Russia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000

  • Andrew Lane
  • Brandon Barnes
Finals performanceFinal result2nd, 155 pointsRussia in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1997 2000 2001►

Russia participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000, held on 13 May 2000 at the Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden. Public Russian Television (ORT) returned to the Eurovision Song Contest after a two-year absence following their relegation in 1998. ORT first announced that the Russian entry for the 2000 contest would be chosen through a televised national final, however, they later opted to choose the nation's representative internally by jury. The selected song was "Solo", written by Andrew Lane and Brandon Barnes and performed by Alsou.

Prior to the contest, the entry was promoted by a music video and live performances in Riga, Tallinn and Saint Petersburg. Russia performed ninth out of the 24 countries competing in the contest and finished in second place, receiving 155 points and full 12-point marks from four countries. This marked the nation's highest placement in the contest to that point.

Background

Prior to the 2000 contest, Russia had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest three times since its first entry in 1994.[1] Russia missed the 1996 contest when its selected song "Ya eto ya" by Andrey Kosinsky failed to qualify from the qualifying round, was relegated from the 1998 contest due to a poor average score from the preceding contests, and was unable to partake in the 1999 contest after ORT didn't air the previous contest on television, which was a requirement for participation in 1999.[2][3] By 2000, the country's best placing was ninth, which it achieved in 1994 with the song "Vechny strannik" performed by Youddiph.[1]

The Russian national broadcaster ORT broadcasts the event within Russia and organises the selection process for the nation's entry.[4] ORT confirmed their intentions to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000 on 18 December 1999. Along with their participation confirmation, it was announced that a national final would be held to select the Russian entry.[5] This aspect was later discarded and the broadcaster ultimately chose the artist and song by the jury panel.[6]

Before Eurovision

Alsou (pictured in 2009) was selected to represent Russia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000

Internal selection

On 18 December 1999, ORT announced that a national final would take place on 19 February 2000 to select the Russian entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2000 and opened a submission period for interested artists and composers to submit their entries through 15 February 2000.[5][7] The broadcaster received over 2000 applications at the conclusion of the deadline.[4][8] Among the submissions received by ORT included the song "Desyat mysley" by Chay Vdvoyom,[9] as well as the entries from "Fonograph-Jazz-Band", Alla Sidorova, "Yula Frolova", and Andrey Misin.[4][10] Plans for the national final were later abandoned by the broadcaster due to financial problems.[6]

On 11 March 2000, ORT announced that they had internally selected Alsou to represent Russia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000 with the song "Solo".[4] Alsou's selection as the Russian representative was decided upon by a jury panel selected by ORT.[10] Written by Andrew Lane and Brandon Barnes,[8] the song became Russia's first entry to be performed in English at the contest.[11] Konstantin Ernst, president of ORT, stated: "I think Alsou is our first potential winner. She's young, bright, talented, beautiful, and perfect for this contest."[8] Following Alsou's selection, ORT announced that "Solo" would undergo remastering for the Eurovision Song Contest.[12]

Promotion

To promote the song as the Russian Eurovision entry, a music video for "Solo", directed by Debbie Bourn, was filmed in London.[13] Alsou also embarked on a promotional tour, performing "Solo" during her concerts at Vernisazh Club in Riga, Latvia on 8 April 2000,[14] Dekolte Club in Tallinn, Estonia on 9 April,[15] and Oktyabrsky Concert Hall in Saint Petersburg, Russia on 10 and 11 April.[16][17] On 4 May 2000, an online chat with Alsou was set up through official website of ORT. The singer also appeared in print media, having been interviewed by the Estonian newspaper Molodezh Estonii.[15]

At Eurovision

The Eurovision Song Contest 2000 took place at the Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, on 13 May 2000.

The Eurovision Song Contest 2000 took place at the Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, on 13 May 2000.[18] Twenty-four nations participated, including the previous year's winning country and host nation Sweden, the "Big Four" countries, the 13 countries which had obtained the highest average points total over the preceding five contests, and any eligible countries which had not competed in the 1999 contest.[19] As Russia did not compete in the 1999 contest, it was thus permitted to participate in 2000.[20] The running order for the contest was decided by a draw held on 21 November 1999;[19] Russia was assigned to perform 9th at the 2000 contest, following Norway and preceding Belgium.[21] The contest was televised in Russia on ORT live on 13 May,[22][23] with a delayed broadcast on 9 June.[24]

Prior to the contest, Russia was considered by bookmakers to be the twelve most likely country to win the competition.[25] The Russian performance was choreographed by Sandra Dukes[26] and featured Alsou, dressed in a silver glittery outfit designed by Maria Grachvogel,[27] performing a choreographed routine with two male dancers.[28] The stage featured LED screen projections of blue smoke.[28] During the performance, Alsou and the dancers were also accompanied by three backing vocalists.[28][29] After the voting concluded, Russia scored 155 points, including four sets of the highest score of 12 points, from Croatia, Cyprus, Malta and Romania;[30] the nation placed second.[21] At the time, this result was the Russia's best placing in its competitive history, and was the nation's first finish in the top three.[1] Following the contest, the Russian delegation petitioned for contest winner Denmark's disqualification due to the use of a vocoder during their performance, however, the EBU did not pursue action and the results remained.[18]

