Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 1999 explained

Year:1999
Broadcaster:Estonian: [[Eesti Televisioon]]|i=no (ETV)
Country:Estonia
Preselection:Eurolaul 1999
Preselection Date:30 January 1999
Entrant:Evelin Samuel and Camille
Song:Diamond of Night
Final Result:6th, 90 points

Estonia was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1999 with the song "Diamond of Night", composed by Priit Pajusaar and Glen Pilvre, with lyrics by Maian Kärmas and Kaari Sillamaa, and performed by Evelin Samuel and Camille. The Estonian participating broadcaster, Estonian: [[Eesti Televisioon]]|i=no (ETV), organised the national final Eurolaul 1999 in order to select its entry for the contest. Ten songs competed in the national final and "Diamond of Night" performed by Evelin Samuel and Camille was selected as the winner by a jury panel.

Estonia competed in the Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 29 May 1999. Performing during the show in position 23, Estonia placed sixth out of the 23 participating countries, scoring 90 points.

Background

See main article: Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest. Prior to the 1999 Contest, Estonian: [[Eesti Televisioon]]|i=no (ETV) had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Estonia five times since its first entry in . Its best result in the contest was fifth, which was achieved with the song "Estonian: [[Kaelakee hääl]]|i=no" performed by Maarja-Liis Ilus and Ivo Linna. In, "Mere lapsed" performed by Koit Toome placed twelfth.[1]

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 its 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, with the broadcaster organising Eurolaul 1999 in order to select the its 1999 entry.

Before Eurovision

Eurolaul 1999

Eurolaul 1999 was the sixth edition of the national selection Eurolaul organised by ETV to select its entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 1999. The competition consisted of a ten-song final on 30 January 1999 at the ETV studios in Tallinn, hosted by Marko Reikop and Romi Erlach and broadcast on ETV.[2]

Competing entries

On 9 September 1998, ETV opened the submission period for artists and composers to submit their entries up until 7 December 1998.[3] 52 submissions were received by the deadline.[4] A 12-member jury panel selected ten finalists from the submissions and the selected songs were announced on 10 December 1998. Evelin Samuel, Hanna Pruuli, Hedvig Hanson, Kate, Lauri Liiv and Pearu Paulus (member of 2 Quick Start) have all competed in previous editions of Eurolaul.[5] The selection jury consisted of Ivo Linna (singer), Priit Hõbemägi (culture critic), Margus Kappel, Koit Toome (singer), Tõnis Kõrvits (composer and musician), Raivo Sersant (music manager), Paul Mägi (conductor), Heli Pikk (Eesti Raadio head of archives), Kaidi Klein (Raadio 2 presenter), Kirke Ert (Kuku Raadio editor), Erki Berends (Kuku Raadio chief editor) and Allan Roosileht (Raadio 2 music editor).[6]

ArtistSongSongwriter(s)
2 Quick Start"Say You Love Me"Jana Hallas, Pearu Paulus, Ilmar Laisaar, Alar Kotkas
Erik Meremaa"Day I Lived a Year"Raivo Hool, Harmo Kallaste
Evelin Samuel and Camille"Diamond of Night"Priit Pajusaar, Glen Pilvre, Maian Kärmas, Kaari Sillamaa
Gerli Padar"Aeg kord täidab soovid"Paul Kikerpuu
Hanna Pruuli and Jakko Maltis"Mu hääl"Hanna Pruuli
Hedvig Hanson"If You Could Only Hear Me"Hedvig Hanson
Joel De Luna, Mati Kõrts, Jassi Zahharov and Mait Trink"Opera on Fire"Rein Rannap
Kate"Vee ja soola saaga"Villu Kangur, Aivar Joonas
Lauri Liiv"Soolo"Sulev Lõhmus
Maiken"Didn't I Know"Jarmo Seljamaa, Kadri Koppel

Final

The final took place on 30 January 1999. Ten songs competed during the show and a jury selected "Diamond of Night" performed by Evelin Samuel and Camille as the winner.[7] A non-competitive public televote which registered 14,676 votes was also held and selected "Opera on Fire" performed by Joel De Luna, Mati Kõrts, Jassi Zahharov and Mait Trink as the winner. The jury panel that voted in the final consisted of Anders Berglund (Swedish composer and conductor), Raimonds Pauls (Latvian maestro), Andrej Karoli (music editor at Radio Slovenia), Bo Halldórsson (Icelandic singer), Manfred Witt (music, show and entertainment producer of the German broadcaster NDR), (Italian television presenter), Noel Kelehan (Irish conductor), Katrina Leskanich (lead singer of the British band Katrina and the Waves), Nana Mouskouri (Greek singer) and Kobi Oshrat (Israeli composer and conductor).[8]

