Eurovision Young Musicians | |
Year: | 2018 |
Semi1: | 18 August 2018 |
Semi2: | 19 August 2018 |
Final: | 23 August 2018 |
Presenters: | Petroc Trelawny Josie d'Arby (final only) |
Director: | Rhodri Huw |
Musdirector: | Thomas Dausgaard |
Exproducer: | Paul Bullock |
Exsupervisor: | Jon Ola Sand |
Host: | BBC Scotland (BBC) |
Venue: | Usher Hall, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom |
Winmusician: | Ivan Bessonov |
Vote: | Each juror awarded a mark from 1–10 to each performer based on specific criteria |
Entries: | 18 |
Finalists: | 6 |
Return: | |
Map 1Semi: | Y |
Next Year: | 2022 |
The Eurovision Young Musicians 2018 was the 19th edition of the Eurovision Young Musicians contest. It was hosted by the United Kingdom, for the first time since the inaugural contest in . This edition was a co-production between the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), the Edinburgh International Festival and the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) as host broadcaster. Musicians representing eighteen countries with EBU membership participated in the contest, with making their debut alongside seven returning countries, while decided not to participate for the first time.
The final concert took place at the Usher Hall in Edinburgh on 23 August 2018, with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under their principal conductor Thomas Dausgaard. It was produced by BBC Cymru Wales for broadcast by BBC Scotland and BBC Radio 3, with Petroc Trelawny and Josie d'Arby being the presenters for the show. Ivan Bessonov of Russia won the contest, marking the country's first win in the competition and the first pianist to win since Poland's Stanisław Drzewiecki in .
Usher Hall, the venue for the final, is a concert hall situated on Lothian Road, in the west end of Edinburgh, Scotland. It has hosted concerts and events since its construction in 1914 and can hold approximately 2,900[1] people in its recently restored auditorium, which is well loved by performers due to its acoustics. The Hall is flanked by The Royal Lyceum Theatre on the right and The Traverse Theatre on the left. Historic Scotland has registered the Hall with Category A listed building status.
The hall previously hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 1972 after, which won the year before, was unable to provide a suitable venue.[2] The last time the United Kingdom hosted a Eurovision network contest was the Eurovision Dance Contest 2008 in Glasgow.[3]
According to an earlier statement by Vladislav Yakovlev, the former executive supervisor of the event, Budapest could host the 2018 contest after bidding for the 2016 edition.[4] On 27 October 2016, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) launched a call to submit applications for the competition.[5]
In early October 2017, Norwegian broadcaster Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK) confirmed in an online article regarding its national selection Virtuos, that the United Kingdom would host this edition of the contest in August 2018.[6] On 30 October 2017, the EBU announced that this edition of the contest would be held in Edinburgh between 16 and 24 of August 2018.[7]
The semi-final round returned in 2018, produced by BBC Radio 3 in the form of public chamber recitals, at the Studio of the Edinburgh Festival Theatre on 18 and 19 August 2018.[8]
On 6 August 2018, it was announced that Petroc Trelawny and Josie D'Arby would host the 2018 competition.[9] Trelawny’s career started at BBC Radio Devon in 1989 as a reporter, before he made his transition to a career in classical music radio and television during the 1990s. Since 1998 he has been a presenter at BBC Radio 3, and is the face of classical magazine programme Music Matters, Radio 3’s Breakfast and concerts in Radio 3 Live in Concert. D’Arby started on Children's BBC (CBBC) in the 1990s before becoming the youngest woman to have her own chat show, Josie, in 1999 on Channel 5. She has co-presented a number of cultural programs for the BBC including; Young Musician of the Year since 2012, Cardiff Singer of the World since 2009, Songs of Praise since 2014 and Young Choir of the Year (2018). Her acting credits include playing series regular WPC Jodie Finn, in BBC One drama Merseybeat from 2002–04. On 11 August 2018, it was revealed that the semi-finals would be hosted by Trelawny, with D'Arby joining him in the final.[10]
The winner of the competition was decided by an international panel of classical music luminaries. On 10 August 2018, the EBU announced the jurors of the competition. The judges for the semi-finals are British bassoonist Ursula Leveaux, Spanish percussionist Noè Roderigo Gisbert, Korean pianist Sinae Lee, and the chair cellist and conductor David Watkin.[11] Joining Watkin's at the final were American conductor and violinist Marin Alsop, composer and performer Anna Meredith, Scottish classical composer and conductor James MacMillan and Head of Music for the Edinburgh International Festival, Andrew Moore.[12]
Altogether there are two set of juries: one for the two days of semi-finals and one for the final. In both juries, each juror was to independently rate each performer a score from 1–10 points. The following criteria were taken into account by the jurors in the semi-finals and finals:
After each juror has awarded his points, these were added together and the result presented to the jury first. However following discussion, the jury may make changes to the numerical rankings by mutual agreement. The six finalists were announced in a random order after the semi-finals on a separate live stream.[13] [11] In addition, it was announced that the jury in the final would not know the results of the semi-final jury to avoid interference. In the final, only the winner was announced during the televised broadcast.[14]
The final list of participants were announced on 2 February 2018, with eighteen countries confirming their participation, the highest number since .[8] made their debut whilst seven countries,,,,,, and, all returned to the Eurovision Young Musicians in 2018.[15] Belgium last participated in 2006, Estonia in, Greece in, Israel in and Spain in . Russia and host country, the United Kingdom, most recently took part in .
