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IRISH NEWS |
On this page you can keep
track of the Eurovision related news stories from Ireland. You can find older news stories
here.
2nd
November
After weeks of speculation RTÉ has finalised its
plans for the selection process of Ireland's Eurovision entry for
2008. RTÉ will be selecting the Irish 2008 entry by means of a
national competition, to be called "Eurosong 2008".
This approach will not be unlike the National Song Contest of
previous years, but will encourage innovation not only in music but
also in visual presentation, in keeping with the Eurovision contests
we've seen in recent years.
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Following the disasterous result for
Ireland in Helsinki this year, RTÉ decided to look again at the
strategy for selecting the country's entry and for that purpose RTÉ
assembled a consultative committee of interested parties from the
music writing, music performance and dance arts, to assist RTÉ in
the review. The committe which included 1992 Eurovision winner Linda
Martin (left) discussed the trends in the contest in recent years,
and how Irish entries needed to change for Ireland to launch a
serious challenge for victory.
The key findings of the committee were that the
contest has changed to incorporate bigger and bigger productions,
that the growth in the number of Eastern European countries
participating has made the contest even more competitive, and that
it has become, as at TV phenomenon, more and more elaborate. The
view of the committee is that it has become a performance contest,
as much as a song contest.
With that in mind, there will be a
very strong emphasis on visual impact and stage performance.
Consequently songwriters are being encouraged to enter not only
songs, but also DVDs which will demonstrate the potential stage
performance of the songs.
As in previous years, a preliminary judging
panel, consisting of five people (a previous Eurovision stand-by
jury member, a performer, a songwriter, a TV director and a
Eurovision fan) assembled by RTÉ, will select from all the entries
received a shortlist of entries to go to the final judging
committee. he composition of the final judging
committee selecting the six finalists will reflect songwriting,
performance arts and television production and will be chaired by
Bill Hughes, who has extensive experience of television and stage
production in both music and dance and is a keen follower of the
Eurovision Song Contest. This final judging committee will
then select from the shortlist six entries to compete in Eurosong,
to be broadcast as a television special by RTÉ in February 2008.
The closing date for entries is Monday January 21st and once again
foreign songwriters or performers can compete as long as they can
travel to Serbia.
The final selection; "Eurosong 2008"
with six songs will be staged in late February and unlike
the last two years, the songs will all be performed by different
singers or groups, but once again it is believed that the public
will have a final say in the selection of the winning entry, that
will represent Ireland in Belgrade, Serbia in May 2008.
You can find more information and
all the rules for entry on RTE's
website.
5th
October
RTÉ is expected to announce its plans for the
selection of Ireland's 2008 Eurovision Song Contest entry within the
next two weeks, and it looks like it will be a case of "back to
the future", with a multi artist Eurosong show in the spring,
with the public selecting the song that will represent Ireland in
Belgrade. It the rumours prove correct, there will be an open
competition for songs, with no limit on songwriters having to come
from Ireland. Once the finalists have been chosen, it is likely that
the songwriters to recruit the singers. A new twist however may see
internet voting, allowing Eurovision fans from all over the World to
have a say in the selection of the Irish entry.
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In other news, you can wait years for an
autobiography by a former Irish Eurovision entrant, and then within
a few weeks a second one comes along. Hot on the heels of Dickie
Rock's "Always Me", Dana (Rosemary Scallon)
Ireland's first Eurovision winner is about to have her autobiography
published and fitingly, it takes its title from her winning entry
"All Kinfds Of Everything". The win stunned Ireland and an
extraordinary career had been born. Dana became a household name,
but rather than disappearing forever from view as so many before her
and since, she continued to develop her career as a popular artist
and gained particular recognition in the U.K., Europe and in the US.
