It used to be the case that to “win Eurovision you had to ‘fly on the wings of love’, ‘take me to your heaven’ or ‘sail into infinity’”, said The Guardian. But now other languages have got their musical acts together.
This year a total of 24 languages will be sung at Eurovision as many entrants return to their native tongues.
Competing nations were required to sing in their national language until 1999, but when this rule was abolished there was a “flood of entries” performed in English, according to fan site Aussievision. Delegations assumed that the “global language” would “win more appeal with audiences”.
A study published in the Royal Society Open Science journal looked at the songs from every contest from 1956 until 2024, a total of 1,763 entries. It found that from 1999, more than 70% of songs were entirely in English or a mix of English and a native language. By 2014, more than three-quarters of the entries were sung entirely in English, surging above 80% in the three years that followed.
But more recently there’s been a “return to songs performed in national languages”, a development that’s become “very popular with fans”. Some songs are performed in a mix of languages. For instance, this year’s entry from Moldova, “Viva, Moldova!”, performed by Satoshi, includes six languages. France, Italy, Portugal and Spain have all “resisted the temptation” to use songs with English lyrics, said New Scientist.
Irving Wolther, a Eurovision historian, told The Guardian that “after Brexit, there was a sense of ‘now we are no longer being patronised by the Brits, we Europeans can express our own voice’”.
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