Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2003 explained

Year:2003
Broadcaster:Estonian: [[Eesti Televisioon]]|i=no (ETV)
Country:Estonia
Preselection:Eurolaul 2003
Preselection Date:8 February 2003
Entrant:Ruffus
Song:Eighties Coming Back
Final Result:21st, 14 points

Estonia was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 2003 with the song "Eighties Coming Back", written by Vaiko Eplik, and performed by the band Ruffus. The Estonian participating broadcaster, Estonian: [[Eesti Televisioon]]|i=no (ETV), organised the national final Eurolaul 2003 in order to select its entry for the contest. Ten songs competed in the national final and "Eighties Coming Back" performed by Claire's Birthday was selected as the winner by an international jury panel. The band was later renamed as Ruffus for Eurovision.

Estonia competed in the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 24 May 2003. Performing during the show in position 17, Estonia placed twenty-first out of the 26 participating countries, scoring 14 points.

Background

See main article: Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest. Prior to the 2003 contest, Estonian: [[Eesti Televisioon]]|i=no (ETV) had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Estonia eight times since its first entry in,[1] winning the contest on one occasion: in 2001 with the song "Everybody" performed by Tanel Padar, Dave Benton and 2XL.

As part of its duties as participating broadcaster, ETV organises the selection of its entry in the Eurovision Song Contest and broadcasts the event in the country. Since their debut, the broadcaster has organised national finals that feature a competition among multiple artists and songs in order to select its entry for the contest. ETV has organised the Eurolaul competition since 1996 in order to select its entry and on 8 November 2002, it announced the organisation of Eurolaul 2003 in order to select its 2003 entry.[2]

Before Eurovision

Eurolaul 2003

Eurolaul 2003 was the tenth edition of the national selection Eurolaul, organised by ETV to select its entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2003. The competition consisted of a ten-song final on 8 February 2003 at the ETV studios in Tallinn, hosted by Marko Reikop and Romi Erlach and broadcast on ETV. The national final was watched by 343,500 viewers in Estonia with a market share of 57.4%.[3]

Competing entries

On 8 November 2002, ETV opened the submission period for artists and composers to submit their entries up until 9 December 2002.[4] A record 100 submissions were received by the deadline—breaking the previous record of 90, set during the 2002 edition.[5] A 10-member jury panel selected 10 finalists from the submissions and the selected songs were announced on 13 December 2002. Among the competing artists was previous Eurovision Song Contest entrant Koit Toome, who represented Estonia in 1998. Kaire Vilgats (member of Family), Kadi Toom, Maarja Kivi (member of Vanilla Ninja), Maiken and Nightlight Duo have all competed in previous editions of Eurolaul. The selection jury consisted of Jaak Joala (musician), Meelis Kapstas (journalist), Ivo Linna (singer), Jaan Karp (musician), Priit Hõbemägi (culture critic), Tõnu Kõrvits (composer), Eda-Ines Etti (singer), Ignar Fjuk (member of the National Broadcasting Council), Karmel Eikner (journalist) and Tiit Kikas (musician).[6]

ArtistSongSongwriter(s)
Claire's Birthday"Eighties Coming Back"Vaiko Eplik
Family"Don't Ever Change"Susan Lilleväli, Johannes Lõhmus, Kaire Vilgats
Kadi Toom"Have a Little Faith"Maian Kärmas, Priit Pajusaar, Glen Pilvre
"We Are Not Done"
Koit Toome"Know What I Feel"Koit Toome, Kersti Kuusk, Imre Sooäär
Maiken"No Matter What It Takes"Peter Ross, Elmar Liitmaa
Nightlight Duo"I Can B the 1"Sven Lõhmus
Slobodan River"What a Day"Maria Rahula, Tomi Rahula
Vanilla Ninja"Club Kung-Fu"Piret Järvis, Sven Lõhmus
Viies Element"Have It Your Way"Asko-Rome Altsoo, Raul Veeber, Aimar Toomla