Throughout the 70’s and 80’s she had a string
of hits, was voted best female artist, best TV artist, hosted series
on BBC and ITV and appeared on Top of the Pops with stars such as
David Bowie, Queen and Marc Bolan as well as at several royal
command performances. In the 1990’s she moved to the US and hosted
a television series on the EWTN cable network to over 75 million
homes. She has met with Presidents Ford, Reagan Clinton and Bush and
met and sung for the Pope on five occasions. In 1997 Dana was the
first-ever independent candidate nominated to contest Ireland’s
presidential election. She shocked the political establishment by
gaining 15% of the popular vote. Two years later, however, she was
successful in being elected, against all the odds, as a Member of
the European Parliament for Connacht / Ulster. From a childhood in
the Bogside of Derry, through the maelstrom of international
showbusiness, to the White House and the Vatican, to the European
Parliament and all its political intrigue, Dana’s story is truly
astonishing. Indeed another chapter of Dana's career may have yet to
be written, as there are rumours that she may contest the European
elections in two years time.
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Meanwhile the man who brought Ireland its second
and third Eurovision victories is making a long overdue return to
this country and for the first time in almost twenty years Johnny
Logan (left) will be performing live on stage, as he plays dates
in Dublin and Cork. On Sunday Ocober 21st Johnny plays Dublin's
Vicar Street and three days later it's onto the Cork Opera House.
Johnny will of course be performing his two Eurovision winners and
also some classic Irish songs from his current "Irish
Collection" album. The collection of well known Irish songs has
gone Platinum in Denmark and Double Platinum in Norway, where it has
topped the album chart.
Unfortunatly there is still no official release
date for the album in Ireland, however in can be downloaded from the
Norwegian ITunes store and it's likely that the CD may be available
sale at the two Iroish gigs.
Johnny will be doing a "X-mas Tour" in
Scandinavia thoughout the months of November and December and the
"Irish Collection" will be in music shops in Sweden at the
end of December. Johnny has of course continued his interest in the
Eurovision Song Contest, and is a regular guest at National Finals
throughout Europe. There were rumours in the Irish press in 2006
that Johnny might return to the contest and with the potential
change in the selection process in Ireland, we might just see
"Mr. Eurovision" make a comeback in 2008.
28th
September
The latest rumours circulating in Irish Euovision
circles suggest that RTÉ may be looking at the option of
returning to an old style National Song Contest to select Ireland's
entry for the 2008 coompetition, to be staged in Belgrade in May of
next year. There may however be some signifiicant differences from
the last time a National Song Contest chose the Irish entry in 2001,
with internet voting and specially commissioned songs from prominent
songwriters supposedly being discussed for 2008.
However the soon to be officially announced news
that next year's Eurovision Song Contest will have two semi-finals,
which undoubtedly benefits Ireland, may mean other options are still
in play for the decision makers in RTÉ. One way or another, expect
the national broadcaster to announce its plans for the 2008 contest,
within the next few weeks.
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While we're still to discover who will represent
Ireland in Serbia, two former Irish Eurovision representatives have
new albums in the shops over the next few weeks. When the new album
by Dervish "Travelling Show", finally hits the
shops on October 26th, it may disappoint many Eurovision fans. It
appears that the Sligo based group wish to put as much space as
possible between themselves and their disappointing Eurovision
performance.
The album which was originally scheduled for
release in May, has undergone changes to the initial track
listing, and not only has the Eurovision entry "They Can't Stop
The Spring" failed to make it to the album, but there is also
no room for any of the other songs which featured in the Irish
selection. Instead Dervish have chosen to return to their Irish
traditional niche, with the band also doing an Irish tradional
musically inspired cover version of Cher's 1971 hit "Gypsies
Tramps & Thieves". You can find more information on
the Dervish album on the band's website.
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An Irish Eurovision entrant from a
different era, is making a well publicised comeback at the moment. Dickie
Rock (left) was Ireland's second Eurovision singer, coming a
creditable 4th in Luxembourg in 1966 with "Come Back To
Stay". Dickie who originally hails from the Northside Dublin
suburb of Carba came to fame in the early 1960s as the lead singer
of the Miami Showband. He scored twenty five Irish hits in the 1960s
and 70s as has been a constant face on the Irish entertainment scene
for almost fify years.
Despite his success, Dickie has not had the
easiest of personal lives, and he tells his own life story in his
newly published autobiography "Always Me". You can read a
recently publish interview with Dickie, which gives an outline of
the book here.
