01. | Estonia (198 p.) | |
02. | Denmark (174 p.) | |
03. | Greece (147 p.) | |
04. | France (142 p.) | |
05. | Sweden (100 p.) | |
06. | Spain (76 p.) | |
07. | Slovenia (70 p.) | |
08. | Germany (66 p.) | |
09. | Malta (48 p.) | |
10. | Croatia (42 p.) | |
11. | Turkey (41 p.) | |
12. | Russia (37 p.) | |
13. | Lithuania (35 p.) | |
14. | Bosnia & Herz. (29 p) | |
15. | UK (28 p.) | |
16. | Israel (25 p.) | |
17. | Portugal (17 p.) | |
18. | Latvia (16 p.) | |
19. | Netherlands (16 p.) | |
20. | Poland (11 p.) | |
21. | Ireland (6 p.) | |
22. | Iceland (3 p.) | |
23. | Norway (3 p.) |
Participant: Sedat Yüce Song: Sevgiliye Son (Good-bye my love) Writer(s): Nurdan Güneri, Figen Cakmak Composer(s): Semih Güneri |
There is another love-song this year, which comes from Turkey and it’s called “Good bye my love”. The singer Sedat Yüce was born in 1976 in Izmir plays the trumpet and studied at the conservatory. One of his greatest dreams was to sing for Turkey at Eurovision – but this time it’s reality! The Turks didn’t use the televoting-system while choosing the song for Europe, the still rely on a professional jury. This song is made more in western-European-style, not the typical ethno-sound, which often is showed by Turkish bands in Eurovision. |
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