Eurovision Song Contest 2004


The Eurovision Song Contest 2004 was the 49th edition of the annual Eurovision Song Contest. It took place in Istanbul, Turkey, following Sertab Erener's win at the contest in Riga, Latvia with the song "Everyway That I Can". It was the first time Turkey had hosted the contest - 29 years after the country made its debut. Organised by the European Broadcasting Union and host broadcaster Turkish Radio and Television Corporation, the contest was held at the Abdi İpekçi Arena, and consisted of a semi-final on 12 May, and the final on 15 May 2004. The two live shows were hosted by Korhan Abay and Meltem Cumbul.
It was the first Eurovision Song Contest held in a transcontinental country and city, in a Muslims-majority country and in Turkic language-speaking country.
Thirty-six countries participated in the contest, beating the record of twenty-six in the previous edition. Albania, Andorra, Belarus and Serbia and Montenegro took part for the first time this year. The old relegation system was replaced with a semi-final format. This was done in order to accommodate the increasing number of countries who wished to participate. The new format allowed all countries to participate every year, rather than being forced to sit out per the relegation rules, which had been the standard since. Because of this, Denmark, Finland, Lithuania, Macedonia, Monaco and Switzerland all returned to the contest.
The winner was Ukraine with the song "Wild Dances", performed by Ruslana who wrote it with Oleksandr Ksenofontov. This was Ukraine's first victory in the contest, after only 1 year of participation. Serbia and Montenegro, Greece, Turkey and Cyprus rounded out the top five.
This year was the first time in which a non-winning entry scored over 200 points. Prior to this contest, only the winning entries in 1994 and 1997 had passed this mark. In this contest, the top 3 songs all got over 200 points.

Location

The contest was held in Istanbul following Turkey's victory in the contest in Riga, Latvia with Sertab Erener's "Everyway That I Can". Originally the Mydonose Showland was chosen by TRT to host the event, but was changed to the Abdi İpekçi Arena as the contest approached due to its bigger capacity. Korhan Abay and Meltem Cumbul were presenters of the show.
In the semi-final and the final, Meltem Cumbul warmed up the audience with a sing-a-long of Eurovision classic "Nel blu dipinto di blu ", originally by Domenico Modugno. Sertab Erener returned to the stage in the final to perform "Everyway That I Can", the 2003 winning song, and one of her new songs called "Leave". Sertab also interviewed contestants in the green room. The Turkish dance ensemble Fire of Anatolia performed as the interval act. An official CD was released and, for the first time, the entire contest was released on DVD which included the Semi-final and the Grand Final.

Format

Firsts

The contest's new official generic logo was used for the first time this year, with the heart-shaped flag in the centre due to be changed for future contests. The slogan for Istanbul's contest was "Under The Same Sky", which communicated the importance of a united Europe and Turkish integration.
This year was also notable as it was the first year that Turkey voted for Cyprus and the second year in a row that Cyprus voted for Turkey. Nevertheless, in a move that angered some Cypriots, when the country presented its votes no map of the island was shown. This was due to Turkey's recognition of the northern half of the island as an independent republic. It is likely Turkey pulled out of showing the map because it would have only highlighted the southern portion of the island, and thus angered the international community.
This was also the first year that the scores were only re-read by the hosts in one language. Before 2004 every point was repeated in French and English, but due to 36 countries voting, and more in years to come, in 2004 to save time the hosts only re-read each score in one language. This was in the opposite of the original country representative spoke in.

Voting structure

Every country in the competition, including those who did not qualify for the final, were allowed to vote for other countries. After all performances were completed, each country opened their phone lines to allow their viewers to vote for their favourite song. Voting for the country in which you are situated is not allowed, however. Each country awarded points based on the number of votes cast for each song: the song which received the most viewer votes was awarded 12 points, the second 10 points, the third 8 points and then 7, 6, 5, etc. down to 1.
In the event of a tie, the number of countries to vote for the tying songs would be counted, and the song having the most countries awarding points to it, would be the winner. In the event of a further tie, then the previously used method of counting back on the number of 12 points, 10 points etc., would be used to find an eventual winner.

