Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Eurovision 2015: Moldova

Epic Sax Guy rides again?
I always look forward to the Moldovan national final.  More than any country in Europe, Moldova brings a great mix of fun, quirk and raw talent to their Eurovision songs.   Moldovan entries are rarely safe and that makes watching the national final an entertaining watch.

O Melodie Pentru Europa's final took place on February 28th and the finals delivered some wacky entertainment.  Out of the sixteen songs in the final there were a lot of fun and interesting songs that would have gone over well in Vienna.


DoReDoS   "Maricica"


Mihaela Andrei   "About Love"


Sunstroke Project featuring Michael Ra   "Day After Day"

This is what I want to see from Moldova--songs that is fun, quirky, and something that will get my friends talking.   Any of them would have been a fun and worthy choice to send to Vienna.

Strangely, none of them did particularly well.  Instead Moldovans chose the lamest and most derivative song in the contest:


Eduard Romanyuta   "I Want Your Love"

Romanyuta has been trying to go to Eurovision for years, attempting to represent his native country of Ukraine three times.   However crossing the border to Moldova gave him the win and I don't understand why.  The song is drippy and outdated while the staging is horrible.  

I don't understand how this won, but I do know that it's not getting out of the semifinal.

This is the second year where Moldova hasn't chosen a good song to go to Eurovision.  I hope the Moldovan national broadcaster goes back to the drawing board.   I need more Eurovision songs like this:


Pasha Parfeny   "Lăutar"   Moldova   2012

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Eurovision 2015: Germany




The format for Unser Song für Österreich is one of the most confusing setups that I have seen in Eurovision.

Let's see if I can explain this:
  1. 1213 amateurs submitted songs to the German National Broadcaster.
  2. Ten artists were selected to compete for one "wildcard" spot in the final.
  3. The winner of the wildcard joined seven established artists in the final.
  4. Each of the eight artists performed a song.  Four were eliminated.
  5. The four remaining artists performed another song.   The eight songs were ranked and the top two (from differing artists) continued on.
  6. The final two songs were performed again.  The most popular song and artist wins.
I'm not trying to watch all of those things and choose my favorite, so I'm just going to take a look at the winning song.




Andreas Kümmert   "Heart of Stone"

Interesting, it's the German version of Darius Rucker.  Self assured, different, and perfectly nice.  Not going to challenge but not an embarrassment either.

But wait, there's a surprise!


Kümmert decides he doesn't want to go to Eurovision.

So why did he compete in the first place?   It's really confusing to me.  If you don't want to do Eurovision, don't enter the contest.

So here's the song going to Vienna.


Ann Sophie   "Black Smoke"

I flat out love "Black Smoke".  It's getting heavy rotation in my musical library and I'm going to be purchasing Ann Sophie's first CD when it gets released.   

It's challenging Maraaya and "Here For You" as my favorite Eurovision song this year.

Eurovision 2015: Romania



In a year of perfectly bland and safe national finals, finally a country gave a Eurovision WTF moment.    I have been hoping for one of these all season.



Super Trooper    "Secret Place"


God bless you Romania.

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Selecția Națională 2015 took place on March 8th with twelve songs presented.  Like many other countries, the Romanians had a variety style format, so there's a song everybody is likely to enjoy.


Blue Noise   "Love Won't Run Away"


Luminița Anghel  "A Million Stars"


Aurelian Temișan feat. Alexa   "Chica Latina"

I do realize I use enjoy rather loosely, but the Romanian broadcaster knew how to put on a show and I can appreciate that.

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However, after hearing the first song performed, it was obvious that it would be the winner.


Voltaj   "De la capăt"

Voltaj is a well known band in Romania--they've released nine albums and won international music awards.  

The staging and camera work were polished and professional something missing from many of the other performances.

And the song is also really moving.  It's an extension of work the band is doing to give support to children whose parents live and work outside the country--the song can be read as a message of love to a child living far away.

It couldn't lose, and I can't disagree.  This was the right choice.  





Sunday, April 12, 2015

Eurovision 2015: Czech Republic

This image pops up for "hair band meets Andrew Lloyd Webber". 

The Czech Republic is arguably the least successful country in Eurovision.

Before this year, the country competed onlythree times, from 2007 to 2009, and never got out of the semifinals.  In two of those three years, they came in dead last.

So it was a big surprise when the Czech national broadcaster ČT announced that they would be entering the 2015 Eurovision Song Contest and would be choosing their song internally.

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Markéta Irglová   "Let Me Fall In Love"

My Marketa Irglova dreams were dashed on January 31, when it was announced that Marta Jandová and Václav Noid Bárta would be representing the Czech Republic with their song "Hope Never Dies". (Which is kind of  an "on the nose" title for the the Eurovisionally-beleaguered country.)


Marta Jandová & Václav Noid Bárta   "Hope Never Dies"

A baritone!  I love a baritone!

If we are talking about the sheer quality of the song, this year is the year the Czech Repblic will qualify for the final.   Jandová and Bárta are both seasoned performers and the hair band meets Andrew Lloyd Webber sound is musically interesting but not alienating to Eurovision lovers.

Plus Bárta is a baritone.  I love hearing a non-tenor singing a pop song.


Crash Test Dummies   "Afternoons and Coffeespoons"

In other words, I think the Czech Republic could actually get to the final, but everything is going to hinge on the performance.

