Posted on 05/21/2005 2:20:48 AM PDT by MadIvan
Fifty years of bizarre names and tactical voting, and all along the song contest has been an ironic metaphor
TONIGHT IS the 50th Eurovision Song Contest, the moment when Europe, for a few precious hours, will speak the same language. And what a strange language it is.
Who can forget Diggi-loo, Diggi-ley, the Swedish song that won in 1984, or Ringe-Dinge-Ding, the Dutch entry in 1967, that was followed in 1975 by the even more powerfully evocative Ding A Dong? Lulu made the greatest British contribution to the Eurovision lexicon with Boom Bang-a-Bang in 1969, but every country has contributed something: Norway, with Oj, Oj, Oj (1969), Spain with the winning La La La (1968), Monaco with Boum-Badaboum (1967), and Diri-Diri, by Kostas Bigalis & The Sea Lovers, the Greek offering in 1994.
What did it all mean? No one can be quite sure, but for one evening every year for half a century, Europe has come together in a festival of joyful inanity, kitsch crooning, national pride, sequins and nipple tape. More than 100 million people are expected to tune in to the contest this year, from Kiev to Kilkenny, for the Eurovision Song Contest is a cultural monument to what most Europeans think it means to be European. Thus, like the European Union itself, the contest is driven by good intentions, but riven by festering national animosities, unacknowledged alliances, linguistic conflict, and a dubious voting system that no one really understands.
Over the years, the contest has served as an unlikely metaphor for Europe: parallel politics in a lamé jumpsuit. Eurovision was invented in 1956 by a French music producer called Marcel Bezençon as a way of uniting the countries of postwar Europe; the EEC arrived a year later, with only six members. Today the EU has 25 members, and more than 40 countries will compete for tonights prize and the right to stage next years extravaganza.
What began as an exclusive Western European club has expanded and, in recent years, moved markedly eastwards. As in Europe, the most enthusiastic participants are also the newest. Ukraine are the hosts tonight; Turkey, Latvia and Estonia have won the three previous years. In each case, the winning country hailed its victory as a political breakthrough. We are no longer knocking at Europes door, declared the Estonian Prime Minister after his countrys victory in 2001. We are walking through it singing. (Even by Eurovision standards of hyperbole, this was a stretch: nobody who heard Estonias Tanel Padar and Dave Benton perform Everybody could seriously describe it as singing.)
The Turks saw their win in 2003 as a harbinger of entry into the EU, and after the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, tonights competition is a powerful symbol of Viktor Yushchenkos pro-European inclinations. This is all faintly absurd when you reflect that the real reason the competition is being held in Ukraine is because the Ukrainian singer Ruslana leapt on stage in a leather jockstrap last year and sang: Inside you my head spins round and round. Painful for all parties, I should imagine, but enough to win her an incomprehensible 280 points.
Conversely, the countries of Old Europe regard the contest through increasingly jaundiced eyes. The Italians no longer bother to compete. The British regard the whole thing as a camp joke, a stitch-up worthy of smothering under a thick blanket of Terry Wogan mockery; but we still get angry when we lose. Even the Irish, who have won the contest more often than any other nation, claim to be taking it less seriously (and have already been eliminated). France invented the game and won the first three contests, but a new survey of Eurovision voting patterns by a team of Oxford statisticians found France to be notably out of tune with the rest of Europe. The French have not won since 1977, and the country seems increasingly disillusioned by a contest it can no longer dominate. A week from now, millions of Frenchmen and women will vote against the EU constitution, for rather similar reasons.
Behind the flagwaving, the glitter and the Bulgarian nose flutes lie raw politics. Cyprus and Greece tend to give maximum points to one another, but few to Turkey; the Nordic and Baltic countries vote, in comradely fashion, for each other; the little countries take the opportunity to stick it to the big ones. The big countries insist it is all tacky nonsense, unless they win, at which point it becomes enormously significant. When the dire British duo Jemini polled nul points in 2003, anti-war politicians claimed that this reflected European opposition to Tony Blairs stance on Iraq (while ignoring the fact that Cry Baby was itself a crime against humanity). Even the spread of English through the competition, despite protests from language purists who believe contestants should sing in their mother tongue, reflects wider tensions within the EU.
Beside all this, the music is merely background, ranging from quietly mediocre to triumphantly bad. Winners seldom go on to enjoy big chart success. Indeed, the competition has only produced one pop classic, and then Abba changed the name of their 1974 entry from Honey Pie to Waterloo at the last moment and went on to win. (The British jury with the cussedness that has so long characterised our relations with Europe awarded Waterloo zero points.)
Of course, one should not read too much meaning into Eurovision. For two years now I have been pondering what the Austrian cabaret artist Alf Poier can possibly have meant when he sang:
Little Rabbits have short noses And kittens have soft paws And Mother Holle likes her wool From the African Dromedary.
The answer remains mysterious, like much of Eurovision. How has a competition of such limited musical merit not only survived, but expanded over half a century? How can the same event be regarded with deadly earnestness by one part of Europe and derision by the other, but remain equally popular with both? How did Nana Mouskouri get away with appearing as the Luxembourg contestant in 1963? And what is a Diggi-loo?