The semi-finals consisted of six hour-long shows spread over two days. A total of eighteen countries took part, of which six qualified to the grand final. In each semi-final, three musicians performed, either solo or with piano accompaniment, for a total of 18 minutes each.
Draw[16] | Country | Performer | Instrument | Piece(s) | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Semi-final 1 | |||||
01 | Bernice Sammut Attard | Piano | 1) Toccata from Trois pièces by Francis Poulenc 2) Prelude in C minor, Op. 23 No. 7 by Sergei Rachmaninoff 3) Prelude in G sharp minor, Op. 32 No. 12 by S. Rachmaninoff 4) Scherzo No. 2 in B flat minor, Op. 31 by Frédéric Chopin | Failed to qualify | |
02 | Maxim Calver | Cello | 1) Sacher Variation by Witold Lutosławski 2) Adagio Affettuoso from Cello Sonata in F, Op. 99 by Johannes Brahms 3) No. 5 Minuetto e Finale from Suite Italienne by Igor Stravinsky | Failed to qualify | |
03 | Sara Valencia | Violin | 1) Caprice Basque Op. 24 by Pablo de Sarasate 2) Caprice No. 13 in B flat major by Niccolò Paganini 3) 3rd mvt (Finale) of Violin Concerto No. 1 in G minor Op. 24 by Max Bruch | Failed to qualify | |
Semi-final 2 | |||||
04 | Nikola Pajanović | Violin | 1) Tambourin Chinois by Fritz Kreisler 2) Capriccio No. 7 by N. Paganini 3) Sonata for violin solo No. 3 in D minor by Eugène Ysaÿe | Qualified | |
05 | Francesco Stefanelli | Cello | 1) Violoncello Totale for cello solo by Krzysztof Penderecki 2) I mov, Cello Sonata in F major, Op. 99 by J. Brahms 3) Papillon, Op. 77 by Gabriel Fauré 4) V mov, Sonata for cello and piano in C, Op. 65 by Benjamin Britten | Failed to qualify | |
06 | Marta Chlebicka | Flute | 1) Hamburger Sonate in G major by Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach 2) Rigoletto Fantasie, Op. 335 by Wilhelm Popp | Failed to qualify | |
Semi-final 3 | |||||
07 | Máté Bencze | Saxophone | 1) Fantaisie sur un thème original by Jules Demersseman 2) Allegro from Sonata in G minor BWV. 1020 by Johann Sebastian Bach 3) Pequeña Czarda by Pedro Iturralde | Qualified | |
08 | Thanos Tzanetakis | Guitar | 1) Fantasia in D minor by David Kellner 2) 3rd Bagatelle from Five Bagatelles for guitar by William Walton 3) 5th Bagatelle from Five Bagatelles for guitar by W. Walton 4) Variaciones sobre un tema de Fernando Sor, Op. 19 by Miguel Llobet | Failed to qualify | |
09 | Tamir Naaman-Pery | Cello | 1) Hungarian Rhapsody, Op. 68 by David Popper 2) Preludio-Fantasia from Suite for Cello by Gaspar Cassadó | Failed to qualify | |
Draw[17] | Country | Performer | Instrument | Piece(s) | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Semi-final 4 | |||||
10 | Tanel-Eiko Novikov | Percussion | 1) Niflheim by Marján Csaba Zoltán 2) Kuusi Op 75/5 by Jean Sibelius 3) Verano porteño by Astor Piazzolla | Failed to qualify | |
11 | Alexandra Cooreman | Violin | 1) Presto from Sonata for piano and violin Op 23 by Ludwig van Beethoven 2) Valse-Scherzo by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky | Failed to qualify | |
12 | Klaudio Zoto | Cello | 1) Cello Sonata by Edvard Grieg 2) Hungarian Rhapsody by Popper | Failed to qualify | |
Semi-final 5 | |||||
13 | Ivan Bessonov | Piano | 1) Mazurka in B flat minor, Op 24 No 4 by Chopin 2) Fantaisie-Impromptu in C sharp minor, Op 66 by Chopin 3) Prelude in G minor, Op 23 No 5 by Rachmaninov 4) Barncleupédie by James MacMillan | Qualified | |
14 | Mira Foron | Violin | 1) Cadenza for solo viola by Penderecki 2) Tzigane by Maurice Ravel | Qualified | |
15 | Indi Stivín | Double bass | 1) Bohemian Suite, 1st Movement: "Celts" by I. Stivin 2) Bohemian Suite, 2nd mvt: "Czech Country" by I. Stivin 3) Bohemian Suite, 3rd mvt: Tarantella Praga by I. Stivin[18] | Qualified | |
Semi-final 6 | |||||
16 | Johanna Ander Ljung | Harp | 1) Improvisations for Harp, Op 10 by William Mathias 2) Allemande from Suite No 5 in F by John Loeillet 3) Féerie - Prelude et Dance by Marcel Tournier | Failed to qualify | |
17 | Birgitta Elisa Oftestad | Cello | 1) 1st mvt from Cello Concerto No 1 by Dmitri Shostakovich 2) Adagio and Allegro by Robert Schumann | Qualified | |
