modern culture since 1991

Wings Over Sealand


Eurovision for heterosexuals

Posted on May 17, 2011 by RevStu

Long-time WoSblog viewers will already be aware that I’ve embraced my gay side when it comes to Eurovision now, thanks to the simple expedient of entering into the spirit and watching it with other people. (If everyone else is even briefly out of the room for some reason I get very twitchy.)

But for those of you still struggling, here are this year’s highlights, with the minimum of campness and the maximum of ROCK!

(NB “Maximum” does not necessarily mean “a lot”.)

Firstly, the intro sequence. Normally this would be last year’s victor singing their winning song, but this year’s German hosts took it in a slightly different direction with this storming, roof-raising big-band version. Can you imagine Graham Norton and Fearne Cotton tearing the place up like this, complete with decent comic timing and some pretty competent guitar-playing and drumming, and doing it all in a foreign language? GO ON, TRY.

I will literally fight anyone who says that’s anything but awesome.

In the contest proper, the Moldovan entry got all the phone votes from the house I watched the show in. Not for being “wacky” (Norton sneered at it tiresomely, as he does at anything that isn’t wet stereotypical pop fluff) but for being a cracking tune, in keeping with Eurovision tradition, and for appearing to actually enjoy themselves. Bonus points for the monocle, obv.

Near-neighbours Georgia, meanwhile, went with a huge, juddering behemoth of emo-goth that (ill-advised Euro-rap section aside) you could entirely plausibly imagine Curve having penned back in the 90s. For some reason they chose to do this while apparently dressed as Xbox 360s.

If there were actual Fraggles in real life, they would undoubtedly be Jedward. The comical discrepancy between the cool, stylish Mad World-esque backdrop and the hyper-excited bouncing Sunny D casualties in front of it was the most striking aspect of the performance, but it’s unarguably a toe-twitching stadium tune with splendidly nonsensical lyrics and all the nuanced subtlety of an 18-wheeler running over a hedgehog.

The eventual winner, from Azerbaijan of all places, was quite bland but polished Euro-pop that does grow on you a bit with repeated listens (while actually watching we were all baffled as the votes stacked up, because we couldn’t remember a thing about it). The girl singer is also pretty foxy, and we really liked the way they made it “rain” with the lights.

And speaking of effects, you can’t help but admire the sheer galactic scale of Eurovision nowadays. No longer held in some anonymous generic concert hall somewhere, it’s been transformed in the last few years into a frankly incredible spectacle. Nobody tapped into that feeling quite like the Greek entrants (featuring Stereo Mike, no less), who came out with a stupendously thunderous neo-Aryan piece of Strength Through Mental that, had it gone on 20 seconds longer, would probably have resulted in the entire stadium upping and spontaneously invading Poland.

And even the UK’s 2011 effort sounded quite pleasingly like a slowed-down track from an early Ridge Racer:

You should watch the Eurovision Song Contest, viewers. Even though most of the songs are rubbish, it’s an extraordinary bit of mega-theatre combined with international political intrigue. Just don’t get caught doing it on your own.

0 to “Eurovision for heterosexuals”

  1. RowanDT says:

    Disappointed at how little love Estonia seemed to get, but their song has no place in a heterosexualist round-up.

  2. Brig Bother says:

    Stefan Raab (playing the guitar in the opener) is basically Germany's Best Person. He has competed in the Eurovision himself (Wudde Hadde Dudde Da?) and co-wrote the hilarious Guildo Loves You. And he invented the sport of wok racing of which there is a live celebrity tournament every year, where people go down a bobsled run on a wok. He's also the megacompetitive antagonist on the original version of Beat the Star (Schlag den Raab) which is a live television event six times a year going on for about five hours, and once culminated with a plucky contestant taking on Raab in one frame of pool on live TV for €3m. All this AND is a chat show host.

  3. Brig Bother says:

    Incidentally, Raab's rockabilly version of Sateliite is now up on iTunes.

  4. Derek says:

    I really liked Estonia's entry. It struggled a little with its chorus. The verse was really lovely though.
    I've liked Georgia a lot previously but this year's entry was just too screechy. I think Lena had the best song but Moldova were the best overall entry for Eurovision.
    Also notable were Sweden and surprisingly Denmark.

  5. MangoFish says:

    Q: What's blue and can't sing?
    A: Blue.

  6. MelonManga says:

    Stuart, your excellentcontent.com and worldofstuart.co.uk domains has been suspended.  Thankfully the blog and forum are still working.

  7. RevStu says:

    Yeah, just noticed this an hour or so ago, but thanks for the heads-up. Looks like a credit card issue, have updated the details so it will hopefully be back in the next few hours.

  8. Derek says:

    I thought the answer to the Blue and can't sing thing was The Blue Man Group.

  9. RevStu says:

    Nah. That’s “What’s blue and WON’T sing?”



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