Final – 30 January 1999
DrawArtistSong Jury VotesTotalPlace
1Gerli Padar"Aeg kord täidab soovid" 23231588113410
2Erik Meremaa"Day I Lived a Year" 6588546353537
3Kate"Vee ja soola saaga" 10126441251127732
4Hedvig Hanson"If You Could Only Hear Me" 41072210124412674
5Lauri Liiv"Soolo" 525128131084585
6Hanna Pruuli and Jakko Maltis"Mu hääl"111053242102409
7Maiken"Didn't I Know" 741276871236723
82 Quick Start"Say You Love Me" 8736732625498
9Joel De Luna, Mati Kõrts, Jassi Zahharov and Mait Trink"Opera on Fire" 361112617710546
10Evelin Samuel and Camille"Diamond of Night"12841010710568801

At Eurovision

The Eurovision Song Contest 1999 took place at the International Convention Center in Jerusalem, Israel, on 29 May 1999. According to the Eurovision rules, the 23-country participant list for the contest was composed of: the previous year's winning country and host nation, the seventeen countries which had obtained the highest average points total over the preceding five contests, and any eligible countries which did not compete in the 1998 contest. On 17 November 1998, an allocation draw was held which determined the running order and Estonia was set to perform last in position 23, following the entry from .[9] [10] Estonia finished in sixth place with 90 points.[11]

The contest was broadcast in Estonia on ETV and via radio on Raadio 2, both with commentary by Marko Reikop.[12] [13] ETV appointed Mart Sander as its spokesperson to announce the results of the Estonian televote during the show.

Voting

Below is a breakdown of points awarded to Estonian and awarded by Estonian in the contest. The nation awarded its 12 points to the in the contest.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Estonia Country Profile . 5 November 2015 . EBU.
  2. Web site: ESTONIAN NATIONAL FINAL 1999 . 2024-10-14 . www.geocities.ws.
  3. Web site: Lühiuudised . 2024-10-14 . Eesti Päevaleht . et.
  4. Web site: Eurolaul 2002 lauluvõistlusele saabus 90 tööd . 2024-10-14 . Eesti Päevaleht . et.
  5. Web site: Eurolaulu 99 eelvooru zhürii koosseis: . 2024-10-14 . www.ohtuleht.ee . et.
  6. Web site: Arhiiv ERR . 2024-10-14 . Arhiiv ERR . et.
  7. Web site: 2011-08-24 . Eurolaul 1999 . 2024-10-14 . escYOUnited . en-US.
  8. Web site: Tinno . Egon . Eurolaul 1999 . 2024-10-14 . Eurovisioon.ee.
  9. Web site: Rules of the 44th Eurovision Song Contest, 1999 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210225102116/http://www.eurosong.net/archive/esc1999.pdf . 25 February 2021 . 13 March 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.
  10. Web site: 44th Eurovision Song Contest . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20010307121806/http://www.ebu.ch:80/tv-cec_participants_99.html . 7 March 2001 . 21 May 2023 . European Broadcasting Union . fr, en.
  11. Web site: Final of Jerusalem 1999 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210412110459/https://eurovision.tv/event/jerusalem-1999/final . 12 April 2021 . 12 April 2021 . European Broadcasting Union.
  12. News: 29 May 1999 . TV – Laupäev 29. mai . TV – Saturday 29 May . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220702124425/https://dea.digar.ee/?a=d&d=sonumilehtsl19990529 . 2 July 2022 . 2 July 2022 . . 29–30 . et . DIGAR Eesti artiklid.
  13. News: Hõbemägi . Priit . 30 May 1999 . Reikop rõdu viimases reas . Reikop in the last row of the balcony . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220702130711/https://www.ohtuleht.ee/78141/reikop-rodu-viimases-reas . 2 July 2022 . 2 July 2022 . . et.
  14. Web site: Results of the Final of Jerusalem 1999 . European Broadcasting Union . 12 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210412114547/https://eurovision.tv/event/jerusalem-1999/final/results/estonia . 12 April 2021 . live.