18 | Jan Tominić | Saxophone | 1) Fantaisie sur un thème original by Demersseman 2) Cinq danses exotiques by Jean Françaix 3) Aria by Eugène Bozza 4) Brasileira from Scaramouche by Darius Milhaud | Failed to qualify | |
Six contestants were selected by the first jury to progress to the Final and the second decided the winner of Eurovision Young Musicians 2018.[19] Each finalist performed one or more movements of a single musical work, accompanied by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, for up to 12 minutes.[20] During the live shows interval, the orchestra performed "Hedwig's Theme" from the Harry Potter score although this was not included in the televised broadcast.[21] The winner received a custom-made engraved trophy, a cash prize of €7,000, and a performance opportunity with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra in a forthcoming season. The runner-up received a cash prize of €3,000.[22]
01 | Birgitta Elisa Oftestad | Cello | 4th mvt from Cello Concerto by Edward Elgar | - | ||
02 | Nikola Pajanović | Violin | 3rd mvt from Violin Concerto by P.I. Tchaikovsky | 2 | ||
03 | Indi Stivín | Double bass | 2nd and 3rd mvt from Bohemian Suite for Double Bass by I. Stivín | - | ||
04 | Mira Foron | Violin | 3rd mvt from Violin Concerto by J. Sibelius | - | ||
05 | Máté Bencze | Saxophone | Concerto da Camera for Saxophone by Jacques Ibert | - | ||
06 | Ivan Bessonov | Piano | 3rd mvt from Piano Concerto No. 1 by P.I. Tchaikovsky | 1 |
The following countries, listed in order of broadcasting dates, confirmed that they would broadcast the contest along with the dates of broadcasting schedules. Alongside television and radio, coverage was also livestreamed on the online platforms of the broadcasters in Belgium, Czech Republic, Estonia, Greece, Poland, San Marino, Slovenia, Spain and the UK.[24] The semi-finals and the final were broadcast live on the internet via the official YouTube channel of the competition.
Date of broadcast | Country | Station |
---|---|---|
18 August 2018 | TVM2 (semi-final 1) | |
KAN Kol Ha Musica (semi-final 3) | ||
18–19 August 2018 | ||
La Trois (semi-final 4) | ||
Klassikaraadio | ||
Rest of the world | YouTube[25] | |
BBC Radio 3 | ||
19 August 2018 | La 2 (semi-final 1) | |
20–21 August 2018 | Russia-K | |
21–22 August 2018 | Radio Clásica | |
22–23 August 2018 | ETV2 | |
23 August 2018 | ČT art (semi-final 5) | |
M5 (semi-final 3) | ||
NRK2 (semi-final 6) |
Date of broadcast | Country | Station | Commentators | |
---|---|---|---|---|
23 August 2018 | ||||
RTSH 1 | Unknown | |||
La Trois | Camille De Rijck[26] | |||
HRT 3 | Jana Haluza[27] | |||
ČT art | Jiří Vejvoda[28] | |||
Klassikaraadio | rowspan="2" | |||
ETV1 | ||||
ERT2 | Mihalis Messinis[29] | |||
M5 | Bősze Ádám | |||
TVM2 | ||||
NRK2 | Arild Erikstad[30] | |||
NRK Klassisk | ||||
TVP Kultura | Aleksander Laskowski | |||
Rest of the world | YouTube | |||
Russia-K | Unknown | |||
SMRTV | ||||
TV Slovenija 1 | Andrej Hofer[31] | |||
Radio Clásica | Silvia Pérez Arroyo and Fernando Blázquez[32] | |||
BBC Two Scotland | rowspan="4" | |||
BBC Red Button | ||||
24 August 2018 | BBC Radio 3 | |||
25 August 2018 | SVT2 | |||
2 September 2018 | WDR Fernsehen | Unknown | ||
10 September 2018 | KAN Chinukhit | |||
KAN 11 | ||||
29 September 2018 | La 2 | Juan Antonio Simarro[33] |
For a country to be eligible for potential participation in the Eurovision Young Musicians, it needs to be an active member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU).[34] It is unknown whether the EBU issue invitations of participation to all 56 active members like they do for the Eurovision Song Contest and Junior Eurovision Song Contest.[34] The EBU Active Members listed below have made the following announcements in regards to their decisions.
The following list of countries have participated at least once since the inaugural contest in but have not stated their reasons for their continued absence in competing:[47]