All posts by ANDY RICHARDS

EerieVision: Day 5

We’re very nearly at Halloween, and that means we have another creepy Eurovision classic for you.

Today, we’re not off to Transylvania, but instead, Switzerland – the host country of the upcoming 2025 Eurovision Song Contest.

But who is our chosen act of the day?

Clue 1: They were born on 5th January 1968.

Clue 2: Their real name is Peter René Baumann.

Clue 3: They’ve had 27 chart hits in Germany and Switzerland.

. . .

. .

.

If you’re a fan of Dracula, Nosferatu, Edward Cullen, or or even Count von Count from Sesame Street, this one’s for you. Buffy would not approve, though. Grab yourself a nice steak to eat – it’s DJ BoBo with Vampires are Alive from the 2007 Contest!

Join us again tomorrow for the penultimate day of EevieVision Spook Contest!

Source: Wikipedia

EerieVision: Day 4

Good evening guys and ghouls! We continue our collection of creepy Eurovision-related music with Day 4 of the EerieVision Spook Contest.

This next song may have passed you by if you don’t watch the National Final selection shows. Many countries each year let their public decide which song will be chosen to represent them at Eurovision, and sadly this means that some great songs don’t make their way onto the global Eurovision stage. Here is one of those acts.

Gothminister are a Norwegian gothic metal band that formed way back in 1999. The following song ‘We Come Alive’ appeared in Norway’s Melodi Grand Prix this year. Gåte were the eventual winner, but we would have loved to have seen this appear on stage in Malmö!

You can find out more about the band on their social media channels, plus check out the offical music video of the song below!

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YouTube
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Sources: Wikipedia / Gothminster.com

 

EerieVision: Day 3

As we get closer to Halloween, our spooktacular EerieVision Spook Contest continues!

We’re not heading too far back in our Time Warp today. In fact it’s a song from very recently. But who is this in their younger years?

Image: Facebook: Bambie Ray Robinson

Who could have ever guessed that this little angel could have transformed into Ireland’s representative from the 2024 contest!

Here’s the terrifying Bambie Thug with their song Doomsday Blue!

 

EerieVision: Day 2

Continuing our seven days of Halloween-themed Eurovision songs and performances, today, we’re heading over to Cypus.

Image: EBU / Thomas Hanses

She’s no angel. In fact, she’s burning down the house.

What the devil? It’s getting hot in here! Here’s Elena Tsagrinou with El Diablo, back from the 2021 contest!

Join us again tomorrow for another spooky tune from the Eurovision graveyard!

 

EerieVision: Day 1

To kick off the first of our Halloween-themed week of Eurovision songs, we’re heading over to Finland… Can you guess who it is from their creepy costume?

Clue 1: She was born on 2 May 1987

Clue 2: She finished as the runner-up in the thirteenth series of The X Factor UK

Clue 3: Her voice has been used on a number of Finnish dubbed movies, including Alice in Wonderland, Brave, and Frozen.

. . .

. .

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It’s Saara Aalto with Monsters, back from the 2018 contest!

We’ll have another creepy song again tomorrow. Leave a comment below if you have any requests, and we’ll get fright on it!

 

Image: RTE.it / Kiss FM’s Haunted House Party

EERIEvision Spook Contest 2024

From tomorrow, and continuning every day until Halloween on 31st October, ESC Covers will be bringing your our favourite spooky songs from the world of the Eurovision Song Contest!

With terrifying and horrific performances featured in the contest itself (don’t worry – Jemini won’t be included), as well as a few creepy National Final songs that never made the cut and got left to rot and decompose – we’ve got your Halloween party covered with some of our favourites.

If you have any suggestions of what videos/perfromances you’d like to see over the coming days, comment below.

Listen to samples of the 18 songs competing in Junior Fest Albania 2024

Junior Fest Albania takes places later this month, and 18 short snippets of each song have now been released by Albanian broadcaster, RTSH.

The songs that will perform in the grand final on 27th September in Tirana, are as follows:

Ami Kokurti – “Reale” (True)
Arbëri Dajko – “Ëndrra në detin blu” (Dream in the blue sea)
Armina Kajnozi – “Mama” (Mum)
Boris Metaj – “Se jemi ne” (It’s us)
David Kerri – “Thirrja e Tokës” (Call of the Earth)
Doris Canaj – “Jemi njësoj” (We are the same)
Eden Dami- “Ti më sjell fat” (You bring me luck)
Elora Tahitri – “Me lajka” (Flattering)
Ema Deda – “Hapat” (Steps)
Gedis Germani – “Flutura prej letre” (Paper butterfly)
Gjon Gjipali – “S’ka problem” (No problem)
Hana Lamaj – “Medaljon” (Medallion)
Kejsi Xheladini – “Dua të këndoj” (I want to sing)
Kejt Hitaj – “Ëndërrojnë” (They dream)
Klejda Bashota – “Një këngë për ty” (A song for you)
Kristel Xhafka – “Party”
Marina Daka – “Nuk do ndalem” (I won’t stop)
Nikol Çabeli – “Vallëzoj” (Dance)

The clips were originally uploaded to Junior Fest RTSH’s Instagram account, and have now since been made into a recap compilation video by the Misja Eurowizja I Recaps YouTube channel. You can listen to a few short seconds of each song in the video below.

