Songs of Europe (1981 concert)
Songs of Europe | |
---|---|
Dates | |
Final date | 22 August 1981 |
Host | |
Venue | Mysen, Norway |
Presenter(s) | Rolf Kirkvaag Titten Tei |
Host broadcaster | EBU, NRK |
Participants | |
Number of entries | 21 songs from 1956 to 1981 |
Songs of Europe is a concert television programme commemorating the Eurovision Song Contest's twenty-fifth anniversary. The event was held in Mysen, Norway in 1981, featuring nearly all the winners of the Eurovision Song Contest from its first edition in 1956 to 1981, and broadcast to more than 100 million viewers all over Europe.
The concert, which was the largest ever in Norway at the time, and still the largest in Mysen, was hosted by Norwegian television personalities Rolf Kirkvaag and Titten Tei, who led the two-hour live broadcast in English, German, French, Norwegian and Spanish. In the United Kingdom, a highlights programme was broadcast by BBC Two on 25 September 1981 and presented by Terry Wogan. BBC Radio 2 transmitted the concert on 26 December 1981.
It is the biggest concert arranged to feature such an amount of Eurovision Song Contest artists and more specifically winners performing at once, with 21 out of a total 29 winners (four winners in the 1969 Contest) attending to perform their past winning songs; that is with the Eurovision Song Contest's fiftieth anniversary, Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest, featuring most of the artists as guests and not as performers, and the Contest's sixtieth anniversary, Eurovision Song Contest's Greatest Hits, featuring fifteen artists acts.
The show
The songs were performed and shown in videos, in accordance to the chronological order of the Eurovision Song Contest's winners from the first edition in 1956 up to and including the 1981 edition; although 1981 was the 26th edition, it was held a few months prior to the concert and thus included in it. Some snippets of earlier ESC performances intermingled into the show. 21 acts performed their winning songs live, including three out of the four winners of the 1969 Contest. The remaining eight winners, marked in light red, were shown in video footages of their performances in their respective editions of the Eurovision Song Contest.
Notes:
- 1.^ Attended the show as a guest in the audience.
- 2.^ The song also contains phrases in French.
- 3.^ Gali Atari who originally sung with Milk and Honey, didn't come to Norway and so Lea Lupatin replaced her.