Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest 2011

Moldova participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2011 in Düsseldorf, Germany and selected their entry through a televised national final, O melodie pentru Europa (A song for Europe), organised by Moldovan broadcaster TeleRadio-Moldova (TRM). The Punk rock band Zdob şi Zdub won the selection with the song "So lucky".

Eurovision Song Contest 2011
Country Moldova
National selection
Selection processO melodie pentru Europa 2011
Selection date(s)26 February 2011
Selected entrantZdob şi Zdub
Selected song"So Lucky"
Finals performance
Semi-final resultQualified (10th, 54 points)
Final result12th, 97 points
Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄2010 2011 2012►

Before Eurovision

O melodie pentru Europa 2011

O melodie pentru Europa 2011 was the national final format developed by TRM in order to select Moldova's entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2011. The event included a final to be held on 26 February 2011, broadcast on TV Moldova 1 and TV Moldova International.[1]

Format

The selection of the competing entries for the national final and ultimately the Moldovan Eurovision entry took place in three rounds. The first round occurred on 26 February 2011 and involved a jury panel shortlisting sixty entries from the received submissions based on criteria such as the quality of the melody and composition, vocals and manner of the performance and the originality of the song. The second round was a live audition of the sixty selected artists and their entries in front of a jury panel that took place on 29 January 2011. The panel selected twenty-five finalists to proceed to the third round, the televised national final. Twenty-five finalists competed in the final on 26 February 2011 where the winner was selected by the 50/50 combination of an expert jury vote and a public televote. In the event of a tie, the entry that received the highest score from the jury vote would be declared the winner.

Competing entries

Artists and composers had the opportunity to submit their entries until 16 January 2011. Songwriters could hold any nationality, but artists were required to have Moldovan citizenship.[2][3][4] At the conclusion of the submission deadline, 98 valid entries were received by the broadcaster, and were published online on 17 January 2011.[5] A jury selected 60 out of the 98 received entries to proceed to the audition round. The live audition round took place on 29 January 2011 where 25 finalists were selected to advance. The jury panel that evaluated the songs during the live auditions and selected the 25 finalists consisted of Geta Burlacu (singer, 2008 Moldovan Eurovision entrant), Aura (singer), Anatol Chiriac (composer), Victoria Melnic (professor at the Academy of Music, Theatre and Fine Arts), Andrei Sava (composer), Liviu Stirbu (composer), Sorina Ștefârță (journalist), Vladimir Beleaev (composer) and Silvia Cărăuş.[6]

Among the competing artists, Natalia Barbu represented Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest 2007. Zdob şi Zdub represented Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest 2005.[7]

ArtistSong (English translation)Composer(s)
Adriana Voloşenco "I Can Win the Game" Alexei Nacai
Anişoara Balmuş "You and I" Elena Buga, Alexandru Gorgos
Aurel Chirtoacă "Încă îndrăgostit" (Still in love) Natalia Matcovschii, Aurel Chirtoacă
Boris Covali & Cristina Croitoru "Break It Up" Evgeny Oleinik. Yulia Bykova
Corina Cuniuc "Şi tac" (And I remain silent) Gicu Cimbir
Cristina Scarlat "Every Day Will Be Your Day" Lidia Scarlat, Ivan Aculov
Dana Marchitan "Lucky You Lucky Me" Rafael Artesero
Denis Latişev "It's My First Dance With You" Adrian Bors, Latişev Denis
Diana Staver "Love Song" Elena Buga, Valentin Dinga
Doiniţa Gherman "Viaţa" (Life) Doiniţa Gherman, Vadim Luchin, Tregubenco, Cătălin Gondiu
Dumitru Socican "Ma pierd când o văd" (I am lost when I see her) Dumitru Socican
Ion Krasnopolski "Cu fanfara pînă dimineaţa" (With fanfare until the morning) Ion Diviza, Ion Krasnopolski
Karizma "When Life is Grey" Ionuț Adrian Radu
M-Studio "Night Reflection" M-Studio
Mariana Mihaila "Mi Rey!" (My king!) Mariana Mihaila
Millenium "In Memoriam" Olga Gorcinschi
Natalia Barbu "Let's Jazz" Natalia Barbu, Mike Diamondz
Natan "Dacă dragoste mai e" (If there's still love) Eugen Doibani
Nicoleta Gavriliţa "Just Your Friend" Elena Buga, Serghei Bilicenco
Odry "Doina, dor nemărginit" (Doina, endless longing) Radmila Popovici, Marian Stîrcea
Pasha "Dorule" (Desire) Anastasia Larionova, Pasha Parfeny
Ruslan Taranu "Lumina mea" (My light) Ruslan Taranu
Vadim Luchin & Tamaz Djgarcava "Always" Tamaz Djgarcava
Valeria Tarasova "This Is My Life" Ralph Siegel, John O'Flynn
Zdob şi Zdub "So Lucky" Marc Elsner, Mihai Gîncu, Andy Shuman

