Eurovision Song Contest 2012


The Eurovision Song Contest 2012 was the 57th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. It consisted of two semi-finals on 22 and 24 May and a final on 26 May 2012, held at the Baku Crystal Hall in Baku, Azerbaijan, and presented by Leyla Aliyeva, Nargiz Birk-Petersen, and Eldar Gasimov. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union and host broadcaster İctimai Television, which staged the event after winning the for with the song "Running Scared" by Gasimov himself and Nigar Jamal as Ell and Nikki. It was the first time the contest was hosted in Azerbaijanonly four years after the country made its debut.
Broadcasters from forty-two countries participated in the contest. returned to the contest for the first time since. Meanwhile, withdrew due to security concerns in relation to the ongoing Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan, while did not participate due to financial concerns.
The winner was with the song "Euphoria", performed by Loreen and written by Thomas G:son and Peter Boström. The song won both the jury vote and televote and received 372 points out of a maximum of 492.,,, and rounded out the top five, with Albania achieving their best result to date. Out of the "Big Five" countries, Germany, Italy and Spain all managed to rank within the top 10, finishing eighth, ninth and tenth, respectively.
The lead-up to the contest was met with political concerns and protests surrounding the host country, including its human rights record and allegations by advocacy groups that Baku was carrying out forced evictions in the construction of the contest's venue.

Location

Azerbaijani broadcaster İctimai Television got the right to host the 2012 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest after winning the with the song "Running Scared" performed by Ell and Nikki. Baku, the capital and largest city of Azerbaijan, as well as the largest city on the Caspian Sea and of the Caucasus region, was named the host city for the contest, with the venue being the Baku Crystal Hall, built a few months prior to the contest on the city's coastline.
Shortly after Azerbaijan's victory at the 2011 edition, officials announced that a new 23,000-seat concert venue was to be built near National Flag Square in Baku, as a potential venue for the event. Three days later, other venue options were revealed by organisers, such as the 37,000-seat Tofiq Bahramov Stadium and the Heydar Aliyev Sports and Exhibition Complex. On 2 August 2011, Alpine Bau Deutschland AG was awarded the contract to construct the Baku Crystal Hall. Preparations for construction began in the area shortly after the announcement. Even though the full cost of the contract was not named, the government allocated 6 million AZN for the construction of the venue.
On 8 September 2011, Azad Azerbaijan TV reported that Baku Crystal Hall would be the venue of the contest, but no formal confirmation was made at the time neither by İTV nor the European Broadcasting Union. On 31 October 2011, Ismayil Omarov, the director general of İTV announced that a decision on the venue choice would be taken by the steering committee in January 2012. On 25 January 2012, it was confirmed that the Baku Crystal Hall would be the venue of the contest. Even though the venue had an extended capacity of 23,000 people, only 16,000 people were able to attend each show. Tickets for the contest became available online for purchase on 28 February 2012.

Participants

On 17 January 2012, the EBU initially announced that forty-three countries would take part in the 2012 contest. The 57th edition saw the return of Montenegro, who was last represented by Andrea Demirović in 2009. Poland decided not to participate, due to the financial burden of the UEFA Euro 2012 and the 2012 Summer Olympics. Armenia, who had originally planned to participate, later withdrew their application due to security concerns related to the ongoing Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan, subsequently reducing the number of participating countries to 42.
CountryBroadcasterArtistSongLanguageSongwriter
RTSHRona Nishliu"Suus"Albanian
ORFTrackshittaz"Woki mit deim Popo"German
İTVSabina Babayeva"When the Music Dies"English
BTRCLitesound"We Are the Heroes"English
VRTIris"Would You?"English
BHRTMaya Sar"Korake ti znam"BosnianMaja Sarihodžić
BNTSofi Marinova"Love Unlimited"Bulgarian
HRTNina Badrić"Nebo "CroatianNina Badrić
CyBCIvi Adamou"La La Love"English
DRSoluna Samay"Should've Known Better"English
ERROtt Lepland"Kuula"Estonian
YlePernilla"När jag blundar"SwedishJonas Karlsson
France TélévisionsAnggun"Echo (You and I)"French, English
GPBAnri Jokhadze"I'm a Joker"English, Georgian
NDRRoman Lob"Standing Still"English
ERTEleftheria Eleftheriou"Aphrodisiac"English
MTVACompact Disco"Sound of Our Hearts"English
RÚVGreta Salóme and Jónsi"Never Forget"EnglishGreta Salóme
RTÉJedward"Waterline"English
IBAIzabo"Time"English, Hebrew
RAINina Zilli"L'amore è femmina (Out of Love)"English, Italian
LTVAnmary"Beautiful Song"English
LRTDonny Montell"Love Is Blind"English
MRTKaliopi"Crno i belo" Macedonian
PBSKurt Calleja"This Is the Night"English
TRMPasha Parfeny"Lăutar"English
RTCGRambo Amadeus"Euro Neuro"EnglishRambo Amadeus
TROSJoan Franka"You and Me"English
NRKTooji"Stay"English
RTPFilipa Sousa"Vida minha"Portuguese
TVRMandinga"Zaleilah"Spanish, English
RTRBuranovskiye Babushki"Party for Everybody"Udmurt, English
SMRTVValentina Monetta"The Social Network Song (Oh Oh – Uh – Oh Oh)"English
RTSŽeljko Joksimović"Nije ljubav stvar" Serbian
RTVSMax Jason Mai"Don't Close Your Eyes"EnglishMax Jason Mai
RTVSLOEva Boto"Verjamem"Slovene
RTVEPastora Soler"Quédate conmigo"Spanish
SVTLoreen"Euphoria"English
SRG SSRSinplus"Unbreakable"English
TRTCan Bonomo"Love Me Back"EnglishCan Bonomo
NTUGaitana"Be My Guest"English
BBCEngelbert Humperdinck"Love Will Set You Free"English

