
Up-tempo electropop song sung by a terrified-looking girl in the black wedding dress.

24. Robin Bengtsson - I Can't Go On (Sweden)

In fine sharp-suited style, a guy who is far too cool for his own good, is backed up by four dancers who join him for an impressive synchronised dance routine - on treadmills. Definitely one to keep your eyes on the screen for. The song is repetitive and catchy, and manages to stay just the right side of sleazy. Just.

Fun fact: In Sweden, swearing is not an issue, so in the original version of this, he sang a different word from "freakin'".

Catchy bit: "I can't go on, I can't go on, when you look this freakin' beautiful".

Which one is this?
The one with the synchronised dancing on treadmills

25. Kristian Kostov - Beautiful Mess (Bulgaria)

A modern pop ballad that brilliantly melds Western modern production values with yearning Eastern strings. At only 17, Kristian is already a seasoned professional with a ridiculously huge and mature voice for a skinny kid who looks even younger. This song hovers around my "Douze points" this year, and it's surprisingly high in the bookies' odds too, but I find the staging doesn't give the song the impact I would like.

Fun fact: Kristian is the first performer at (adult) Eurovision to be born in the 2000s.

Catchy bit: "Our love is untouchable"

Which one is this?
Modern pop ballad with yearning strings sung by a boy who looks 12 but sounds 32.

26. Alma - Requiem (France)

And finally, a dramatic, but fun track as a beautiful brunette playfully prances around the stage as it flies through the skies of Paris. Keep your motion sickness pills handy, just in case...

Fun fact: The original version of the song was sung entirely in French, with a slightly different arrangement, but some English was added to chorus when it was revamped for Eurovision.

Catchy bit: "Embrasse moi, dis moi que tu m'aime"

Which one is this?

The very very French one.



Thursday, 11 May 2017

Eurovision Song Contest 2017 Kyiv - Semifinal 2 - Preview (updated with results)






Eurovision Song Contest 2017 Kyiv - Semifinal 2
Thursday May 11th May 2017, BBC Four, 8pm


*Be warned, Lithuania makes me say naughty things*

1. Tijana Bogicevic - In Too Deep (Serbia)

Catchy drum & bass track that's been likened to Katy Perry's Firework. It's one of the standouts on the album, but loses a lot in the live performance. Tijana wears a see-through white dress and is joined halfway through by a shirtless male dancer who seems to get flushed away in the watery staging.

Fun fact: Tijana has been to Eurovision before - as a backing singer in 2011.

Catchy bit: "I'm falling so deep, I'm in too deep"

Which one is this?
The girl in see-through white, circled by the male dancer

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? No
Result: Out.

2. Nathan Trent - Running On Air (Austria)

A bright and breezy, summery, semi-acoustic folksy number that's almost guaranteed to put a smile on your face. Resembling a more naively youthful Justin Timberlake, Nathan has a great voice and fantastic diction (in multiple languages - check out his YouTube covers). I really feel I should like this more than I actually do.

Fun fact: Nathan was going to enter the German selection competition, until the Austrian delegation found out and nabbed him as an direct internal selection instead. He is actually Austrian, so said yes.

Catchy bit: "Hey now..."

Which one is this?
The folksy one by the man in the moon

Should qualify? No
Will qualify? Yes
Result: Through.

3. Jana Burceska - Dance Alone (FYR Macedonia)

Another up-tempo pop/dance song that sounds great on the album. Jana's vocals are given a special effect that makes her sound a lot like Nina from The Cardigans, but her live performance is awkward. She slut-drops in front of multiple images of herself, when she'd clearly be more comfortable presenting children's TV. So many wasted opportunities to click her fingers and clap her hands, but... no. Frankly, unforgivable. I can't (and don't) resist even if I'm walking down the street listening to this. "I let the pavement be my catwalk". Fabulous!

Fun fact: Macedonia haven't qualified out of the semis since 2012

Catchy bit: "I will dance alone, wherever I am, the rhythm follows"

Which one is this?
The girl in black fringe and thigh-high boots who can't dance (alone).

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? No
Result: Out.

4. Claudia Faniello - Breathlessly (Malta)

The classic big Eurovision female diva power ballad. As those go, this is a great example, and a good song in its own right. Any other year this may stand a chance, but not this year.

Fun fact: This her eleventh attempt to enter Eurovision for Malta, and her first to succeed. Even her brother beat her to it. Twice.

Catchy bit: "Breathlessly, I'll be watching you..."

Which one is this?
The epic ballad by the chesty woman in the sparkly white dress.

Should qualify? No
Will qualify? No
Result: Out.

