MGP Nordic explained

Alt Name:Melodi Grand Prix Nordic
Genre:Music competition
Creator:DR
Num Seasons:5
Runtime:Various
Channel:DR, NRK, SVT (2002–2009)
Yle Fem (2007–2009)

MGP Nordic (Melodi Grand Prix Nordic) was a Scandinavian song contest for children aged 8 to 15, organized by DR, NRK, SVT and Yle through Yle Fem. It originated as a 2000 spin-off of Denmark's Eurovision Song Contest national final known as De unges Melodi Grand Prix, but expanded to become MGP Nordic in 2002 with the addition of Norway and Sweden. The competing entries were sung primarily in the official or co-official languages of the corresponding countries and written solely by the participants.

History

MGP Nordic was put on hiatus in 2003 when the European Broadcasting Union began to organize the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, a pan-European expansion of the concept. Regional finalists were sent to the new competition instead of MGP Nordic until 2006, when the countries jointly pulled out of the contest due to concerns over the ethical treatment of competitors.[1] As a result, MGP Nordic was revived in 2006,[2] with the new addition of Finland to the competition a year later.[3]

In 2010, the contest was supposed to have taken place in Oslo, Norway, but it was cancelled due to Denmark pulling out in order to revise the participant requirements for DR's participation in the contest.[4] SVT has since begun competing in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest again for Sweden, returning in 2010. As a result, MGP Nordic was cancelled and has not returned since.

National selections

CountryCompetitionLanguageBroadcasterNational final venueHeld
De unges Melodi Grand PrixDanishDRVarious2000–2009, 2011–present
Melodi Grand PrixSwedishYle FemYle Headquarters2007–2019
MGPjrNorwegian/SamiNRKOslo Spektrum2002–2022
Lilla MelodifestivalenSwedishSVTSVT Television Centre2002–2009, 2012–2014

List of contests

YearWinnerArtistSongDatePresenterVenueLocation
2002 DenmarkRazz"Kickflipper"27 AprilCamilla Ottesen, Josefine Sundström, and Stian BarsnesForum Copenhagen Copenhagen
2006SEB"Tro på os to"25 NovemberTherese Merkel and SVT Television Centre Stockholm
2007 NorwayCeline Helgemo"Bæstevænna"24 NovemberNadia Hasnaoui and Stian BarsnesOslo Spektrum Oslo
2008The BlackSheeps[5] "Oro jaska beana"29 November and Musikhuset Store Sal Aarhus
2009 SwedenUlrik Munther[6] "En vanlig dag"28 NovemberOla LindholmSVT Television Centre Stockholm

Scoretable

RankCountry Winner Runner-up Third PlaceFourth PlaceTotal
1 Denmark22105
2 Norway20215
3 Sweden13105
4 Finland00033

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ESC Today . 18 April 2006 . News - Scandinavian JESC pull-out . 19 April 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100117203712/http://esctoday.com/news/read/5926 . 17 January 2010 .
  2. Web site: Scandinavian TV Says No To Junior Eurovision. 20 April 2006. 10 August 2024. sverigesradio.se.
  3. Web site: Finland to join MGP 2007. ESCToday.com. Stella. Floras. 27 November 2006. 10 August 2024.
  4. Web site: Stopp for MGP Nordic . Stop MGP Nordic . 5 May 2010 . VG . 5 May 2010 . Norwegian.
  5. Web site: The BlackSheeps geasuhii . The BlackSheeps a popular draw . Hætta, Mathis . November 10, 2009 . Ávvir . February 27, 2010 . Northern Sami.
  6. Web site: Sverige knep segern i Melodi Grand Prix Nordic . Sweden wins the Melodi Grand Prix Nordic . November 28, 2009 . YLE Svenska . February 27, 2010 . Swedish .