Voting

The same voting system in use since 1975 was again implemented for 2000 contest, with each country providing 1–8, 10 and 12 points[31] to the ten highest-ranking songs as determined by a jury panel or the public through televoting, with countries not allowed to vote for themselves.[19] Russia opted to assemble a jury panel to determine which countries would receive their points.[32] The Russian spokesperson, who announced the points awarded by the Russian jury during the final, was Zhanna Agalakova.[28][33]

Points awarded to Russia[34]
Score Country
12 points
10 points
8 points
7 points
6 points  Denmark
5 points
4 points  Germany
3 points
2 points   Switzerland
1 point
Points awarded by Russia[34]
Score Country
12 points  Denmark
10 points  Croatia
8 points  Malta
7 points  Macedonia
6 points  Romania
5 points   Switzerland
4 points  Germany
3 points  France
2 points  Spain
1 point  Latvia

After Eurovision

"Alsou's second-placing was seen by many as a triumph for her homeland, after recent Eurovision contests had brought humiliation for top flight Russian singers at the annual event - broadcast around the world to an audience estimated at 100 million viewers. Even though Alsou calls England home for now, her success caused a major splash in the national newspapers here. Several papers said the Eurovision result was sweet balm for national pride, wounded by the national hockey team's disastrously low 11th place at the world championships, which finished last Sunday in St. Petersburg."

—Alexander Bratersky from The Moscow Times on result's reception in Russia.[35]

Reception

Russia's success at the contest was greeted with positive reactions in the Russian press; Vechernyaya Moskva proclaimed the result "a matter of national pride",[36] while Kommersant expressed that Alsou "has regained the national prestige that was ruined by Russian hockey" and labelled the result "near-triumph".[6] Alsou herself stated that she was "immensely happy that [she] was able to support the musical glory of the country."[37] Following the contest, "Solo" was released as a single,[38] which went on to become a success in Russia; having sold over 64,000 copies by August 2000, "Solo" become the best-selling single in Russia to that point.[a][40]

Impact and legacy

In their book Performing the 'New' Europe: Identities, Feelings and Politics in the Eurovision Song Contest, Karen Fricker and Milija Gluhovic credited Russia's success in the contest that year for starting the nation's "more focused and concerted pursuit of Eurovision gold", which included "consciously modeling their singers and musical material on Europop."[27] Vitaly Gizzatulin from Argumenty i Fakty wrote that Alsou's result "returned the interest of the domestic public to this song contest".[41] Yana Nevskaya from Amurskaya Pravda expressed that after Alsou's participation, "Eurovision has become an important and iconic contest for most Russian viewers."[42] Aleksey Kryzhevsky of Expert noted that Alsou's success "strengthened the foreign reputation of Russian pop,"[43] while Leonid Pavlyuchik from Trud stated that Alsou's second-place finish "brought her unprecedented popularity".[44] In a 2022 interview, former Universal Music Russia president David Junk said:

I wanted our artist Alsou to represent Russia at Eurovision because I was hoping it would help promote her new album in Europe. Access to 300 million television viewers across 24 countries – what a great opportunity. It was the first TV performance for this young 16-year-old girl. After a few poor placings, she brought prestige back to the country on an international stage.[45]

Various Eurovision participants cited the performance as an influence for their own participations in the contest; in an interview with Moskovsky Komsomolets, 2011 Eurovision winners for Azerbaijan Ell & Nikki have cited inspiration towards Alsou's performance: "Both Eldar and I almost simultaneously, since 2000, began to dream of performing at the competition. For example, I was very inspired by Alsou, her second place in 2000, but Azerbaijan did not participate in Eurovision at that time, and it seemed like a distant dream."[46] 2018 Russian representative Yulia Samoylova has also stated that "[her] dream to get to the Eurovision Song Contest was born when [she] saw the performance of the wonderful singer Alsou at this contest".[42]

A number of publications have retrospectively listed the Alsou's performance as one of the best Russian Eurovision performances; it has been included in unranked lists of the best Russian Eurovision Song Contest performances by Voice, STB, TV Centre and the Russian edition of Glamour magazine.[47][11][48][49] MTS included the performance on their list of "Most Iconic Eurovision performances,"[50] a 2016 Wiwibloggs poll resulted in "Solo" being chosen as the third-best Russian Top 5 Eurovision song,[51] and in 2021, music critic Artem Makarsky, in an article for The Village, ranked the performance as the ninth-best Russian Eurovision performance.[52]

Notes

  1. ^ In 2001, "You're My #1" by Enrique Iglesias and Alsou surpassed "Solo" and broke the record.[39]

References

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  29. ^ Maitland, Jonathan (2003). Flop Idol. Simon & Schuster. p. 93. ISBN 9780743430258.
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  52. ^ Makarsky, Artem (18 May 2021). Levchenko, Lesha (ed.). "Музыкальный критик оценивает все номера России на «Евровидении»" [Music critic evaluates all Russian numbers at Eurovision]. The Village (in Russian). Archived from the original on 18 May 2021. Retrieved 18 February 2023.

Further reading

  • Napier-Bell, Simon (2022). Sour Mouth, Sweet Bottom: Lessons from a Dissolute Life. Unbound. p. 275-278. ISBN 9781800181892.
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