Slovenia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 explained

Year:2001
Broadcaster:Slovenian: [[Radiotelevizija Slovenija]]|i=no (RTVSLO)
Country:Slovenia
Preselection:Slovenian: Evrovizijska Melodija 2001
Preselection Date:Semi-final:
23 February 2001
Final:
24 February 2001
Entrant:Nuša Derenda
Song:Energy
Final Result:7th, 70 points
Next:2002

Slovenia was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 with the song "Energy", composed by Matjaž Vlašič, with lyrics by Lucienne Lončina, and performed by Nuša Derenda. The Slovene participating broadcaster, Slovenian: [[Radiotelevizija Slovenija]]|i=no (RTVSLO), held the national final Slovenian: Evrovizijska Melodija 2001 in order to select its entry for the contest. The broadcaster returned to the contest after a one-year absence following its relegation in as one of the six entrants with the lowest average scores over the previous five contests.

22 entries competed in the national final which consisted of two shows: a semi-final and a final. Entries were selected to advance from the semi-final based on a public televote and a jury panel. Ten entries qualified to compete in the final where "Slovenian: Ne, ni res|i=no" performed by Nuša Derenda was selected as the winner following the combination of votes from two thematical juries and a public televote. The song was later translated from Slovene to English for Eurovision and was titled "Energy".

Slovenia competed in the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 12 May 2001. Performing during the show in position 17, Slovenia placed seventh out of the 23 participating countries, scoring 70 points.

Background

See main article: Slovenia in the Eurovision Song Contest. Prior to the 2001 contest, Slovenian: [[Radiotelevizija Slovenija]]|i=no (RTVSLO) had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Slovenia six times since its first entry in .[1] Its highest placing in the contest, to this point, has been seventh place, achieved in with the song "Slovenian: Prisluhni mi|i=no" performed by Darja Švajger. Its only other top ten result was achieved when "Slovenian: Zbudi|i=no" performed by Tanja Ribič placed tenth. In, "For a Thousand Years" performed by Švajger placed eleventh.

As part of its duties as participating broadcaster, RTVSLO organises the selection of its entry in the Eurovision Song Contest and broadcasts the event in the country. The broadcaster has traditionally selected its entry through a national final entitled Slovenian: Evrovizijska Melodija (EMA), which has been produced with variable formats. For 2001, RTVSLO opted to organise Slovenian: Evrovizijska Melodija 2001 (EMA 2001) to select its entry.[2]

Before Eurovision

Slovenian: Evrovizijska Melodija 2001

Slovenian: Evrovizijska Melodija 2001 (EMA 2001) was the sixth edition of the national final format Slovenian: Evrovizijska Melodija (EMA). The competition was used by RTVSLO to select its entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2001, and consisted of two shows on 23 and 24 February 2001. Both shows of the competition took place at the RTVSLO Studio 1 in Ljubljana and were broadcast on TV SLO1.[3]

Format

The format of the competition consisted of two televised shows: a semi-final held on 23 February 2001 and a final held on 24 February 2001. Twenty-two songs competed in the semi-final where a public televote first selected the top six entries to proceed to the final. An expert jury then selected an additional six finalists out of the thirteen remaining songs. Ten songs competed in the final where the winner was selected following the combination of points from two thematical juries and a public televote. The jury groups and the televote each assigned points as follows: 1–8, 10 and 12, with the song that received the highest overall score when the votes were combined being determined the winner.

Competing entries

An expert committee consisting of Mojca Menart (music editor for Radio Slovenija), Mojmir Sepe (conductor and composer), Jaka Pucihar (composer) and Aleš Strajnar (musician and composer) selected twenty-two artists and songs for the competition from 98 received submissions.[4] [5] The competing artists were announced on 18 December 2000. Among the competing artists was former Eurovision contestants 1X Orchestra which represented as 1X Band, and Regina who represented .[6]