Dickie has released many successful albums and
his new collection of cover versions of well known Irish songs is in
the shops today. Among the tracks which Dickie has recorded for the
album are Van Morrison's "Moondance" (the first
single from the album), U2's "I Still Haven't Found What
I'm Looking For" and perhaps most bizarrly Snow Patrol's
"Chasing Cars". Dickie Rock plays Dublin's Vicar St. on
October 2nd . Tickets are priced at €30.00 and are available
from Ticketmaster and usual outlets nationwide. Booking Line: 0818
719 390. Dickie will also be planning several gigs outside Dublin,
promoting his new album.
3rd
September
Last Saturday September 1st saw the first ever
Eurovision Dance Contest, organised by the BBC, staged in London and
co-hosted by Irish presenter Graham Norton. Sixteen countries
competed and the competition was won by the Finnish duo Jussi Väänänen
& Katja Koukkola, who had been selected as that country's
representatives only a week earlier. The couple scored a clear win,
gaining points from every other country with the Ukrainian duo
finishing as the runners-up.
The Irish representatives Nicola Byrne & Mick Donegan
finished in a surprisingly high third place, given their lack of
experience in ballroom dancing. You can watch the couple's two
performances on the left. Unlike this year's Eurovision Song
Contest, where the neighbourly and diaspora voting gained more
coverage than the actual songs, the Eurovision Dance Contest had far
less obvious partially in the voting, although once again Ireland's
immigrant community played a big part in the televote, with
Lithuania gaining the 12 points and Poland the 10.
Despite disappointing
ratings in some countries (including hosts United Kingdom) the
contest is likely to be repeated again next year and once again the
BBC is likely to host the event. Unlike this year, when entry was by
invitation only and limited to Eurovision's biggest financial
contributors, next year's competition may be open to all members of
the EBU. After this year's good result (Ireland's first Top 3
Eurovision result in a decade) , RTÉ is likely to enter once again.
In other Eurovision related
news, the Irish branch of OGAE (the international Eurovision
fan club) has chosen its entry for the annual "Second
Chance" competition, organised by the fanclub. The competition
is designed to give more exposure to songs which missed out in the
national Eurovision pre-selections and members of OGAE choose their
favourite using Eurovision style voting. The 2007 Irish entry
is "Until We Meet Again" which was
the public's second choice to represent Ireland in Helsinki. The
song which was written by Malachi Cush, Don Mescall, Pam Sheyne
and Martin Sutton was the only uptempo entry in the four song
selection. You can watch the videos of the 21 songs competing
in this year's "Second Chance" contest here.
Meanwhile in a second song contest for non Eurovision related songs,
also organised by OGAE the Irish entry is "So Far Away"
sung by Ronan Keating, a ex-Boyzone singer who co-cost the
Eurovision Song Contest ten years ago, and who many believe may one
day represent Ireland in the competition. Details of that OGAEL Song
Contest 2007, can be found here.
Most Irish fans might want
to forget this year's Eurovision Song Contest, given the fact that
it was the country's worst ever result, but one journalist has
decided to remind us all of the humiliation of May. A tongue in
cheek article in yesterday's Sunday Independent drew a parallel
between the last place achieved by the Irish entry and other recent
failures by the country in various sporting and artistic endeavours.
It did however make some very valid comments onwhy Irish Eurovision
entries may not be doing so well recently and how we may need to
revert to how we did things in the past, if we are to repeat out
former achievements. You can read that article here.
18th
August
Late summer is typically
the quietest time of the year for Eurovision related news, and this
year is no exception. Following Ireland's worst ever Eurovision
result in Helsinki in May, media attention was predictably negative,
with both RTÉ's decision to selection Irish traditional band
Dervish, and neighbourly voting by Eastern European countries
gaining most column inches and airtime. Indeed
in the aftermath of the result, Ireland's future participation in
the Eurovision Song Contest was questioned by many journalists and
fans, but it now appears that the competition's most successful
country will be back in 2008, but the selection process may be
different from the past couple of years.
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Among those most
loudly critical of RTÉ was Louis Walsh (left), former
manager of Eurovision winners Johnny Logan and Linda
Martin who appears to believe that the national bradcaster needs
to invest more money in the Eurovision selection, and believes that
the recent choices have been old fashioned and outdated. How much
coinsideration will be given to Walsh's opinion is unclear, but
early rumours suggest next year may possibly see the return of an
old style multi artist National Song Contest, in a new format with
the possibility of specially commissioned songs by prominent
songwriters. If this is to happen we can
expect an announcement within the next couple of months.