Let us know in the comments section below, what your Top 3 are!

Image: Junior Fest Rtsh (Instagram)
Source: RTSH / Eurovoix

 

Your hosts of the 2024 Junior Eurovision Song Contest are here!

RTVE have now announced the names of the three hosts that will be presenting the next edition of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest – and they may very well be familiar to ESC and JESC fans alike!

Murcia-born Ruth Lorenzo represented Spain at Eurovision in 2014 with her song, “Dancing in the Rain”, which finished in tenth place in the contest. She also finished in fifth place in the UK version of The X Factor in 2008, and has also hosted Spain’s pre-selection show, Benidorm Fest.

Marc Clotet is an award-winning actor, who can be seen in many Spanish films, television shows, and stages throughout the country. The first series that his production company, alongside RTVE created, was given honours at both the Cannes Series Festival and the Prix Europa Awards.

And finally, Melani García will already be familiar to JESC fans, as she finished in third place at the 2019 contest with her song “Marte”, which was held in Gliwice, Poland. At Nickelodeon’s Kids Choice Awards in 2022, she was nominated for Best Spanish Artist.

You’ll be able to watch all three stars perform their hosting duties at the 22nd edition of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest on 16th November 2024, live from the Caja Mágica in Madrid, Spain. 17 countries will be taking part, including returning nations Cyprus and San Marino. Let’s Bloom is this year’s theme, which references the young artists that will be ‘blossoming’ when they’re on stage performing to the world.

Source: eurovision.tv

Behind the scenes at Eurovision 2024 with performer, Sarah Blomgren

At ESC Covers we sometimes like to take a look a look at the rarer and more unusual parts of the Eurovision Song Contest, plus love showcasing some of the talented people behind the scenes whom the mainstream media don’t often credit.

Today we have an exclusive interview with Sarah Blomgren Barth, who some of you may have seen performing along side Erik Aahl at the closing sections of both the Friday Night Preview Show (aka Jury Final) and Saturday Afternoon Preview Show inside the Malmö Arena. During the rehearsals for the voting sequence, Sarah and Erik stood in for the ‘fake’ winners of both of these shows, and treated the audience to their dance renditions of Doomsday Blue by Bambie Thug and We Will Rave by Kaleen.

If you’ve never been to one of the rehearsal shows at Eurovision in the past, you may not have realised that the entire show is rehearsed a number of times before the live TV programme is aired across Europe and the world. The whole thing is presented as if it were real, including full script, performances, postcards, jokes from the hosts, and of course the full voting process. This gives the whole production team, broadcasters and commentators across the world to experience the entire show as it will look for real.

One of the most important things to do, is to fully rehearse and practice the voting – to make sure any problems are ironed out before going live for real. The results of these of course need to be made up (as the televoting hasn’t yet been opened), and we see a completely different scoreboard to the actual show. We also need fake winners, and this is where Sarah and Erik’s part was very important to the success of the show! They actually got to be Eurovision ‘winners’ for a few moments! The entire leaked performance of the fake winning performance was uploaded onto YouTube, by Eurovision Exclusives and is available to watch after reading our interview with Sarah below.

Hi Sarah! Thanks for taking the time to speak to ESC Covers! How did you get involved with Eurovision this year? Were you volunteeers/fans/employees/standins etc?

I got involved with this year’s Eurovision through the dance studio Malmö dansfabrik where I got the opportunity to be a rehearsal stand-in dancer for two countries. After that I also got the job as a Moomin troll for the interval act in the second semi final before being a stand in for the winning act. We actually got the call asking if we wanted to be stand-ins for the winning number on the Friday a few hours before we were on stage performing in the first rehearsal show for the finale. 

What does the average day working at Eurovision look like? What’s the daily routine?