5. Ilinca ft. Alex Florea - Yodel It! (Romania)

Yes, you read that right... Yodelling is back!! With rap!! Wait, what? Yes, seriously, and you won't believe how well it works! Catchy as hell, it manages to also be surprisingly contemporary. So wrong in so many ways, and yet so right... Your first WTF moment of the night has arrived. And if you're not singing along by the end, you must be dead inside. ;-)

Fun fact: The original lyrics featured the lines "feel like shit", now replaced with "feeling incomplete".

Catchy bit: Yodelling, but you will be joining in, trust me.

Which one is this?
The rap-yodelling one. With cannons.

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? Oh please God, yes
Result: Through! Woop!

6. O'G3NE - Lights and Shadows (The Netherlands)

Wilson Phillips are back! Hold on... not really, but they may as well be. Three sisters (two are twins) sing with beautifully tight harmonies an emotional ballad written by their father about their mother, who has bone cancer. The song is very basic, and doesn't really go anywhere, and yet their immaculate vocals make it a captivating three minutes.

Fun facts: They are linked by their mother's genes - "O" is their mother's blood type and there are 1.. 2.. 3 of them, hence O'G3NE (pronounced O-Jean). They also entered Junior Eurovision 10 years ago, and won "The Voice of Holland".

Catchy bit: "Cry no more"

Which one is this?
The Wilson Phillips one, i.e. three girls with the incredible harmonies.

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? No
Result: Through.

7. Joci Papai - Origo (Hungary)

A nice change of pace with a stirring ethnic ballad, sung mostly in Hungarian, but with a Romani chorus. The lyrics translate into his tale of facing prejudice and turning to God for comfort. You may not understand a word, but you will feel every word and sing along with ease. I could live without the rap break, mind.

Fun fact: Joci is of Romani descent.

Catchy bit: "jálomá lommá"

Which one is this?
The Eastern-sounding one by the Asian man with the musical milk jug and dancing girl.

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? Yes
Result: Through.

8. Anja Nissen - Where I Am (Denmark)

A glossily-produced contemporary mid-tempo pop ballad, Anja pretty much starts at 11 and goes up from there. Her voice is enormous, and the song's chorus is as big as her voice. Lyrically, the song strikes a nerve with me, but I'll say no more about that.

Fun fact: Anja has Danish parents, but was raised in Australia, where she won The Voice. She entered the Danish national final last year too, but came runner-up.

Catchy bit: "I'm laying down my armour, laying down my guns"

Which one is this?
The big, contemporary ballad by the blonde girl in the red dress with the gap in her teeth.

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? Sadly not.
Result: Through. Gladly yes!

9. Brendan Murray - Dying To Try (Ireland)

A big boy-band ballad that sounds like it came from the late '90s, sung by a cute former boy-band member. Yes, you've guessed it, Louis Walsh was involved. Looking and sounding far younger than his 20 years, his voice is oddly big and small at the same time. As for the song, it's what you'd expect from Louis Walsh, i.e. Flying Without Wings, the sequel. And in case you didn't get that, he's singing from a hot air balloon. Really.

Fun fact: Brendan was in now-defunct boyband Hometown. Nope, me neither.

Catchy bit: "I'm dying to try, I'm dying to try."

Which one is this?
Flying Without Wings, Part 2 - via hot air balloon, leaking some helium, judging by his voice.

Should qualify? No
Will qualify? No
Result: Out.

10. Valentina Monetta & Jimmie Wilson - Spirit of the Night (San Marino)

A 1970s disco song updated to include more contemporary references, such as St Elmo's Fire. Only at Eurovision.

Fun facts: This is Valentia's fourth time representing San Marino - all of them in this decade. She gave them their only ever qualification out of the semis with the song "Maybe" in 2014.

Jimmie is an American veteran of musical theatre, including "Sisterella", which was produced by a certain Michael Jackson.

Catchy bit: "It's the spirit of the night, spirit of the night"

Which one is this?
The 70s Disco stomper by the male/female duo.

Should qualify? No
Will qualify? No
Result: Out.

11. Jacques Houdek - My Friend (Croatia)

Your next WTF moment has arrived, as a man duets... with himself; half in a cheesy English-language pop voice, the other half in his Italian-language operatic voice. Sadly, the performance is nowhere near as entertaining as it sounds, though he has made a bit of attempt at the classic Tommy Cooper two-costumes-in-one-if-you-turn-to-the-side thing. The song is called "My Friend" and is every bit as sugary sweet as you may expect. With the addition of a spoken intro, rainbows and sunflowers, proceed with caution as you may get type 2 diabetes.

Fun fact: He's a coach on The Voice of Croatia.

Catchy bit: "I pray you see the light and find your way"

Which one is this?
The half-opera one-man duet

Should qualify? No. Though I kind of hope it does.
Will qualify? No
Result: Yes. And deservedly so!