One format that is unlikely
to be used is the "You're A Star", the national talent
search which was used to choose Ireland's Eurovision entrants in
2003,2004 and 2005, with differeing results. The show which is about
to enter its sixth season despite the fact that the three most
recent winners have all failed to turn their victory in the
competition into commercial sucess. This year former Eurovision
winner Linda Martin has been controversially dropped from the panel
and among the replacements is Brian McFadden, former member
of Westlife, and co-writer of Ireland's 2004 entry "If My World
Stopped Turning", sung by Chris Doran in
Istanbul.
Following the 2007 result, Ireland will have to
qualify for the final in Belgrade in 2008, but a potential change in
the format of next year's contest, may give whoever respresents
Ireland in Serbia a slightly better chance of progressing. Following
this year's controversial result, when Eastern European countries
dominated the contest, due in no small part to neighbourly and
emigrant voting, the EBU is considering only allowing the 2007
winners Serbia and Eurovision's "Big 4" (France, Germany,
Spain and the U.K.) to take automatic places in the 2008 final, with
the other twenty places coming from two semi-finals. While the
change to the format is yet to be officially announced, it is likely
that only those countries participating in each semi final will vote
in that show, thereby lessening the impact of the block votes.
Despite the disappointing result in
Helsinki, and a considerable amount of criticism, Dervish have
resumed their successful careers on the folk and traditional music
circuits and have recently played concerts in France and the United
States. The group's new album "The Travelling Show" is
scheduled to go into shops next month, having been put back from its
original May release slot.
The album will include their Eurovision song
"They Can't Stop The Spring" and also "The Thought Of
You", another song from the Irish Eurosong selection. The album
takes its title from a line from the old Cher hit
"Gypsies, Tramps and Thieves", which Dervish have also
recorded for inclusion on the album. You can watch the band
performing the song on the clip on the left.
Another former Irish Eurovision act finding
success abroad is three time winner Johnny Logan. At home in
Ireland Johnny has been a constant sight on television over the past
few months, due to his link up with American fast food chain McDonalds,
however in Scandinavia he is enjoying a resurgence in his recording
career, and has had his first number one album.
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"The Irish
Collection" was recorded earlier this year by Johnny and a
group of predominently Danish musicans. The album predominently
contains traditional Irish songs such as "The Wild Rover",
"Molly Malone" and "Whiskey In The Jar" but
there are also some more contemporary Irish favourites like
"Dirty Old Town", "The Band Played Waltzing
Matilda" and "The Town I Loved So Well", the latter
written by Eurovision winner Phil Coulter. You can find more
details on the album on Johnny's official website.
The album has gone gold in
Denmark and platinum in Norway, where it has also topped the chart
and its success there has meant that it will also be released in
Sweden. At this stage there are no plans to release the album in
Ireland or the U.K., although that may change as Johnny is returning
to Ireland to play two gigs in October. On 21st October Johnny will
play Dublin's Vicar Street and three days later he will play in
Cork's Opera House.
Finally for this news
update, Irish Eurovision fans may be interested in the first Eurovision
Dance Contest which is being hosted by the BBC and will be
staged in London on September 1st. The show is the latest attempt by
the EBU to spread the Eurovision concept beyond the long established
Song Contest. In 2003, the "Junior Eurovision Song
Contest" was established and while that competition continues,
it has made no impact in either Ireland or the U.K., with both RTÉ
and BBC ignoring the show.
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The competition is
the first international contest reflecting the increased intrest in
televised dance shows which has spread throughout Europe and beyond.
Sixteen countries will compete in the first Eurovision Dance
Contest, which will be co-hosted by Irishman Graham Norton and
the European public will decide the winners by televoting after the
couples have danced two routines.
The Irish dancers were
selected on the recent series of "Celebrity Jigs &
Reels". Nicola Byrne & Mick Donegan (left) are both
former members of the "Riverdance" touring shows. You can
read more about them and the first Eurovision Dance Contest on the official
website.
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