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The 2024 contest took place in Malmö, Sweden, following the country's victory at the 2023 contest with the song "Tattoo", performed by Loreen. [2] It was the seventh time Sweden had hosted the contest, having previously done so in 1975 , 1985 , 1992 , 2000 , 2013 , and 2016 .
Participants in the Eurovision Song Contest, coloured by decade of debut. The table lists the participating countries in each decade since the first Eurovision Song Contest was held in 1956. Seven countries participated in the first contest. Since then, the number of entries has increased steadily.
{{ESC [Year] participants}} Produces a list of all countries which participated in a given edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, with links to their respective "country-in-contest-by-year" articles (e.g. Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 1956). Individual templates exist for each contest; changing the year will result in a different list ...
The Eurovision Song Contest 2024 grand final will take place on Saturday 11 May, with the running order to be determined once the finalists have been announced.
Germany has made the most contest appearances, participating in all but one event since its founding. [14] Morocco conversely has participated the fewest times, competing only once in 1980. [15] As of 2024, Ireland and Sweden both hold the record for the most victories, having won the contest seven times, including four Irish wins in the 1990s.
The Eurovision Song Contest 2024 was the sixty-eighth edition of the contest, held on 7, 9 and 11 May 2024 at the Malmö Arena in Malmö, Sweden and organised by SVT. [71] 37 countries applied to take part in the seventh contest held on Swedish soil, with Luxembourg making its first appearance since 1993.
Prior to the 2024 contest, ARD has participated in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Germany sixty-six times since its debut in 1956, [1] making Germany, to this point, the country with the most entries in the contest: they have taken part in every edition except in 1996 when they were eliminated in a pre-contest qualification round.
Eurovision Song Contest: Oslo 2010 was the official compilation album of the 2010 contest, put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by EMI Records and CMC International on 17 May 2010.The album featured all 39 songs that entered in the 2010 contest, including the semi-finalists that failed to qualify into the grand final. [146]