Returning artists

Four artists returned in this year's contest. Kaliopi had intended to participate for with the song "Samo ti", which placed in 26th position in the pre-qualifying round. She would then go on to represent. Jónsi had represented with the song "Heaven", which placed 19th. Željko Joksimović for Serbia, had represented with the song "Lane moje" which placed second, and had co-hosted the with Jovana Janković. Jedward had represented, and returned for a second consecutive year, after their 8th-place finish with the song "Lipstick". In addition, Martina Majerle, who represented, returned as a backing vocalist for Slovenia.
Lys Assia, who won the first Eurovision for, entered the song "C'était ma vie", written by Ralph Siegel and Jean Paul Cara, into the. The song, however, only came eighth in a closely fought national selection. Assia attended the event in Baku as a guest of honour.

Languages

The Finnish entry, "När jag blundar", sung by Pernilla Karlsson, was only Finland's second entry in Swedish and the first entry at all to be sung in Swedish since 1998. Russia's entry, "Party for Everybody", sung by Buranovskiye Babushki, was the first entry ever to be performed in Udmurt. The Georgian entry, "I'm a Joker" was the first Eurovision entry containing the Georgian language while the Bulgarian song "Love Unlimited" had a few words in the Azerbaijani language, both of whom never appeared at the contest before.

Other countries

Active EBU members

  • On 7 March 2012, the EBU announced that Armenian broadcaster ARMTV had decided to withdraw despite originally being included in the list of participating countries, after Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev had given a speech the previous week calling "Armenians of the world" one of Azerbaijan's "main enemies". Armenia was consequently fined by the EBU and was expected to face further penalties, such as exclusion from participation in future contests if it failed to comply with the EBU requirements. Armenia had been in a continuous state of war with Azerbaijan since the early 1990s due to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
Active EBU member broadcasters in,, and confirmed non-participation prior to the announcement of the participants list by the EBU. The and broadcasters did the same, despite previous speculations of a possible return.

Non-EBU member

On 26 November 2011, it was reported that two official EBU documents showed that Liechtenstein's only national broadcaster 1 FL TV was being granted active EBU membership, sparking speculations of a debut for the nation. However, it was clarified a few days later that these documents contained editing mistakes.

Format

In a meeting of the Eurovision Reference Group on 29 June 2011, it was decided that the televoting system would revert the format used most recently in the 2009 contest, in which the phone and SMS lines opened for a fifteen-minute window after all songs had been performed, instead of opening before the show starts, which was the system used between 2010 and 2011. The results format of each show remained the same with each country's votes being decided on a 50:50 split between televoting and a national jury. Each participating country had their own national jury, which consisted of five professional members of the music industry.
Under the official rules released on 24 November 2011, the number of participants in the grand final was raised to 26, including the host nation, the "Big Five", and the ten qualifiers from each semi-final. This was the second time in the Eurovision Song Contest that 26 countries were in the grand final, the first being the 2003 contest.

