Although I've been spending most of my time watching songs from the current year's crop of Eurovision hopefuls, my group of Alaskan jurors has been looking back at the songs from the contest in 1965.
The tenth Eurovision Song Contest took place in Naples on March 20th, 1965, put on by the Italian broadcaster, RAI. All the countries who participated in 1964 returned and a new country debuted:
Butch Moore "Walking the Streets in the Rain" Ireland
And for a debuting country in the Eurovision Song Contest, Butch did a pretty good job. He placed sixth overall in Naples--garnering votes from Yugoslavia, Portugal, and Italy. He even did one better in our voting, with one of the Alaska judges declaring him "dreamy".
There was also a bit of scandal this year from the Swedes.
Ingvar Wixell "Absent Friends" Sweden
Wixell performed his song in English, breaking an unwritten rule that songs at Eurovision would be performed in a national language. That unwritten rule was quickly written into the rules for the following year's contest.
But when all of the dust settled, the winner of the Eurovision Contest was a young French girl singing an entendre laced song for Luxembourg, bringing the contest out of the 1950s and bringing it closer to the musical tastes of the time.
France Gall "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" Luxembourg
France Gall's performance won on the night in Naples, but it was performance that divided our jury on gender lines. The men in the contest ranked it highly--considering it the best song in the contest. The women, on the other hand,found Gall's overly childish performance grating, rating it at the bottom of their list, putting "Poupée" into ninth place in the the eyes of the Alaskan judges.
Our winner, however, is a little less surprising.
Kathy Kirby "I Belong" United Kingdom
Kirby's performance did well on the night in Naples, coming in second. It scored well with all the jurors as well, making it "Alaska's Choice".
What is surprising are the two songs that were close runners up.
Conchita Bautista "¡Qué bueno, qué bueno!" Spain
Simone de Olivera "Sol de inverno" Portugal
These two songs from the Iberian Peninsula didn't do well during the voting in Naples--de Olivera received only one point from Monegasque juror while Bautista received the dreaded "nul points". But forty-eight years later, their dramatic performances and powerful vocals put them second and third respectively.
It proves why I love doing this blog... It highlights performances and songs buried in the depths of Eurovision history.
Next up, 1966 and Luxembourg!
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