Incidents

Just before the Slovenian entry was about to be performed, the Turkish broadcaster accidentally took a commercial break which meant the Slovenian song was not heard by Turkish viewers and consequently, Turkey gave no votes for the song. There were technical problems when in a short hiatus halfway through the songs,, the hosts tried to contact various parties in Europe. They tried contacting Germany, Spain and Turkey, but in the end were only able to get a response from Germany. During the Romanian postcard introduction, the information for the Romanian entry appeared on the screen, but was quickly taken away. A final minor hiccup occurred when, on her way to present the winner the trophy, Sertab Erener got her shoe stuck in a speaker grill by the side of the stage and had to be freed by stagehands. However this did not delay proceedings, and other than the above the show ran smoothly.
An hour after the semi-final had been aired, the European Broadcasting Union discovered that there had been problems with the vote counting in Monaco and Croatia. Digame, an affiliate of Deutsche Telekom, who had been responsible for processing all the votes, reported that they had encountered problems with their calculation software, and there was a problem with text message voting in Croatia. When the votes were counted, results showed that Croatia had awarded themselves 4 points, which is against Eurovision rules. Later, an official EBU statement read that there had been technical problems at the side of the Croatian mobile service provider, who neglected to delete the illegal votes from the results. Consequently, some votes were not counted in the results announced at the end of the broadcast of the semi-final. When the results were corrected to include these additional votes, they were found not to have affected which countries had qualified for the Final.

Participating countries

This year's Eurovision contest was the first to be a two-day event, with one qualifying round held on a Wednesday and the grand final held on the following Saturday. Under this new format, byes into the final were given to the 'Big 4';,, and the and the ten highest placed finishers in the contest.
,, and participated in the Contest for the first time, with returning after a 25-year absence. were due to return after an absence of 11 years, but later pulled out after money issues arose between RTL and the EBU.
All participating countries had the right to vote in both the qualifying round and the grand final. This was the first year in which all 36 participating countries voted based on a public phone vote. However, and did not broadcast the semi-final and therefore did not give votes for it like the other thirty-three countries. In Belgium, the French-language RTBF did not broadcast the semi-final, but the Dutch-language VRT did.

Results

Semi-final

The semi-final was held on 12 May 2004 at 21:00. 22 countries performed and all participants voted except France, Poland and Russia. This was the first ever semi-final in Eurovision history.
Shaded countries qualified for the Eurovision Final
DrawCountryArtistSongLanguagePlacePoints
01Jari Sillanpää"Takes 2 to Tango"English1451
02Aleksandra and Konstantin"My Galileo"English1910
03Piero Esteriore & The MusicStars"Celebrate"English220
04Fomins and Kleins"Dziesma par laimi"Latvian1723
05David D'Or"Leha'amin" Hebrew, English1157
06Marta Roure"Jugarem a estimar-nos"Catalan1812
07Sofia Vitória"Foi magia"Portuguese1538
08Julie and Ludwig"On Again... Off Again"English874
09Maryon"Notre planète"French1910
10Sakis Rouvas"Shake It"English3238
11Ruslana"Wild Dances"English, Ukrainian2256
12Linas and Simona"What's Happened to Your Love?"English1626
13Anjeza Shahini"The Image of You"English4167
14Lisa Andreas"Stronger Every Minute"English5149
15Toše Proeski"Life"English1071
16Platin"Stay Forever"English215
17Neiokõsõ"Tii"Võro1157
18Ivan Mikulić"You Are the Only One"English972
19Tomas Thordarson"Shame on You"English1356
20Željko Joksimović & Ad-Hoc Orchestra"Lane moje" Serbian1263
21Deen"In the Disco"English7133
22Re-Union"Without You"English6146

A new ABBA video was shown in the semi-final, briefly outlining how ABBA started and what the response was of the first record company they approached. It featured small puppets of the band performing snippets of their songs and featured Rik Mayall as the record company manager. This was cut from the Eurovision Song Contest DVD and released separately. References to the video that were made running up to the showing of it were also cut.