Semi-final allocation draw

The draw that determined the semi-final running order was held on 25 January 2012 at the Buta Palace. The participating countries, excluding the automatic finalists, were split into six pots, based upon how those countries voted in past contests. From these pots, half competed in the first semi-final on 22 May 2012. The other half in that particular pot competed in the second semi-final on 24 May 2012. This draw also acted as an approximate running order, in order for the delegations from the countries to know when their rehearsals would commence and determine which semi-final the automatic finalists would be allowed to vote in.
Pot 1Pot 2Pot 3Pot 4Pot 5Pot 6

Graphic design

The design of the contest was built around the motto "Light Your Fire!", inspired by the nickname of Azerbaijan itself, "Land of Fire".
Each introductory video postcard began with a shot of the artist and performers, followed with the flag and country name in a handwritten font with a background resembling the yellow, orange and red fire of the 2012 theme art. The postcards consisted of various shots of Azerbaijan, with a caption displaying 'Azerbaijan' and underneath 'Land of...', which were then followed by the name of a town or geographic feature, showing the landscape and culture of the country. Some postcards focused on the host city of Baku with text changing to 'Baku' and underneath 'City of...'. The postcards finished with a shot of the Crystal Hall displayed in the colours of the performing country's flag. These postcards acted as a tourism mechanism to present the country to a wider audience.
The artist, song and number graphics as well as tables and voting graphics were kept the same as those used in 2011, with a slight modification to incorporate the 2012 theme art. The lower points were highlighted in red squares while the top points were highlighted in orange squares with each square increasing in size in relation to the point value. Both sets of graphics were designed by London brand design agency Turquoise Branding.

Host broadcaster

, which is the EBU member that participates in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Azerbaijan, is one of country's public-service broadcasters. Azerbaijan's largest telecommunications operator, Azercell, was chosen as the presenting partner for the contest. On 1 December 2011, İTV named the German production company Brainpool as its official production partner for the contest, citing the quality of its work on the previous year's contest.

Contest overview

Semi-final 1

The first semi-final took place on 22 May 2012 at 00:00 AZST. All the countries competing in this semi-final were eligible to vote, plus Azerbaijan, Italy and Spain. The EBU allowed the Albanian broadcaster Radio Televizioni Shqiptar to defer transmission and only use jury votes due to the Qafa e Vishës bus accident. The highlighted countries qualified for the final.
CountryArtistSongPointsPlace
1"Euro Neuro"2015
2Greta Salóme and Jónsi"Never Forget"758
3"Aphrodisiac"1164
4Anmary"Beautiful Song"1716
5"Suus"1462
6Mandinga"Zaleilah"1203
7Sinplus"Unbreakable"4511
8Iris"Would You?"1617
9Pernilla"När jag blundar"4112
10Izabo"Time"3313
11"The Social Network Song (Oh Oh – Uh – Oh Oh)"3114
12"La La Love"917
13"Should've Known Better"639
14Buranovskiye Babushki"Party for Everybody"1521
15Compact Disco"Sound of Our Hearts"5210
16Trackshittaz"Woki mit deim Popo"818
17"Lăutar"1005
18Jedward"Waterline"926

Semi-final 2

The second semi-final took place on 24 May 2012 at 00:00 AZST. All the countries competing in this semi-final were eligible to vote, plus France, Germany and the United Kingdom. Germany requested that they vote in this semi-final. Before it withdrew, Armenia was drawn to perform in the first half of this semi-final. The highlighted countries qualified for the final.
CountryArtistSongPointsPlace
1"Nije ljubav stvar"1592
2Kaliopi"Crno i belo"539
3"You and Me"3515
4"This Is the Night"707
5Litesound"We Are the Heroes"3516
6"Vida minha"3913
7Gaitana"Be My Guest"648
8"Love Unlimited"4511
9"Verjamem"3117
10"Nebo "4212
11Loreen"Euphoria"1811
12"I'm a Joker"3614
13"Love Me Back"805
14"Kuula"1004
15"Don't Close Your Eyes"2218
16Tooji"Stay"4510
17"Korake ti znam"776
18"Love Is Blind"1043