In the end, Eurovision is less a contest than an idea, a vision of Europe, a long-running exercise in hopeful internationalism that is simultaneously naff, hilarious and oddly touching. Away from the pomposity and boredom of Brussels and Strasbourg, this is the one moment of the year we can say Hello Belgium, and mean it.
Eurovision can make even the most hardened cynic feel better, or at least superior. Offering predictions about this contest is foolish, but here is one: if France wins the Eurovision Song Contest today, then the French will vote yes in the EU referendum.
Regards, Ivan
Ping!
I never heard any of those songs....
Well shucks! It seemed like a lot of fun when we were stationed in Bonn when I was a kid. I'll always fondly remember "Making Your Mind Up" winner for 1981 (Bucks Fizz?). Then again, I never could sit through the whole retarded pageant. Like the Academy Awards, I just tuned in for the end. Sounds like it may have lost it's former bubbly innocence. Those costume references don't sound too encouraging.
Be grateful you've never heard of them. To my knowledge, the only Eurovision winning band that became famous in America was Abba.
And that should say it all, really.
Regards, Ivan
Regards, Ivan
a long-running exercise in hopeful internationalism
Yeah, this is the only place they can safely practice internationalism. In other venues, if they do it, they lose something substantial. French are all for EU internationalism except losing their vested interest. That is why so many French are against EU constitution.
This is the only place they can sustain their illusion of one Europe because it is thoroughly inane.
"As with all things of consequence, the Americans got there first:
Who put the bomp (in the bomp bomp bomp)"
______________________________________________________________
"By Golly! They really are singing: "Who, who put the moo-cow out!" (Roberta, from Homer Hickam's "The Coalwood Way")
Book Of Love
The Monotones
Wasn't it a few years ago, in the World Idol conytest, that Kelly Clarkson lsot to some really weird Norwegian guy...a purely anit-American vote...
Well, there is always next year. Last year, Norway became dead last, but managed to get through to tonights final.
I cannot wait to hear what the BBC guy has to say about our Motley Crew (almost literally. lol) of heavy metal glam rockers. haha.
Well, I am looking forward to tonight. Hope Sweden tanks. And looking forward to see another glimpse of the Israeli singer. She was, um, very talented :-)
Cheers.
You are right...
But, I don't think it was anti american vote though. Kelly Clarkson is alright, and deservedly came second, but in my, albeit not totally unbiased opinion :-), Kurt Nilsen from Norway really was the best artist on the night.
Also one of the judges dissed him and told him he looked like a Hobbit, and I think that played in his favour. A bit of sympathy voting in the midst of the Lord of the Rings mania at the time.
Besides, if I remember correctly, the arab jury gave more points to clarkson than they did to the Norwegian guy. I also think that was the case the German vote for instance.
Cheers.
Thanks..and good mornin' to ya...I remember the Hobbitt reference.and also how Kelly looked STUNED when the results were announced..BTW..has the Norwegian guy done anything musically of late?
Good morning to you too :-)
Kurt Nilsen released his second album a little while back. Since I am not a big fan, I have only seen his first video called My street. It's alright. The man does have a really good voice. The video was obviously big in Norway, and I also noticed it get a bit of airtime on MTV here in Europe when flipping through the channels.
As for international success, I think it is mainly in Germany were he has really breaken through and topped the charts. I think the Germans really loved their Idol though :-) He has also appeared on top of the pops, and made a decent entry into the British charts before quickly falling like a rock.
If you have nothing else to do you can check out his latest video (and some others) on this link:
http://www.kurt-nilsen.net/media.html
Cheers.
ABBA! Hm, sweet smell of 70s! "Where are those happy days?", ABBA was once singing.
Sitting in front of my new 34 flat TV screen and sipping a glass of good cold beer I was hoping I would spend the evening having fun. I hoped Id hear something that would caress my tormented ears after working hard all day. To my horror I saw gangs of the mentally disabled running around in circles, producing sounds only the mentally disabled could call them songs.
My Polish national team was to perform as the last. When the time came, to my extreme horror, I saw a Gypsy Gang running like madmen on the stage, whaling and shouting something in a language which resembled Polish like a fish resembles a bicycle. A Gypsy band is as representative for Poland as Africans playing bongos on behalf of Greenland.
Ive already heard lots of so called performers whose musical abilities qualified them only to play to a cutlet in a suburban grill bar. However, this was beyond any expectations, revealing new horizons of human imperfections.
You cannot imagine my sigh of relief when I saw the Polish team didnt qualify to the final. God is merciful!!! The whole Europe was spared seeing them again and Poland was spared paying huge amounts as compensations for devastated ears all across the Old Continent.
From Poland with regards
Pomian
Well some songs were eliminated, sadly, others were not.
This contest definitely needs to die.
Regards, Ivan
Well, she is big time cute!
Regards,
hehe. I suspect you just might be a sore loser :-)
UK Nill points :-)
Agree that the competition is a bit of a joke, but that is as I see it half the point. Heck, even reading the article you posted was quite entertaining.
You should muster up some Norwegian pride and support Norway's heavy metal act tonight.
Not kidding, the guitarist in Kiss just endorsed them :-)
I love the BBC's coverage and commentary.
Well I only listened to a few small samples - Norway's song is the only one that didn't make me feel like retching.
I'm not sure why Norway would want to win...the prize is hosting this.
Regards, Ivan
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.