Final

The final took place on 8 February 2003. Ten songs competed during the show and a jury selected "Eighties Coming Back" performed by Claire's Birthday as the winner. A non-competitive public vote conducted via televoting and online voting which registered 77,729 votes was also held and selected "Club Kung-Fu" performed by Vanilla Ninja as the winner.[7] The jury panel that voted in the final consisted of Anders Berglund (Swedish conductor), Sergio (Belgian singer), Darja Švajger (Slovenian singer), Manfred Witt (German television producer), Moshe Datz (Israeli singer), Renārs Kaupers (Latvian musician), Michael Ball (British singer) and Bo Halldórsson (Icelandic singer).[8]

Final – 8 February 2003
DrawArtistSongJury VotesTotalPlace
1Kadi Toom"We Are Not Done"1263861085583
2Family"Don't Ever Change"68751321338
3Nightlight Duo"I Can B the 1"10105123147524
4Kadi Toom"Have a Little Faith"536107656485
5Koit Toome"Know What I Feel"821231251210642
6Slobodan River"What a Day"241228104337
7Maiken"No Matter What It Takes"712844732476
8Vanilla Ninja"Club Kung-Fu"17215268329
9Claire's Birthday"Eighties Coming Back"45107812712651
10Viies Element"Have It Your Way"314610413329

At Eurovision

According to Eurovision rules, all nations with the exceptions of the bottom five countries in the competed in the final on 24 May 2003.[9] On 29 November 2002, an allocation draw was held which determined the running order and Estonia was set to perform in position 23, following the entry from and before the entry from .[10] The band performed at the contest under the new name Ruffus and Estonia finished in twenty-first place with 14 points.[11] [12]

The show was broadcast in Estonia on ETV with commentary by Marko Reikop as well as via radio on Raadio 2 with commentary by Vello Rand. ETV appointed Ines (who represented) as its spokesperson to announce the Estonian votes during the show.

Voting

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Estonia Country Profile. 5 November 2015. EBU.
  2. Web site: Siim. Jarmo. 1 October 2003. Estonian National Final on February 7, 2004. 30 August 2021. Esctoday.
  3. Web site: Siim. Jarmo. 12 February 2003. Estonian Eurolaul 2003: 343,500 viewers. 30 August 2021. Esctoday.
  4. Web site: Bakker. Sietse. 8 November 2002. ETV: Eurolaul 2003 to be held at February 8. 30 August 2021. Esctoday.
  5. Web site: Keian. Allan. 9 December 2002. ETVsse laekus rekordarv eurolaule. 30 August 2021. postimees.ee. Estonian.
  6. Web site: Siim. Jarmo. 13 December 2002. Eurolaul 2003: Ten finalists made public. 30 August 2021. Esctoday.
  7. Web site: 2003-02-20 . Eurolaul 2003 publikulemmik . 2023-08-25 . eurolaul.ee . https://web.archive.org/web/20030220040015/http://www.eurolaul.ee/?main=kuum&n=8 . 20 February 2003 . et.
  8. Web site: 2003-02-20 . Eurolaul 2003 žürii . 2023-08-25 . eurolaul.ee . https://web.archive.org/web/20030220035258/http://www.eurolaul.ee/?main=kuum&n=7 . 20 February 2003 . et.
  9. Web site: 20 November 2002. RULES OF THE 2003 EUROVISION SONG CONTEST. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20030414040437/http://www.ebu.ch/news/pdf/ESC2003Rules.pdf. 14 April 2003. 16 November 2013. European Broadcasting Union. European Broadcasting Union.
  10. Web site: Bakker. Sietse. 28 November 2002. Draw to be made public Friday 17:00 CET. 16 November 2013. ESCToday.com.
  11. Web site: Aldrovandi. Matteo. 17 February 2003. A new name for Claire's Birthday. 30 August 2021. Esctoday.
  12. Web site: Final of Riga 2003. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20210407194917/https://eurovision.tv/event/riga-2003/final. 7 April 2021. 7 April 2021. European Broadcasting Union.
  13. Web site: Results of the Final of Riga 2003 . European Broadcasting Union . 7 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210407201143/https://eurovision.tv/event/riga-2003/final/results/estonia . 7 April 2021 . live.