The days were quite different depending on what I was there to do. When we did the first stand-in work we would get there and have some time in the changing room to get warmed up and ready before getting our in-ears and doing a sound check before heading to the stage to wait for our time. Once it was our turn we would get safety notes and quickly stage the number before doing it full out and filming. Each performance got to do it 2-3 times depending on how much time there was over. Many of the countries with a lot of props on stage only managed to do it twice. Those who had multiple performances had to wait to do it all again and then we would leave once we were done for the day. 

For the work I did as a Moomin troll we had 3 rehearsals on the stage the week before the show, the first one was without costumes but the other two were with our full costumes. The performance days we had, we would arrive around the time that the show started. We weren’t on until later in the show so we didn’t have to be there that early. We waited in the back-stage area until it was time to get our in-ears, get dressed and head to the stage. Once we were done we had quite a few hours to kill before doing it again.

As stand-ins for the winning act we weren’t on until the very end so we arrived when the show had already started and then we went directly to the greenroom and sat there through the whole mock voting before going straight to the stage walking the “winners walk”. The first rehearsal went slower and we got instructions on what was going to happen before performing. We did Ireland’s number on the Friday because we had done it as rehearsal stand-ins and therefore knew the choreo. Then we had to wait to do it again later in the evening. When we came on Saturday for the rehearsal performance they wanted us to do Austrias number instead. But we didn’t know that choreography so we tried to learn the beginning right before going on stage and just improvise the rest.

What did you think of the show overall? Have you watched Eurovision before? Did you have any favorite songs, and were you happy with Switzerland winning?

I think that the show this year was very good with a lot of good songs and a lot of great dance numbers but also great interval acts. I have watched Eurovision every year for as long as I can remember but I usually only watch the finale from home. It is hard to choose just one song as a favorite. I really liked Switzerland’s song and their amazing performance but I also really liked Ukraine, Italy and Armenia. I think it was a tough year with a lot of great performances but I think Nemo from Switzerland is a well deserving winner. 

How long have you both been dancing for? What styles of dance are your favorites?

I started dancing when I was 4 and I am 19 now, so I have been dancing for about 15 years or so. The styles I enjoy the most have to be modern/contemporary and jazz.

Were you involved in the choreography for any of this year’s performances?

No, I was not involved in the choreography for any of the performances. We had to learn the choreographies we got to do as stand-in dancers from videos sent to us from each countries own rehearsals. Some countries also changed their choreographies before the actual show and then we would have to relearn the numbers so that we knew the newest version of it. That was a bit stressful at times considering that we had very little time to work on this but it was also fun to see how the numbers evolved and also what additional changes were made between the time that we were on stage to the live performances.

How does it feel to now see your performance on YouTube, when it was really just intended for the audience at the rehearsal shows?

It definitely feels weird to see myself on the internet like that and to see how many views the videos get. I generally don’t like watching videos of myself dancing and I have felt quite insecure about the videos and about my performance even though I am so thankful that I got this amazing opportunity and it was so much fun getting to dance on the Eurovision stage. I think that it’s nearly impossible in today’s world to do anything for just the audience, there are always going to be people who record something. That was something I knew before I did the performances so I tried to prepare myself for it but it is still a weird feeling seeing myself like that. 

Do you also act or perform anywhere else?

I am currently a dance student at Copenhagen Contemporary Dance School where we have done performances at different schools and nursing homes during the last couple of months. I also recently had a performance with my dance studio Malmö Dansfabrik.

Who are your inspirations?

There are so many amazing dancers that I look up to. I am constantly getting inspired by the other students at my school and by all of our amazing teachers that we have. 

What would you say is the best dance routine of all time?

There are so many amazing dance performances and new ones are constantly being made so it really is impossible to say that one specific one is the best. The last dance performance I saw was “Hammer” by Göteborgsoperans danskompani which i really loved watching.

Which musical act would be your dream to perform on stage with?

Maybe Benjamin Ingrosso. I really like his songs and the interval act he did for the first semi final in eurovision was absolutely amazing and looked like so much fun to do as a dancer.

Do you have any important messages to the world?

To treat everyone with respect and kindness. To see our differences and respect them. To not be so quick to judge each other and to remember that we are all humans with feelings and we should treat each other the way we would want to be treated by others. 

How can our readers find out more about you both? (social media/dance school etc)

My instagram is Sarah_blomgren and the school I go to is Copenhagen Contemporary Dance School and I also dance at Malmö Dansfabrik. 

We’d like to thank Sarah very much for answering our questions, and hope that we will maybe get to see both herself and Erik at other massive productions in the future. ESC Covers will be the first to let you know of their upcoming productions. Watch this space!

Sarah and Erik’s leaked YouTube ‘winning’ performance is available to watch below:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J0mjOA_eFFk

Video taken from the Eurovision Exclusives channel on YouTube.