Final

The final took place on 26 February 2011 at TRM studios in Chișinău, hosted by Dianna Rotaru and Gabriel Coveseanu. The winner was selected based on the combination of a public televote and the votes of an expert jury.[8] "So Lucky" performed by Zdob şi Zdub were selected as the winners. Karizma was the landslide winner of the televote with 33.35% while Natalia Barbu was the winner of the jury vote.[9]

Final – 26 February 2011
Draw Artist Song Jury Televote Total Place
1 Natan "Dacă dragoste mai e" 99 0 1.11% 0 0 14
2 Natalia Barbu "Let's Jazz" 126 12 9.13% 7 19 2
3 Ion Krasnopolski "Cu fanfara pînă dimineaţa" 67.5 0 1.34% 0 0 14
4 Anişoara Balmuş "You and I" 66.5 0 0.25% 0 0 14
5 Denis Latişev "It's My First Dance With You" 85 0 0.27% 0 0 14
6 Pasha "Dorule" 121.5 8 10.84% 8 16 3
7 Doiniţa Gherman "Viaţa" 92.5 0 1.82% 0 0 14
8 Corina Cuniuc "Şi tac" 92 0 1.88% 1 1 13
9 Cristina Scarlat "Every Day Will Be Your Day" 101.5 2 1.09% 0 2 12
10 Diana Staver "Love Song" 74 0 0.61% 0 0 14
11 Dumitru Socican "Ma pierd când o văd" 83.5 0 2.54% 3 3 10
12 Nicoleta Gavriliţa "Just Your Friend" 90.5 0 0.72% 0 0 14
13 Adriana Voloşenco "I Can Win the Game" 78.5 0 0.98% 0 0 14
14 Boris Covali & Cristina Croitoru "Break It Up" 107 6 3.55% 5 11 6
15 Ruslan Taranu "Lumina mea" 80.5 0 0.58% 0 0 14
16 Millenium "In Memoriam" 118.5 7 4.88% 6 13 5
17 Odry "Doina, dor nemărginit" 96.5 0 1.08% 0 0 14
18 Karizma "When Life is Grey" 99.5 1 33.35% 12 13 4
19 Vadim Luchin & Tamaz Djgarcava "Always" 89.5 0 1.62% 0 0 14
20 Mariana Mihaila "Mi Rey!" 93 0 3.08% 4 4 8
21 Valeria Tarasova "This Is My Life" 107 5 2.54% 2 7 7
22 Aurel Chirtoacă "Încă îndrăgostit" 104 4 0.97% 0 4 8
23 M-Studio "Night Reflection" 104 3 1.79% 0 3 10
24 Zdob şi Zdub "So Lucky" 122.5 10 13.15% 10 20 1
25 Dana Marchitan "Lucky You Lucky Me" 98 0 0.83% 0 0 14

At Eurovision

Moldova competed in the first half of the second semi-final of the contest, on 12 May 2011, with starting position 7. The song was well received by the audience, however narrowly making it into the grand final with 10th place and 54 points. It beat Belgium for the final spot by 1 point. Shortly after the second semi final, Moldova drew starting position 15 for the grand final on Saturday 16 May 2011. Moldova achieved 12th place after the voting had finished, with 97 points in total.

Split results

  • In the Semi-final 2 Moldova came 10th with 54 points: the public awarded Moldova 8th place with 61 points and the jury awarded 13th place with 53 points.
  • In the Final Moldova came 12th with 97 points: the public awarded Moldova 12th place with 98 points and the jury awarded 15th place with 82 points.

Points awarded by Moldova

Points awarded to Moldova (semi-final 2)
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point
Points awarded to Moldova (final)
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point

See also

References

  1. Busa, Alexandru (21 January 2011). "Moldova: National final on February 26th". EscToday.com. Retrieved 21 January 2011.
  2. Brey, Marco (27 December 2010). "Moldova: Call for entries for national selection". Eurovision.tv. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  3. Al Kaziri, Ghassan (27 December 2010). "MOLDOVA - TRM call for songs". Oikotimes.com. Archived from the original on 29 December 2010. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  4. Jiandani, Sanjay (27 December 2010). "Moldova: Call for entries and singers". EscToday.com. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  5. Busa, Alexandru (17 January 2011). "Moldova : Listen to the 98 submitted songs". EscToday.com. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
  6. "Moldova 2011".
  7. Busa, Alexandru (16 January 2011). "Moldova: Last day to submit entries". EscToday.com. Retrieved 16 January 2011.
  8. "MOLDOVAN NATIONAL FINAL 2011". Archived from the original on 19 February 2020.
  9. Results "Punctajul Juriului şi SMS voting" Check |url= value (help) (in Romanian). Teleradio Moldova. 4 March 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
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