Australia to compete at Eurovision Song Contest 2015

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,927
1,910
113
Australia may be about 10,000 miles from Europe on the opposite side of the planet but it is to compete at this year's Eurovision Song Contest.

This year is the 50th Eurovision Song Contest and, to mark the occasion, the Antipodean nation has been invited to take part as a one-off. The Eurovision Song Contest is hugely popular in Australia.

"It's a daring and at the same time incredibly exciting move. It is our way of saying let's celebrate this party together!" contest supervisor Jon Ola Sand said.

Australia will be fast-tracked to the final (participating nations, with the exception of the Big Four - UK, Germany, France and Spain - have to go through tournament-style qualification rounds to get to the final), which will take place in on 23 May in Vienna as a result of Austria's bearded "lady" Conchita Wurst winning it last year in Copenhagen.

A total of 40 countries will now compete in the contest.

It might seem a little bizarre, but Eurovision doesn't always follow the rules of geography.

Many of the competitors are from outside of Europe, like Israel and Azerbaijan - and Morocco also entered in 1980.

Participation is defined by being a member of the European Broadcasting Union. Australian broadcaster SBS is a member, and they've broadcast it for 30 years.

It is not, however, be the first time Australians have participated at the song contest.

Singer Jessica Mauboy - who appeared in the 2012 film The Sapphires - provided the interval entertainment at last year's contest in Copenhagen.

Australians have also competed representing the UK - including the New Seekers, Gina G and Olivia Newton John, who lost to Swedish pop group Abba in Brighton 1974.

Eurovision Song Contest: Australia to compete in 2015


11 February 2015
BBC News


SBS Eurovision commentator Julia Zemiro told the BBC that details of Australia's act were still "secret"


Australia is to compete at this year's Eurovision Song Contest.

Organisers issued a one-off invitation as part of the contest's 60th anniversary celebrations.

"It's a daring and at the same time incredibly exciting move. It is our way of saying let's celebrate this party together!" contest supervisor Jon Ola Sand said.

Australia will be fast-tracked to the final, which will take place in Vienna, Austria, on 23 May.

A total of 40 countries will now compete in the contest.

The European Broadcasting Union said Australia had been given a wildcard for the final "to not reduce the chances" of the semi-final participants and because of the "one-off nature" of its participation.

Australia will be allowed to vote in both semi-finals, as well as the grand final. The possibility of allowing the public to have a 50% stake in the Australian vote through televoting is also being explored.

The other participating countries will be allowed to vote for the Australian entry - who has yet to be selected - however should their act win the contest, next year's show will be held in a European city and Australia will be allowed to defend its title.




Australian singer Gina G represented the UK at the Eurovision Song Contest in 1996


British-born Aussie singer Olivia Newton-John represented the UK at the 1974 Eurovision in Brighton, in which she finished fourth, with Abba winning for Sweden

The show has a long tradition of being broadcast in Australia by broadcaster SBS.

"SBS has been broadcasting Eurovision for over 30 years and we have seen how Australians' love of the song contest has grown during those years," managing director Michael Ebeid said.

"We are very excited to have secured this historic opportunity for Australia to be represented on the world's biggest stage and are honoured that the European Broadcasting Union has supported us to achieve this ambition."

Host broadcaster ORF added: "With the participation of Australia, together with our partners at the EBU and SBS, we have succeeded to lift [Eurovision] to a new global level and to build another bridge for the 60th anniversary."

It is not the first time Australians have participated at the song contest.

Singer Jessica Mauboy - who appeared in the 2012 film The Sapphires - provided the interval entertainment at last year's contest.

Australians have also competed representing the UK - including the New Seekers, Gina G and Olivia Newton John - who lost to Swedish pop group Abba in 1974.





Analysis - Dr Paul Jordan, Eurovision expert

It might seem a little bizarre, but Eurovision doesn't always follow the rules of geography.

Many of the competitors are from outside of Europe, like Israel and Azerbaijan - and Morocco also entered in 1980.

Participation is defined by being a member of the European Broadcasting Union. Australian broadcaster SBS is a member, and they've broadcast it for 30 years.