Final

The final took place on 26 May 2012 at 00:00 AZST and was won by Sweden. The "Big Five" and the host country, Azerbaijan, qualified directly for the final. From the two semi-finals on 22 and 24 May 2012, twenty countries qualified for the final. A total of 26 countries competed in the final and all 42 participants voted.
Sweden won with 372 points, winning both the jury vote and the televote. Russia came second with 259 points, with Serbia, Azerbaijan, Albania, Estonia, Turkey, Germany, Italy and Spain completing the top ten. France, Denmark, Hungary, United Kingdom and Norway occupied the bottom five positions.
CountryArtistSongPointsPlace
1"Love Will Set You Free"1225
2Compact Disco"Sound of Our Hearts"1924
3"Suus"1465
4"Love Is Blind"7014
5"Korake ti znam"5518
6Buranovskiye Babushki"Party for Everybody"2592
7Greta Salóme and Jónsi"Never Forget"4620
8"La La Love"6516
9Anggun"Echo (You and I)"2122
10"L'amore è femmina (Out of Love)"1019
11"Kuula"1206
12Tooji"Stay"726
13"When the Music Dies"1504
14Mandinga"Zaleilah"7112
15"Should've Known Better"2123
16"Aphrodisiac"6417
17Loreen"Euphoria"3721
18"Love Me Back"1127
19"Quédate conmigo"9710
20"Standing Still"1108
21"This Is the Night"4121
22Kaliopi"Crno i belo"7113
23Jedward"Waterline"4619
24"Nije ljubav stvar"2143
25Gaitana"Be My Guest"6515
26"Lăutar"8111

Spokespersons

Each participating broadcaster appointed a spokesperson who was responsible for announcing, in English or French, the votes for its respective country. The order in which each country announced their vote was determined in a draw following the jury results from the final dress rehearsal. Similar to the an algorithm was used to add as much excitement as possible. The spokespersons are shown alongside each country.
  1. Andri Xhahu
  2. Marija Marković
  3. Paula Seling
  4. Kati Bellowitsch
  5. Oleksiy Matias
  6. Dmitry Koldun
  7. Peter Van de Veire
  8. Safura Alizadeh
  9. Keith Demicoli
  10. Monica Fabbri
  11. Amaury Vassili
  12. Scott Mills
  13. Adriana Magania
  14. Elvir Laković Laka
  15. Olivia Fortuna
  16. Anna Angelova
  17. Sara Hildebrand
  18. Lorella Flego
  19. Loucas Hamatsos
  20. Nevena Rendeli
  21. Mária Pietrová
  22. Kristina Talevska
  23. Vivienne van den Assem
  24. Joana Teles
  25. Matthías Matthíasson
  26. Sarah Dawn Finer
  27. Nadia Hasnaoui
  28. Ignas Krupavičius
  29. Getter Jaani
  30. Valters Frīdenbergs
  31. Elena S. Sánchez
  32. Mr Lordi
  33. Sopho Toroshelidze
  34. Anke Engelke
  35. Oxana Fedorova
  36. Éva Novodomszky
  37. Ofer Nachshon
  38. Gráinne Seoige

Detailed voting results

The EBU and PwC audit company checked and verified the individual jury and televoting results, which were combined to create the overall national vote for the contests. On 18 June 2012, the EBU published the following results.

Semi-final 1

12 points

Below is a summary of the maximum 12 points each country awarded to another in the first semi-final:
N.ContestantNation giving 12 points
5,,,,
5,,,,
3,,
2,
2,
1
1
1
1

Semi-final 2

12 points

Below is a summary of the maximum 12 points each country awarded to another in the second semi-final:
N.ContestantNation giving 12 points
6,,,,,
4,,,
2,
2,
2,
1
1
1
1
1

Final

12 points

Below is a summary of the maximum 12 points each country awarded to another in the grand final:
N.ContestantNation giving 12 points
18,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
4,,,
4,,,
4,,,
2,
2,
2,
1
1
1
1
1
1

Broadcasts

Most countries sent commentators to Baku or commentated from their own country, in order to add insight to the participants and, if necessary, the provision of voting information. In addition to the participating countries, the hosts mentioned that the contest was also broadcast in Australia and New Zealand. Known details on the broadcasts in each country, including the specific broadcasting stations and commentators are shown in the tables below.
CountryBroadcasterChannelCommentator
Armenia