12. JOWST - Grab The Moment (Norway)

A modern pop-dance track that has pseudo-rapped verses and a catchy chorus followed by even catchier vocal effects. The staging is pretty straightforward - men twiddling knobs behind a singing frontman.

Fun fact: JOWST is actually the masked DJ/producer who later hits the drum. The uncredited singer is Aleksander Walmann. They had to have special permission from the EBU to use the sampled vocals, as all vocals -including backing - are supposed to be performed live. They successfully argued it was no different from a sampled instrument.

Catchy bit: "I'm, I'm gonna, gonna kill, kill, kill, kill, that voice in my head"

Which one is this?
The electro-pop group with the masked man and the one in the hat

Should qualify? No
Will qualify? Yes
Result: Through.

13. Timebelle - Apollo (Switzerland)

From atop a small flight of stairs, a pretty brunette in a huge yellow dress sings a sweetly catchy mid-tempo pop song about the Greek god of creativity. I like it, but it's unlikely to make any impact in the voting.

Fun fact: Lead vocalist Miruna is Romanian, and so the band was offered the song "Yodel It!" When they turned it down, it was offered to Ilinca instead, who teamed up with Alex to represent Romania. (See above, if somehow you'd actually forgotten THAT!)

Catchy bit: "I'll follow you, Apollo"

Which one is this?
The mid-tempo pop song sung by Belle from Beauty & the Beast

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? No
Result: Out.

14. NAVIBAND - Story of My Life (Belarus)

A duo dressed in white bring us a relentlessly cheery and catchy song in their own language. I only wish I was having a great time with the song as they clearly are. Still, it's something different and the kind of thing I would never hear outside of this competition.

Fun fact: This is the first time the Belarusian language has ever been sung at Eurovision.

Catchy bit: "Hey! Hey! Ay-ay-ay-ah-oh!"

Which one is this?
The cheery folksy foreign one. On a flying boat-thing (!?)

Should qualify? No
Will qualify? Yes
Result: Through. And wow, they were truly awful.

15. Kristian Kostov - Beautiful Mess (Bulgaria)

A modern pop ballad that brilliantly melds Western modern production values with yearning Eastern strings. At only 17, Kristian is already a seasoned professional with a ridiculously huge and mature voice for a skinny 17 year old who looks even younger. This song is my "Douze points" this year, and it's surprisingly high in the bookies' odds too.

Fun fact: Kristian is the first performer at (adult) Eurovision to be born in the 2000s.

Catchy bit: "Our love is untouchable"

Which one is this?
Modern pop ballad with yearning strings sung by a boy who looks 12 but sounds 42.

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? Yes
Result: Through.

16. Fusedmarc - Rain of Revolution (Lithuania)

Unintentional WTF moment #3. An incredibly incompetent mess of a song littered with horrid artificial horns, badly pronounced English and a shouty lead singer with who looks like she just wants to fucking kill you. Nil points.

Fun fact: Lithuania's marathon national selection had a potential winner in Greta Zazza's magnificent "Like I Love You". But no, they opted for this shit.

Catchy bit: "Yeah yeah, yeah yeah, yeah yeah..."

Which one is this?
The fucking awful one.

Should qualify? Hell no
Will qualify? No
Result: Out. Phew.

17. Koit Toome and Laura -Verona (Estonia)

When you think of typical Eurovision songs, one thing that must come to mind is the middle-aged male/female duet, and it doesn't get more typical Eurovision than this. And of course, that's a good thing. Catchy as hell, this one has been vastly underestimated by fans, journalists and bookies alike, but I can't help but see it going top 5 in the final. You know, just like I thought Georgia would in 2013... (except they didn't)

Fun fact: Both have been at Eurovision before - Koit in 1998, and Laura as part of group Suntribe in 2005 (also in Kyiv!).

Catchy bit: "Ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah-ah, we have lost our Verona"

Which one is this?
Verona. (Trust me, that's all you'll need to remember this)

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? Yes
Result: Out! A real shocker!

18. Imri Ziv - I Feel Alive (Israel)

Ending the show with a bang, this irresistible up-tempo party song is all smiles, claps and dance moves with its clubby production and Eastern instrumental break. He may not hit every note - and there are a fair few big ones - but he knows his audience, so wears an almost see-through black vest to make up for it. (Rab C Nesbitt he is not.)

Fun fact: This is Imri's third consecutive year at Eurovision representing Israel, but the previous two were as a backing vocalist. And he's definitely worth following on Instagram.

Catchy bit: "Breaking me to pieces"

Which one is this?
The up-tempo club banger by the guy with the sleeveless top.

Should qualify? Yes
Will qualify? Yes
Result: Through. He slayed!

Bring on the final! See you Saturday!