Ding-a-dong

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Netherlands Ding-a-dong
French 7-Inch single cover.
Eurovision Song Contest 1975 entry
Country Netherlands
Artist(s) Getty Kaspers,
Ard Weeink,
Chris de Wolde,
John Gaasbeek,
Koos Versteeg,
Rudi Nijhuis
As Teach-In
Language English
Composer(s) Dick Bakker
Lyricist(s) Will Luikinga, Eddy Ouwens
Conductor Harry van Hoof
Finals performance
Final result 1st
Final points 152
Appearance chronology
◄ "I See a Star" (1974)   
"The Party's Over" (1976) ►

Ding-a-dong (original Dutch title: Ding dinge dong, as it was introduced in the titles when broadcast) was the title of the winning song in the Eurovision Song Contest 1975. It was sung by Teach-In, representing the Netherlands, and was written by Dick Bakker, Will Luikinga, and Eddy Ouwens.

History

Ding-a-dong was notable for being one of the Eurovision winners that had quirky or entirely nonsensical titles or lyrics, following in the footsteps of Massiel's La La La in 1968 and Lulu's Boom Bang-a-Bang in 1969, later followed by the Herreys' Diggi-Loo Diggi-Ley in 1984. Ding-a-dong was performed first on the performance night (preceding Ireland's The Swarbriggs with That's What Friends Are For). The song was the first winner under the now-familiar Eurovision voting system whereby each country awards scores of 1-8, 10 and 12. At the close of voting, it had received 152 points, placing first in a field of nineteen. As the first song performed during the evening, the victory ran contrary to the fact that success usually went songs performed later in the broadcast. According to author and historian John Kennedy O'Connor's The Eurovision Song Contest - The Official History, this was the first of three occasions when the first song would win the contest, the second coming the following year in 1976.[1]

Teach-In - Ding A Dong excerpt
An excerpt from Ding A Dong

Problems playing this file? See media help.

The song, performed entirely in English, was an up-tempo ode to positive thought. The band (only the second to win the Contest in a non-native language after ABBA the year before) sings that one should "sing a song that goes ding ding-a-dong" when one is feeling unhappy. On the night of the Dutch National Song Contest, the song had already been selected to be performed at the ESC, but there were two other singers competing for the honor of performing the song: Albert West and Debbie.

Almost immediately, the song's lyrics became a source of ridicule[citation needed], particularly in the UK, because the word "dong" is slang for penis. This did not stop the song from hitting number 13 in the UK singles chart. Besides the Dutch and English versions, Teach-In also recorded Ding-A-Dong in German as Ding ding-a-dong.

The song was succeeded in 1976 as contest winner by Brotherhood of Man, representing the United Kingdom, singing Save Your Kisses for Me. It was succeeded as the Dutch representative at the 1976 contest by Sandra Reemer with The Party's Over.

Charts

Charts (1975) Peak
position
Swiss Singles Chart 1
UK Singles Chart 13
Dutch Singles Chart 3
Norwegian Singles Chart 1

Covers

"Ding-A-Dong"
Single by beFour
from the album Friends 4 Ever
Released 17 April 2009
Format CD single
Recorded 2009
Genre Pop
Length 3:32
Writer(s) Will Luikinga, Eddy Ouwens
beFour singles chronology

"No Limit"
(2009)
"Ding-A-Dong"
(2009)

"Ding-a-Dong" was recorded by German band beFour for their fourth studio album Friends 4 Ever and released as the second single in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

Charts

Chart (2009) Peak
position
German Singles Chart 61

Advertising

In 2009 and 2010, the tune of "Ding-a-dong" was used in an advert for the GSBonus as known as Galatasaray S.K.'s credit card.[2][3][4][5]

References

  1. O'Connor, John Kennedy. The Eurovision Song Contest - The Official History. Carlton Books, UK. 2007 ISBN 978-1-84442-994-3
  2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NEaokBPdaXw
  3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UxGs_cYIldc
  4. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hlv7k7mY8Mo
  5. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jtgz4nvU89k

External links

Preceded by
Griechischer Wein by Udo Jürgens
Swiss Singles Chart number-one single
18 April 1975 - 16 May 1975
Succeeded by
I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do by ABBA
Preceded by
I Can Help by Billy Swan
Norwegian Singles Chart number-one single
21 April 1975 - 9 June 1975
Succeeded by
Love Hurts by Nazareth
Preceded by
Waterloo by ABBA
Eurovision Song Contest winners
1975
Succeeded by
Save Your Kisses for Me by Brotherhood of Man
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