Jandová and Bárta have to have the PERFECT performance during their semifinal performances to even have a chance to make it to Saturday night.  If anything goes wrong, they're doomed.  The Czech Republic doesn't have easy points to earn, so they have to be amazing to even get the attention of any other country.

I certainly hope the qualify, but even if they don't they're still going to be the most successful Czech Eurovision entrant.

Eurovision 2015: Lithuania


Monkey Business.  You can take down US presidential candidates and Eurovision hopefuls.

You have to feel sorry for Mia.


Mia   "This Time"

Mia was one of three finalists at "Eurovizijos" dainų konkurso nacionalinė atranka, the interminably long selection process Lithuania set up to choose both the singer and song to send to Vienna. She made it through six weeks of eliminations and had a good chance to win.

Then, after the winning song was chosen, somebody decided to pair up the other two contestants and make the winning song a duet.


Vaidas Baumila & Monika Linkytė   "This Time"

Poor girl didn't have a chance at all.

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As for the winning contestants, this is the best example of hopping on the coattails of Eurovision trends that we have at the contest.  This is a countrified schlager duet--it's as if last year's Dutch and Swedish entries cross pollinated.  It's a likely final qualifier and rather popular in the Eurovision fandom.

I personally hate it.  The chorus is catchy enough on one listen, which is perfect for casual Eurovision fans, but it's really hard to listen to over and over again.  It's skippable.

Vaidas and Monika were the right singers to send to the contest. I just wish they had a less annoying song.

Eurovision 2015: Hungary



When it comes to Eurovision, Hungary always seems to march to the beat to their own drum.  Over the past couple of years, they've had a lot of success with not following Eurovision trends, getting critical and popular support for their songs, with two consecutive top ten finishes..

The Hungarian national final took place back on February 28th, and it had the requisite mix of pop rock bands, dance tracks, and even a former Hungarian representitive.


Kati Wolf    "Ne engedj el"

But the winner continues a trend of interesting, idiosyncratic songs from Hungary:


Boggie  "Wars For Nothing"

Instead of a pop duet with a country feel or a dramatic ballad, Hungary has sent a message song.  Message songs were big during the late 80s and early 90s in Eurovision, but with the end of communism and breakup of Yugoslavia, they became a rarity.

So this profoundly antiwar song is an oddity and a welcome one at that.  "Wars For Nothing" stands out starkly from the rest of the songs in this years contest.    It gets major points from me on that fact alone.

Yet I don't see people actually going out of their way to vote for this song.   This is a song you respect but don't vote for.

I hope the jury vote will get Boggie into the final, but this could bet the first time since 2009 that we won't see a Hungarian song on Saturday night.

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Eurovision 2015: Norway

Every year at Eurovision there is one song where I vigorously disagree with the rest of the Eurovision fan base, and this year Norway has sent that song.

Yep, a lead balloon.  A metaphor for the Norwegian entry.


Mørland & Debrah Scarlett   "A Monster Like Me"

For me, this is the worst song of the forty entries.  The twee vocals, the swoony strings, and the melodramatic staging are so repellent to me in visceral way.   I have only been able to watch the clip once all the way through.  Any other attempts cause me to cringe and switch to something else.

However, it ticks all the boxes for a top ten finish on the night of the finals, so "A Monster Like Me" is getting a lot of love from Eurovision fans.

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I personally wish that the Norwegians had chosen a different song, one that was upbeat and completely silly.


Staysman & Lazz   "En godt stekt pizza"

Country techno with rap.  It's kind of off the wall and insane but this song is the only song I've seen throughout the final that was silly and fun.   Eurovision needs to be silly and fun and I would have loved for this to go to Vienna.

But, serious we must be and we have another dramatic duet.  At least I know when I'm going to make myself a cup of coffee during the first semi final.

Eurovision 2015: Portugal



Portugal likes to stick with tradition when it comes to Eurovision and this year is no exception.  The 49th edition of Festival da Canção 2015 took place back in March, with six songs competing in the final on March 7th.

Portuguese Eurovision songs, more than any other country at Eurovision, reflect the national musical taste, particularly the fado.

Fado influenced songs are always popular in Festival da Canção, with this song by Teresa Radamanto being a perfect example of this genre.


Teresa Radamanto    "Um fado em Viena" 

Sadly, there's no cut of the performance on the night, but Radamanto was perfectly polished and professional.  The song was lovely and came in second.  It would not have done anything in Vienna, but it was lovely.

The Portuguese public decided to go a little bit more modern with their choice, selecting this song by a former contestant from The Voice Portugal.


Leonor Andrade   "Há um mar que nos separa"

It is different that the typical Portuguese Eurovision song, which is a pleasant surprise.  A song that has some rock influence is a refreshing change of pace from the typical fado/folk songs that have been sent from Portugal in recent years.

Unfortunately, I don't think that this song is going to make it to the final though.  The problem is Ms. Andrade is the wrong person to sing the song.  The song needs a singer with a rock voice, not the sweet pop interpretation the Andrade brings to it.

If Andrade had a gruffer voice and a bigger stage presence, this song could soar.   Instead, the song plods.  

Sadly, Portugal isn't going to get out of the semifinal again....  

Maybe next year...