Final

The finalists were:
The final was held on 15 May 2004 at 21:00 and was won by Ukraine.
Countries in bold automatically qualified for the Eurovision Song Contest 2005 Final.
DrawCountryArtistSongLanguagePlacePoints
01'Ramón"Para llenarme de ti"Spanish1087
02Tie Break"Du bist"German219
03Knut Anders Sørum"High"English243
04'Jonatan Cerrada"À chaque pas"French, Spanish1540
05'Željko Joksimović & Ad-Hoc Orchestra"Lane moje" Serbian2263
06'Julie and Ludwig"On Again... Off Again"English1250
07Re-Union"Without You"English2011
08'Max"Can't Wait Until Tonight"English, Turkish893
09'Anjeza Shahini"The Image of You"English7106
10Ruslana"Wild Dances"English, Ukrainian1280
11Ivan Mikulić"You Are the Only One"English1250
12'Deen"In the Disco"English991
13Xandee"1 Life"English227
14'Julia Savicheva"Believe Me"English1167
15Toše Proeski"Life"English1447
16'Sakis Rouvas"Shake It"English3252
17Jónsi"Heaven"English1916
18Chris Doran"If My World Stopped Turning"English227
19Blue Café"Love Song"English, Spanish1727
20'James Fox"Hold On to Our Love"English1629
21'Lisa Andreas"Stronger Every Minute"English5170
22'Athena"For Real"English4195
23Sanda"I Admit"English1818
24Lena Philipsson"It Hurts"English5170

Scoreboard

Semi-final

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points in the semi-final:
N.ContestantVoting nation
9'Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Germany, Netherlands, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine
7'Albania, Cyprus, Israel, Malta, Romania, Turkey, United Kingdom
4'Belarus, Estonia, Lithuania, Portugal
2--
2'Denmark, Norway
2'Greece, Monaco
2Finland, Latvia
2'Belgium, Ireland
1--
1'Macedonia
1Spain
1Iceland
1'Serbia and Montenegro
1Andorra

Final

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points in the final:
N.ContestantVoting nation
8Estonia, Israel, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Turkey
7Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Sweden, Switzerland, Slovenia, Ukraine
5Albania, Cyprus, Malta, Romania, United Kingdom
4Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Norway
4Belgium, Germany, France, Netherlands
2Andorra, Portugal
1Macedonia
1Greece
1Monaco
1Spain
1Serbia and Montenegro
1Belarus

Other awards

AP Awards

Marcel Bezençon Awards

The Marcel Bezençon Awards were first handed out during the Eurovision Song Contest 2002 in Tallinn, Estonia honoring
the best competing songs in the final. Founded by Christer Björkman and Richard Herrey, the awards are named after the creator of the annual competition, Marcel Bezençon. The awards are divided into 3 categories: Press Award, Artistic Award, and Composer Award.
CategoryCountrySongPerformerComposerFinalPoints
Artistic Award"Wild Dances"RuslanaOleksandr Ksenofontov
Ruslana Lyzhychko
1280
Composer Award"Stronger Every Minute"Lisa AndreasMike Konnaris 5170
Press Award"Lane moje" Željko JoksimovićŽeljko Joksimović2263

Commentators and spokespersons

Commentators

Participating countries

Non-participating countries

Each country appointed a spokesperson to announce their respective country's points.
  1. – Pati Molné
  2. Zhani Ciko
  3. – Dodo Roščić
  4. Mija Martina
  5. – Martine Prenen
  6. Denis Kurian
  7. Emel Aykanat
  8. – Nataša Miljković
  9. – Loukas Hamatsos
  10. Thomas Anders
  11. Camilla Ottesen
  12. Maarja-Liis Ilus
  13. Anne Igartiburu
  14. – Anna Stenlund
  15. – Alex Taylor
  16. Lorraine Kelly
  17. – Alexis Kostalas
  18. Barbara Kolar
  19. Johnny Logan
  20. Merav Miller
  21. – Sigrún Ósk Kristjánsdóttir
  22. – Rolandas Vilkončius
  23. Lauris Reiniks
  24. – Anne Allegrini
  25. – Claire Agius
  26. – Karolina Petkovska
  27. Esther Hart
  28. Ingvild Helljesen
  29. Maciej Orłoś
  30. – Isabel Angelino
  31. Andreea Marin
  32. Yana Churikova
  33. Jovan Radomir
  34. Peter Poles
  35. Meltem Ersan Yazgan
  36. – Pavlo Shylko

    Official album

Eurovision Song Contest: Istanbul 2004 was the official compilation album of the 2004 Contest, put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by EMI Records and CMC International on 26 April 2004. The album featured all 36 songs that entered in the 2004 contest, including the semi-finalists that failed to qualify into the grand final.

Charts