Eurovision is hugely popular in Australia - three million watched it last year and they have a very loyal fanbase. This is a one-off: a way of saying thank you for the support, so come and join us for the 60th contest.

I think Kylie would make a fantastic participant, but the question is whether she'd do itor not. It would be interesting to see who Australia chooses - would a big artist with a credible career touch the contest? That's the difficultly we've had in the UK in recent years - it's seen as a poisoned chalice.

It would be a real coup if Australia won because it's supposed to be a one-off a light-hearted gimmick, but there's potential they could win.

It also demonstrates how strong the Eurovision brand is. As a TV format, it has existed for 60 years and it's hugely impressive. Other countries and continents have tried to emulate it, but it's never got off the ground.

What we've got here is a very special song contest that everyone has an opinion on whether they love it or hate it - it's really quite a nice idea of uniting Europe and, in the case of Australia, the world.


Number of Eurovision wins per country:

7: Republic of Ireland
5: France, Luxembourg, UK, Sweden
4: Netherlands
3: Denmark, Israel, Norway
2: Switzerland, Italy, Austria, Spain, Germany
1: Monaco, Belgium, Yugoslavia, Estonia, Latvia, Turkey, Ukraine, Greece, Finland, Serbia, Russia, Azerbaijan



BBC News - Eurovision Song Contest: Australia to compete in 2015
 
Last edited:

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,927
1,910
113
My mistake. It's not the 50th Eurovision Song Contest this year. It's the 60th. That's why Australia has been invented for this one year.

Some countries have decided who will compete for them at this year's Eurovision.

The UK - which has won it five times - has not yet picked who will represent it. The BBC has launched a selection process.

BBC launches open selection for 2015 British entry | News | Eurovision Song Contest


The UK has won it five times, in 1967, 1969, 1976, 1981 and 1997 (with only Ireland winning it more times), and hosted it a record eight times (including those times when a winning country wasn't able to host it), followed by Ireland, who have hosted it seven times, and Sweden, who have hosted it five times.



The 2015 Eurovision Song Contest, in Vienna, is coming to a screen near you on on May 23.

And yes, it might FINALLY be time for the UK to win again. Well, probably not, but we'll give it a fair old go.

But most of the fun to be had is in the other countries' acts - let's be honest.

In the past we've had the likes of Finland's Lordi (remember them? They were a rock band dressed as orcs) and Ukraine's Verka Serduchka in a silver tin foil get-up in 2007.

And then there was last year's winner, the frankly amazing Conchita Wurst, Austria's bearded "lady".


In 2006, Finnish heavy metal band Lordi won the competition. They are the only heavy metal act to win Eurovision


Austria's bearded "lady" Conchita Wurst won the competition last year in Copenhagen

Who makes it into the glitzy, ostentatious show is a competitive affair.

As part of the "Big Five" nations who put the most amount of money into the competition, the UK, Spain, France, Germany and Italy will all automatically qualify.

As the winning nation, so will Austria. And, so too, will guest nation Australia.

As well as these seven, 33 other nations will compete in the semi-final competitions, before behind whittled down to the final 20.

Yes, 20 performances - it's a long night, is Eurovision - so get stockpiling the wine and cocktail sausages in advance. We should also point out that it's the perfect excuse to play drinking games. They don't call them Eurovision parties for nothing...

Find out which countries are in this year's competition here - as well as everything we know about their acts so far.


Danish pop-rock boy band Anti Social Media are repping for Denmark, who won it in 1963, 2000 and 2013

Who is in the Eurovision Song Contest 2015? Country by country, here's the line-up - Mirror Online
 
Last edited:

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,927
1,910
113
A punk band made up of musicians with learning disabilities is to represent Finland at the 2015 Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna.

The quartet, named PKN, was chosen by Finnish viewers on Saturday and has now been ranked by bookmakers as among the favourites for the contest.

The group, whose members have Down's syndrome and autism, will perform their 85-second song Aina Mun Pitaa (I Always Have To) at the event in Vienna in May.

The group - full name Pertti Kurikan Nimipaivat (Pertti Kurikka's Nameday) - will also become the first punk band to compete at Eurovision.