ArtistSongSongwriter(s)
1X Orchestra"Ta ni zame"Tomaž Kosec, Cole Moretti
Alenka Godec"Če verjameš ali ne"Anja Rupel, Alenka Godec, Aleš Klinar
Andraž Hribar"Življenje je"Dušan Bižal, Andraž Hribar
By the Way"Svet okoli mene"Aleksandra Konstantin, Simon Baraga
Damjana Golavšek"Stoletje sanj in miru"Svezdana Majhen, Karel Novak
Deja Mušič and Katice"Angel luči"Nenad Kokovič
GIS"Sreča je"Jamez Hostnik
Ivo Špacapan"Za devetimi gorami"Ivo Špacapan
Jan Plestenjak"Vse je OK"Jan Plestenjak
Karmen Stavec"Ostani tu"Martin Štibernik, Karmen Stavec
Kingston"Lunapark"Dare Kaurič, Zvone Tomac
Lutke"Pokliči me"Dadi Dacič
Nude"Ni čist greh"Boštjan Dermol, Gaber Marolt
Number One"Tell Me Why"Franko Reja, Branko Kumar, Roland Makovec
Nuša Derenda"Ne, ni res"Urša Vlašić, Matjaž Vlašić
Panda"Tok, tok"Andrej Pompe
PAX"Ko so lipe cvetele"Vlado Poredoš
Polona"Samo laži"Drago Mislej Mef, Danolo Kocjančič
Regina"Zaljubljena v maj"Marko Slokar, Aleksander Kogoj
Simona Weiss"Vse življenje"Simona Weiss, Goran Šarac, Andrej Baša
So Real"Nedeljsko jutro"Peter Azaman, Mario Barišič
Tinkara Kovač"Sonce v očeh"Zvezdan Martič, Tinkara Kovač, Sergej Pobegajlo

Semi-final

The semi-final of EMA 2001 took place on 23 February 2001 and was hosted by Mojca Mavec. The twenty-two competing entries first faced a public televote where the top six proceeded to the final; an additional six qualifiers were then selected out of the remaining sixteen entries by an expert jury.[7]

Semi-final – 23 February 2001
DrawArtistSongTelevotePlaceResult
1Panda"Tok, tok"1,05115Eliminated
2PAX"Ko so lipe cvetele"3,8494Advanced
3Tinkara Kovač"Sonce v očeh"3,5805Advanced
4Nuša Derenda"Ne, ni res"6,4161Advanced
5Jan Plestenjak"Vse je OK"2,02610Eliminated
6Simona Weiss"Vse življenje"2,8197Eliminated
7GIS"Sreča je"1,00017Eliminated
8Damjana Golavšek"Stoletje sanj in miru"1,89711Eliminated
9By the Way"Svet okoli mene"1,02216Advanced
10Deja Mušič and Katice"Angel luči"1,53413Eliminated
11Polona"Samo laži"99918Advanced
12Lutke"Pokliči me"44621Eliminated
13Ivo Špacapan"Za devetimi gorami"61520Advanced
14Regina"Zaljubljena v maj"1,65412Advanced
15Nude"Ni čist greh"2,2889Advanced
16Kingston"Lunapark"4,4413Advanced
17So Real"Nedeljsko jutro"44422Eliminated
18Number One"Tell Me Why"1,16114Eliminated
19Alenka Godec"Če verjameš ali ne"2,4658Advanced
20Andraž Hribar"Življenje je"2,8576Advanced
211X Orchestra"Ta ni zame"76619Eliminated
22Karmen Stavec"Ostani tu"5,0962Advanced

Final

The final of EMA 2001 took place on 24 February 2001 and was hosted by Mojca Mavec, Miša Molk and Marcel Štefančič. In addition to the performances of the competing entries, Jette Ostan Vejrup, Trine Jepsen and Michael Teschl (who represented) and Stefan Raab (who represented) performed as guests.[8] The combination of points from two thematical juries (2/3) and a public televote (1/3) selected "Slovenian: Ne, ni res|i=no" performed Nuša Derenda as the winner.[9] [10] The juries consisted of experts and representatives of the entertainment programme of RTVSLO.[11]

Final – 24 February 2001
DrawArtistSongJuryTelevoteTotalPlace
ExpertRTVSLOVotesPoints
1PAX"Ko so lipe cvetele"115,788797
2Tinkara Kovač"Sonce v očeh"674,6175185
3Nuša Derenda"Ne, ni res"12128,76910341
4By the Way"Svet okoli mene"221,5121512
5Polona"Samo laži"761,0730136
6Ivo Špacapan"Za devetimi gorami"45787097
7Regina"Zaljubljena v maj"041,7862610
8Nude"Ni čist greh"302,3993610
9Kingston"Lunapark"005,955889
10Alenka Godec"Če verjameš ali ne"883,3024203
11Andraž Hribar"Življenje je"10104,8566262
12Karmen Stavec"Ostani tu"5310,08812203
[12] ! Jury! Members
Experts
RTVSLO
  • Mira Bučar
  • Dajana Makovec
  • Anton Natek
  • Andrej Hofer

