Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Euphoria" is a song performed by Swedish singer Loreen. It was released on 26 February 2012 as the third single –first single internationally– from her debut studio album, Heal (2012). The song was written by Thomas G:son , Peter Boström and produced by Boström and SeventyEight .
Sweden participated in and won the Eurovision Song Contest 2012 with the song "Euphoria" written by Thomas G:son and Peter Boström.The song was performed by Loreen.The Swedish broadcaster Sveriges Television (SVT) organised the national final Melodifestivalen 2012 in order to select the Swedish entry for the 2012 contest in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Lorine Zeineb Nora Talhaoui (born 16 October 1983), [4] [5] known professionally as Loreen (Swedish:), is a Swedish singer and songwriter. [6] [7] Representing Sweden, she won the Eurovision Song Contest in 2012 and 2023 with the songs "Euphoria" and "Tattoo" respectively.
A preview of the song was published on 9 January 2013. [2] The same day the full version was leaked. [3] The song represented Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 2013. [4] The song was released in Germany as a digital download on 8 February 2013. Despite being one of the favorites to win it finished in 21st of 26 places with 18 points.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
"Tattoo" is a song by Swedish singer Loreen, released as a single on 25 February 2023, through Universal. [1] After winning Melodifestivalen 2023, it represented Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest 2023, winning the competition with 583 points, making Loreen the first female artist to win the contest twice (and second overall, after Johnny Logan), after previously doing so with "Euphoria" in ...
HBOEuphoria, a show that is mostly terrible, received an implausible number of Emmy nominations this morning: 16 for what was an uneven, even controversial season. Season 2 was such a mess, in ...
Upon hearing about the cancellation of the Eurovision Song Contest 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, journalist Rob Holley launched an initiative to watch a past contest on YouTube every week as a replacement, eventually giving it the title EurovisionAgain. [1] The initiative quickly became popular, so the EBU itself decided to partake.