They are 5/1 to win the contest, according to Betfred, making them third favourites behind Italy and Estonia.

It isn't the first that Finland has achieved a Eurovision first. In 2006, Finnish band Lordi became the first and, so far, only heavy metal band to win Eurovision. It is the only time Finland has won it.


Finland punk band PKN set for Eurovision


BBC News
1 March 2015


'We don't want people to vote for us to feel sorry for us,' say PKN

A punk band made up of musicians with learning disabilities is to represent Finland at the Eurovision Song Contest.

The quartet, named PKN, was chosen by Finnish viewers on Saturday and has now been ranked by bookmakers as among the favourites for the contest.

The group, whose members have Down's syndrome and autism, will perform their 85-second song Aina Mun Pitaa (I Always Have To) at the event in Vienna in May.

"Every person with a disability ought to be braver," singer Kari Aalto said.

"He or she should themselves say what they want and do not want," he told Finnish broadcaster YLE.

The group - full name Pertti Kurikan Nimipaivat (Pertti Kurikka's Nameday) - will also become the first punk band to compete at Eurovision.

They first got together during a charity workshop and appeared in an award-winning 2012 documentary called The Punk Syndrome.

The song deals with the frustration of the rules of daily life, like having to eat healthily and doing chores like cleaning and washing up.

'Changing attitudes'

"We are rebelling against society in different ways, but we are not political," bassist Sami Helle told The Guardian.

"We are changing attitudes somewhat, a lot of people are coming to our gigs and we have a lot of fans.

"We don't want people to vote for us to feel sorry for us, we are not that different from everybody else - just normal guys with a mental handicap."

They are 5/1 to win the contest, according to Betfred, making them third favourites behind Italy and Estonia.

Heavy metal band Lordi gave Finland its only Eurovision win to date with Hard Rock Hallelujah in 2006.

The UK's Eurovision entrant will be named on Saturday night after The Voice UK on BBC One.


In 2006, Finnish band Lordi became the first and, so far, only heavy metal band to win Eurovision




BBC News - Finland punk band PKN set for Eurovision
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,927
1,910
113
Electro Velvet are to represent the UK at this year's Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna.

Alex Larke, a primary school teacher from Hertfordshire, 35, who performs with a Rolling Stones tribute act called The Rolling Clones, has teamed up with Bianca Nicholas, 26, from Kent.

Their song, Still in Love With You, is an up-tempo electric swing track and they'll be hoping the European public likes it enough for it to get enough votes to earn the UK - a powerful pop music nation - its first Eurovision Song Contest win since 1997.

The Telegraph's Neil McCormick called the song "a Cole Porter-style 20s jazz pastiche, with strained faux witty lyrics that are clearly meant to represent a kind of old world British sophistication".

The president of the UK arm of the international Eurovision fan club, the Organisation Generale des Amateurs de l'Eurovision (OGAE), told BBC News he had "expected something more".

It is the first duo to represent the UK in Eurovision since Jemini in 2003 - they finished rock bottom of the 26 competing acts, being the only act that year to finish with zero points. It was the first time the UK - which has won the competition more times than any other country except Ireland - finished with zero points; the first time it finished in the bottom three; and the first time it finished lower than 16th. Turkey won.

Eurovision: UK duo Electro Velvet earn mixed reaction


BBC News
8 March 2015


Electro Velvet is Bianca Nicholas, 26, and Alex Larke, 35. Their song was selected from hundreds of entries received by the BBC


Reactions have been mixed for Electro Velvet, this year's UK entry for the Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna.

Alex Larke, from Hertfordshire, who performs with a Rolling Stones tribute act, has teamed up with Bianca Nicholas from Kent.

Their song, Still in Love With You, is an up-tempo electric swing track.

The Guardian called the song "nightmarish" while on Twitter, Eurovision expert Paul Jordan admitted: "We've sent worse".

The Telegraph's Neil McCormick called the song "a Cole Porter-style 20s jazz pastiche, with strained faux witty lyrics that are clearly meant to represent a kind of old world British sophistication".


Strictly Come Dancing star Robin Windsor gave a positive review


The president of the UK arm of the international Eurovision fan club, the Organisation Generale des Amateurs de l'Eurovision (OGAE), told BBC News he had "expected something more".