At Eurovision

The Eurovision Song Contest 2001 took place at Parken Stadium in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 12 May 2001.[13] The relegation rules introduced for the were again utilised ahead of the 2001 contest, based on each country's average points total in previous contests. The 23 participants were made up of the host country, the "Big Four" (France, Germany, Spain, and the United Kingdom), and the 12 countries with the highest average scores between the and contests competed in the final.[14] On 21 November 2000, an allocation draw was held which determined the running order and Slovenia was set to perform in position 17, following the entry from the and before the entry from .[15] At the contest, Nuša Derenda performed the English version of "Slovenian: Ne, ni res|i=no", titled "Energy". Slovenia finished in seventh place with 70 points.[16]

The show was televised in Slovenia on TV SLO1.[17] RTVSLO appointed Mojca Mavec as its spokesperson to announce the Slovenian votes during the show.

Voting

Below is a breakdown of points awarded to Slovenia and awarded by Slovenia in the contest. The nation awarded its 12 points to in the contest.[18]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Slovenia Country Profile. EBU. 20 November 2014.
  2. Web site: 2002. - Ljubljana . 2023-06-03 . eurosong.hr . hr.
  3. Web site: Slovenia: EMA 2001 . 2023-06-03 . Eurovisionworld . en-gb.
  4. Web site: Na Evrosong gre Nuša Derenda . 2023-06-03 . 24ur.com . sl.
  5. Web site: Maatko . Alesh . 2017-11-21 . Poglejmo, kdo vse je izbiral skladbe za Emo in tako krojil našo usodo . 2023-06-03 . Evrovizija.com . sl-SI.
  6. Web site: 2000-12-18 . Lista de finalistas . 2023-06-03 . Eurovision Spain . https://web.archive.org/web/20010302084435/http://eurofestival.net/01/noticias/eslovenia/1812.htm . 2 March 2001 . es.
  7. Web site: SLOVENE SEMI-FINAL 2001 . 2023-06-03 . natfinals.50webs.com.
  8. Web site: 2001. - Ljubljana . 2023-06-03 . eurosong.hr . hr.
  9. Web site: EMA 2001 selects Slovenian song for Copenhagen . 2023-06-03 . ESCOL. https://web.archive.org/web/20010302182502/http://www.eurosong.org.uk/news/stories/sloveniawin.htm . 2 March 2001 .
  10. Web site: Sanabria-Rangel . Álvaro . 2020-07-23 . Eurovision 2001: Slovenia's Nuša Derenda in focus . 2023-06-03 . EuroVisionary . en-GB.
  11. Web site: SLOVENE NATIONAL FINAL 2001 . 2023-06-03 . natfinals.50webs.com.
  12. Web site: Maatko . Alesh . 2015-02-27 . To so komisije, ki so krojile usodo na EMI zadnjih petnajst let . 2023-06-03 . Evrovizija.com . sl-SI.
  13. Web site: Copenhagen 2001–Eurovision Song Contest . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210102233622/https://eurovision.tv/event/copenhagen-2001 . 2 January 2021 . 14 March 2021 . European Broadcasting Union (EBU).
  14. Web site: Rules of the 2001 Eurovision Song Contest . 10 April 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.
  15. Web site: Rules of the Eurovision Song Contest 2001 . 19 March 2022 . Myledbury.co.uk .
  16. Web site: Final of Copenhagen 2001 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210410142841/https://eurovision.tv/event/copenhagen-2001/final . 10 April 2021 . 10 April 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.
  17. News: 11 May 2001 . Panorama – sobota, 12. maja 2001 . sl . 27 . Gorenjski glas . live . 29 November 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221202212758/https://arhiv.gorenjskiglas.si/digitar/16298754_2001_36_L.pdf . 2 December 2022.
  18. https://www.esc-history.com/details.php?key=0861 Eurovision Song Contest : Slovenia 2001 Nuša Derenda Energy
  19. Web site: Results of the Final of Copenhagen 2001 . European Broadcasting Union . 10 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210410075553/https://eurovision.tv/event/copenhagen-2001/final/results/slovenia . 10 April 2021 . live.