Switzerland in the Eurovision Song Contest 1989 explained

Year:1989
Country:Switzerland
Preselection:Concours Eurovision 1989
Preselection Date:18 February 1989
Entrant:Furbaz
Song:Viver senza tei
Final Result:13th, 47 points

Switzerland was represented by Furbaz, with the song "Viver senza tei", at the 1989 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 6 May in Lausanne, following Céline Dion's victory for Switzerland the previous year. Furbaz was the winner of the Swiss national final for the contest, held on 18 February.

Before Eurovision

National final

The Swiss German broadcaster SF DRS was in charge of broadcasting the Swiss National final for the 1989 contest. The final was held at the Theater Casino in Zug, hosted by Raymond Fein. Ten songs were selected for the Swiss entry and the winner was selected by 3 regional juries representing each linguistic region of Switzerland (DRS, TSR, TSI), a jury consisting of members of the press, and a jury consisting of music professionals.

Final – 18 February 1989
DrawArtistSongRegional JuriesPress
Jury
Expert
Jury
TotalPlace
DRSTSRTSI
1Michel Villa"Sur des musiques qui balancent"87874344
2Nadia Goj"Una canzone per sognare"765810363
3Carl Nicolas"Reisefieber"55747285
4Alexandra"S'envoler pour ailleurs"13133119
5Chris Lorens"Mutter Erde"101010106462
6Pierrette Dufaux"Coup d'assommoir"34322148
7Silvana Rezzonico"Déjà vu"21211710
8Ann Lomar"Wege in der Nacht"68455285
9Renato Mascetti"La voce del mare"42668267
10Furbaz"Viver senza tei"1212121212601

At Eurovision

On the night Furbaz performed 18th in the running order, following Cyprus and preceding Greece. At the close of voting, "Viver senza tei" had picked up 47 points, placing Switzerland in 13th place out of 22 entries.[1] As of 2024, "Viver senza tei" has been the only Swiss song in the competition to be sung in the Romansh language. The Swiss jury awarded its 12 points to Greece.

The Swiss entry was conducted at the contest by the musical director Benoît Kaufman.

Voting

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Final of Lausanne 1989 . European Broadcasting Union . 17 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210417084905/https://eurovision.tv/event/lausanne-1989/final . 17 April 2021 . live.
  2. Web site: Results of the Final of Lausanne 1989 . European Broadcasting Union . 17 April 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210417110133/https://eurovision.tv/event/lausanne-1989/final/results/switzerland . 17 April 2021 . live.