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Swedish Melodifestivalen: Tusse, Eric Saade or….

Tonight is the night for the last national final of this year: Swedish Melodifestivalen comes to an end tonight. Bookmakers say Tusse is the huge favourite to win this thing. But also Eric Saade stands a high chance to do so. Or will it be a surprise winner? We will see. Anyway, you can watch it at 20.00 CET and you can watch it here

The full list of participants is:

  • Danny Saucedo, “Dandi dansa”
  • Klara Hammarström, “Beat of broken hearts”
  • Anton Ewald, “New religion”
  • The Mammas, “In the middle”
  • Paul Rey, “The missing piece”
  • Charlotte Perrelli, “Still young”
  • Tusse, “Voices”
  • Alvaro Estrella, “Baila baila”
  • Clara Klingenström, “Behöver inte dig idag”
  • Eric Saade, “Every minute”
  • Dotter, “Little Tot”
  • Arvingarna, “Tänker inte alls gå hem”

No less than four contestants know what it is to win Melodifestivalen: Arvingarna did it in 1993, Eric Saade in 2011 and The Mammas last year. Charlotte Perrelli even won twice: in 1999 and in 2008. The first time she even managed to win the Eurovision Song Contest!

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Anja Kroeze

They will rock you!

  It is often said: Rock music… that doesn’t belong  in the Eurovision Song Contest. But why not? And who decides? That is the counter-question.  The answer is simple; If we look at the rules of the EBU, there are rules about length, publication, originality, but not about the genre.So…. Rock music at Eurovision: Sure thing! The early years For the very first Rock entry, we’re going all the way back to…..1956! An entry in the very first year of Eurovision, which would not be out of place for Elvis (regardless of the language). The Austrian Freddy Quin was one of the German representatives; his song was called was “So geht das jede Nacht”. As with every entry in the Eurovision Song Contest of 1956, apart from the winner, the placement is unknown. Varying degrees of success and the lowest ranking Rock songs were submitted with varying degrees of success in the years that followed. In 1982 a Rock-bottom was reached: Finland’s Kojo with “Nuku pommiin”, took the very last place with 0 points. Was it really that bad, or was Europe not ready for it? Judge for yourself: Rock Win It took quite some time before Rock really made a difference at Eurovision, but in 2006 the time had come: Lordi for Finland with “Hardrock Hallelujah” won the contest with 292 points. Rock is part of it After that, Rock as a type of music at Eurovision was taken a lot more seriously. Bigger successes were achieved, and in 2018 even a Hungarian hard metal band managed to reach the finals. That AWS with “Viszlát Nyár” finished last in the grand final, doesn’t matter… They made it to the finals. The icing on the Rockcake was, of course, Måneskin in 2021. France was the big favorite (Barbara Pravi), but with 524 points, Italy left France behind.  The conclusion may be that Rock definitely belongs at Eurovision, although opinions will always be divided on this. 2024 was a year without Rock. We are curious to see what 2025 will bring.           Share

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