Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Eleven Eurovision winners (alongside three non-winners) were featured at the special concert Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest in 2005, in which ABBA's "Waterloo" was voted the most popular song of the contest's first fifty years. [85] Ireland and Sweden have won seven times, more than any other country. Ireland also won ...
View history; Tools. Tools. ... List of Eurovision Song Contest entries (1956–2003) ... List of Eurovision Song Contest winners
The discography of the Eurovision Song Contest winners includes all the winning singles of the annual competition held since 1956. As of 2024 [update] , 71 songs have won the competition, including four entries which were declared joint winners in 1969 .
A new landmark was achieved at this contest with the performance of the 1,000th song in Eurovision history, when Ireland's Brian Kennedy performed "Every Song Is a Cry for Love" in the semi-final. [176] 45 years after first entering the contest, Finland secured its first win, represented by Lordi and "Hard Rock Hallelujah". [91] [238]
The EBU has held several events to mark selected anniversaries in the contest's history: Songs of Europe, held in 1981 to celebrate its twenty-fifth anniversary, had live performances and video recordings of all Eurovision Song Contest winners up to 1981; [401] [402] Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest was organised in 2005 ...
The following tables list the entries which have been performed at the contest between 1956 and 2003. Entries are listed by order of their first performance in the contest; entry numbers provide a cumulative total of all songs performed at the contest throughout its history, and a second cumulative total outlines the total entries for each country.
Pages in category "Eurovision Song Contest–winning songs" The following 72 pages are in this category, out of 72 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
0–9. Eurovision Song Contest 1956; Eurovision Song Contest 1957; Eurovision Song Contest 1958; Eurovision Song Contest 1959; Eurovision Song Contest 1960