It's Just A Game
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It's Just A Game | ||
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Eurovision Song Contest 1973 entry | ||
Country | Norway | |
Artist(s) | Anne Karine Strøm, Ellen Nikolaysen, Bjørn Kruse, Benny Kruse | |
As | Bendik Singers | |
Language | English, French | |
Composer(s) | Arne Joachim Bendiksen ("Arne Bendiksen") | |
Lyricist(s) | Bob Williams | |
Place | 7th | |
Points | 89 | |
Lyrics | from Diggiloo Thrush | |
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It's Just A Game was the Norwegian entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1973, performed in English and French - with some lyrics in Spanish, Italian, Dutch, German, Irish, Serbo-Croatian, Hebrew, Finnish, Swedish and Norwegian - by the Bendik Singers.
The song is written as a series of suggestions for wooing a woman, with the singers all in agreement that one should not take the process too seriously or use too many ornate terms of endearment in the process.
The song was performed fifth on the night (following Germany's Gitte with Junger Tag and preceding Monaco's Marie with Un Train Qui Part). At the close of voting, it had received 89 points, placing 7th in a field of 17.
It was succeeded as Norwegian representative at the 1974 Contest by Anne Karine with The First Day Of Love.
Unusually, over the next three years, all Norwegian eurovision entries would feature one or more members of the Bendik Singers. 1974's entry featured all four of them, with Ellen Nikolaysen, Bjørn Kruse and Benny Kruse singing backing vocals for Anne Karine Strøm. Ellen Nikolaysen would perform solo in 1975 with the song Touch My Life (With Summer). and in 1976, Anne Karine Strøm would return with the disco themed Mata Hari, although none of these subsequent efforts would achieve the same high finishing position as this entry.