Paul Marks-Jones said reaction to the song had been "more negative than positive", adding, "I've now listened to it a few times but on the Euro stage you only get one chance and I don't know if it's strong enough to woo the Eurovision voters".


The song's musical style has split fans



Listen to Electro Velvet perform the UK's 2015 Eurovision Song Contest entry "Still In Love With You:

‘Still In Love With You’ Electro Velvet (UK entry for Eurovision 2015) - BBC One - YouTube



Last year, Molly Smitten-Downes came 17th for the UK with Children of the Universe. This year's contest is in Vienna on 23 May.

The UK has only been placed in the top 10 once since Jemini's infamous "nul points" in 2003. That was when Jade Ewan was fifth in 2009 with the Andrew Lloyd Webber written song It's My Time.

The last time it won was in 1997 when it was represented by Katrina and the Waves with Love Shine a Light.

Despite the lukewarm reaction to the new song, Mr Marks-Jones insisted the UK could still make an impact at the event:

"People just assume we won't win again but any country can win. This song will stand out a lot because there are a lot of ballads this year and they have something different. But I don't think this year will be the year that we win."

Bianca Nicholas, 26, of Beckenham, was a contestant on BBC's The Voice in 2013, although none of the judges swivelled their chair round in support of her performance, meaning she did not progress any further than the initial heats.

She released a single in 2011 - Hold on to Your Dreams - which sold enough copies to enter the top 100 singles chart.

She has the serious genetic condition cystic fibrosis, which affects the lungs, and has previously spoken about how singing has improved her breathing and lung function.

Due to her affiliation with the Cystic Fibrosis Trust, she has sung in front of Royal Family members at charity galas.

Larke, 35, from Welwyn Garden City, has performed around the world with his Rolling Stones tribute act, and splits his time between performing and teaching in a primary school.

"I feel incredibly privileged and humbled to be representing the United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna, for this massively historic 60th anniversary event," he said.


Jemini were the last duo to represent the UK in the infamous year of 2003. They were the only act to finish with zero points, the first time that ever happened to the UK, a pop music superpower


"We have a fantastic song and will work as hard as is humanly possible to bring the contest home and make our great nation proud. It's time to get this party started! See you in Vienna!"

The song Electro Velvet will be performing was written by David Mindel and Adrian Bax White and chosen through an open selection process which saw hundreds of entries from both professional and amateur songwriters.

Austria's Conchita Wurst won the Eurovision Song Contest last year, meaning it will be held in her home country.

Can They Swing The Eurovision Votes for the United Kingdom?

By Eurovision Song Contest expert Benny Royston

So how will the boy-girl duet perform in Vienna and could we be looking at a victory for the United Kingdom at the 60th anniversary Eurovision Song Contest?

The song is very much en vogue for the country, featuring the 1920s style that has spawned global success for Downton Abbey and Mr. Selfridge television shows. The 1920s have become synonymous with Britain, so this song can be classed typical of the country it represents, even if it isn’t a mainstream music genre. That is often the sign of a Eurovision entry with the potential to succeed.


Electro Velvet (Picture: BBC)

The song is electro-swing, and for fans of Strictly Come Dancing, it’s a classic Charleston. We can only think of one former Eurovision Song Contest entry in this style. It came from Alex Swings Oscar Sings for Germany in 2009 and featured Dita von Teese riding a writhing sofa on stage. It came 20th place our of 25.

Outdated and a sinking ship or strikingly retro modern and in with a chance? Opinion is divided. I’m going for retro modern with a smidge of wonder and a toe-tapping twist – it could shine out as the ballads share the quiet vote. It’s going to appeal to the silver brigade for sure.

There is a hint of Mika in the song, and shades of Scatman, a very popular sound and one France have been keen to get for a while.

Watching the BBC reveal, ‘irritatingly catchy’ seems to be a popular description. Lyrically, other countries are sending ballads – the United Kingdom might have got ourselves a bit of an edge.

There are still ten songs to be chosen, but so far, so good.



BBC News - Eurovision: UK Duo Electro Velvet earn mixed reaction
 
Last edited: