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Eurovision - Is It Really A Fix?

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  • Eurovision - Is It Really A Fix?

    EUROVISION - IS IT REALLY A FIX?
    By Shane Jarvis

    Daily Telegraph
    9:34AM BST 14 May 2009
    UK

    Shane Jarvis listens to all 42 entries in this year's contest and
    assesses the chances of UK hopeful Jade Ewen.

    Making 'un point'?? Jade Ewen rehearsing in Moscow this week Photo:
    GETTY IMAGES Millions of viewers will watch the Eurovision Song Contest
    on Saturday betting that the UK's entry, It's My Time by Jade Ewen,
    will come last. So long has our run of Eurovision failure lasted that
    many -including former host Terry Wogan - are convinced that the UK
    never stands a chance of winning again.

    But the doubters may be proved wrong. After another UK debacle last
    year, someone decided that, in order to do better in the contest,
    we should start taking ourselves and the competition a bit more
    seriously. Andrew Lloyd Webber became involved, and his composition
    might actually prove to be a contender.

    Sounds Like Teen Spirit: a cross between Borat and Little Miss
    SunshineTo assess our chances - and at great risk to my aural sanity
    - I decided to listen intently to all 42 entries in the competition
    just to see if there was any musical merit in any of them. And, to
    my great surprise, the fact of the matter is that there is - and not
    always where you might expect it. The winning entry might come from
    Slovenia, Moldova, Ukraine, Lithuania or20Armenia, all of whom have
    very good compositions.

    For what it is worth, the UK entry stands up well against the
    opposition and could even finish in the top five. But there are many
    songs of quality and originality - more than there is room for in
    the final of 25 songs. Once again this year, the number of entries
    means there are two semi-finals in the week before the main televised
    event. So who are the ones to watch for and who can we dismiss?

    Norway, which has earned the dubious zero-points honour four times,
    has an excellent song and is justifiably favourite to win. Alexander
    Rybak's Fairytale is a freewheeling fantasy with a violin hook and
    verse/chorus combination reminiscent of Maroon 5. Sweden is putting
    in a dynamic pop opera that is breathless, entertaining, infectious
    and ends two octaves above middle C. And Christina Metaxa's entry for
    Cyprus starts in Lloyd Webber style before heading into U2 territory.

    Of the five automatic finalists, only the UK and France deserve to be
    there, although the Russian song, Mamo, is a slow burner. Spain and
    Germany, I'm afraid, turn in poor performances that lack originality
    and sparkle. Despite listening to Spain's entry more than a dozen
    times, I still cannot remember a thing about it other than it abandons
    Latin flavours in favour of an eastern European minor refrain that
    will fool no one.

    When Wogan announced that he was stepping down from20presenting
    the contest for UK viewers last year, he cited a number of reasons
    why he thought the UK would never again do well in the show. They
    included everything from our involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq
    and our automatic entry into the final, to the notion that eastern
    European countries voted just for each other.

    What he might have overlooked was that his disdain and increasing
    contempt for the contest was beginning to be noticed by the organisers
    and other countries and that, more importantly, maybe the songs placed
    higher than the UK's were actually better. It may even have been that
    Wogan's presence was putting the UK at a disadvantage. One participant
    observed during Tuesday night's first semi-final that our commentator
    would no doubt be saying cruel things again this year.

    But this time we might see a difference. We have a new presenter in
    Graham Norton and a strong and serious entry. Lloyd Webber will be
    appearing onstage with Jade Ewen with a song that ticks a lot of boxes.

    Only if it finishes last might the Woganists be vindicated in their
    suspicions that Eurovision is all one big fix.

    The second Eurovision semi-final is on BBC3 at 8pm tonight. The final
    is on BBC1 at 8pm on Sat.
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