Incidents and controversies

Human rights concerns

Azerbaijan's large investment in hosting the Eurovision contest was widely discussed in Western media as an attempt to "mitigate misgivings about its poor democracy and human rights record". Elnur Majidli, an activist imprisoned during the Arab Spring-inspired 2011 Azerbaijani protests, was released in an apparent effort to soften Azerbaijan's image ahead of the contest, but many political prisoners remained. Human Rights Watch reported a "violent crackdown on protesters" on the eve of the contest, and Amnesty International condemned the "stern crackdown of freedom of expression, dissent, non-governmental organizations, critical journalists, in fact anyone who criticised the Aliyev regime too strongly" that continued up to the contest.
Human Rights Watch also criticised the Azerbaijani government and the Baku City Authority for carrying out forced evictions against local residents, in order to allow for the demolition of flats to make way for construction in the neighbourhood where the Baku Crystal Hall was built. The Public Association for Assistance to Free Economy, a transparency and economic rights campaign group, had described the evictions as a "violation of human rights", and as having "no legal authority". However, in a statement to the BBC, the EBU said that on a recent visit to Baku they had observed "that the construction of the concert hall media reports refer to was already well under way on a clean construction site and thus there are no demolitions needed". The EBU cited the "apolitical" nature of the contest and the Azerbaijani government's claim that the construction was not tied to the contest.
The contest's eventual winner Loreen met local human rights activists during the event weeks, the only entrant to do so. She later told reporters, "Human rights are violated in Azerbaijan every day. One should not be silent about such things." An Azerbaijan government spokesman criticized her in response, saying that the contest should not "be politicised" and requested the EBU prevented further meetings of a similar nature. Swedish diplomats replied that the EBU, the Swedish broadcaster SVT and Loreen had not acted against the competition's rules.
On 26 May, a flash mob of anti-government protesters were quickly dispersed by police. Activists expressed fears that they would face a crackdown when the international spotlight left Azerbaijan again at the end of the contest. Before presenting the results of the German vote, the German spokesperson Anke Engelke gave a live statement that alluded to the human rights issues in Azerbaijan, saying: "Tonight nobody could vote for their own country. But it is good to be able to vote. And it is good to have a choice. Good luck on your journey, Azerbaijan. Europe is watching you."

Tensions with Iran

Iranian officials objected to Azerbaijan hosting the contest, with Iranian clerics Ayatollah Mohammad Mojtahed Shabestari and Ayatollah Ja'far Sobhani condemning Azerbaijan for "anti-Islamic behaviour", while also claiming that Azerbaijan was hosting a gay parade. This led to protests in front of Iranian embassy in Baku, where protesters carried slogans mocking the Iranian leaders. Ali Hasanov, head of the public and political issues department in Azerbaijani president's administration, said that gay parade claims were untrue, and advised Iran not to meddle in Azerbaijan's internal affairs. In response, Iran recalled its ambassador from Baku, while Azerbaijan demanded a formal apology from Iran for its statements in connection with Baku's hosting of the contest, and later also recalled its ambassador from Iran.
On 30 May, the Ministry of National Security of Azerbaijan announced that they had thwarted a series of planned terror attacks against the contest, among the targets being Baku Crystal Hall, as well as Marriott Absheron Baku Hotel|Marriott] and Hilton hotels in Baku. On 22 August, The Daily Telegraph reported that according to Western intelligence services, Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei personally gave orders to the elite Quds Force unit to launch terrorist attacks against the West and its allies, including Azerbaijan during the contest.

Other awards

In addition to the main winner's trophy, the Marcel Bezençon Awards and the Barbara Dex Award were contested during the 2012 Eurovision Song Contest. The OGAE, "General Organisation of Eurovision Fans" voting poll also took place before the contest.

Marcel Bezençon Awards

The Marcel Bezençon Awards, organised since 2002 by Sweden's then-Head of Delegation and 1992 representative Christer Björkman, and 1984 winner Richard Herrey, honours songs in the contest's final. The awards are divided into three categories: Artistic Award, Composers Award, and Press Award.
CategoryCountrySongArtistSongwriter
Artistic Award"Euphoria"Loreen
Composers Award"Euphoria"Loreen
Press Award"When the Music Dies"Sabina Babayeva

OGAE

, an organisation of over forty Eurovision Song Contest fan clubs across Europe and beyond, conducts an annual voting poll first held in 2002 as the Marcel Bezençon Fan Award. After all votes were cast, the top-ranked entry in the 2012 poll was also the winner of the contest, "Euphoria" performed by Loreen; the top five results are shown below.
CountrySongArtistPoints
"Euphoria"Loreen375
"L'amore è femmina (Out of Love)"Nina Zilli212
"Never Forget"Greta Salóme and Jónsi211
"Nije ljubav stvar"Željko Joksimović199
"Stay"Tooji164

Barbara Dex Award

The Barbara Dex Award is a humorous fan award given to the worst dressed artist each year. Named after Belgium's representative who came last in the 1993 contest, wearing her self-designed dress, the award was handed by the fansite House of Eurovision from 1997 to 2016 and is being carried out by the fansite songfestival.be since 2017.
PlaceCountryArtistVotes
1Rona Nishliu829
2Jedward551
3Sofi Marinova232
4Joan Franka163
5Gaitana145

Official album

Eurovision Song Contest: Baku 2012 was a compilation album put together by the European Broadcasting Union, and released by Universal Music Group on 4 May 2012. The album featured all 42 songs that entered in the 2012 contest, including the semi-finalists that failed to qualify into the grand final.

Charts