Eurovision 2023: What We Know So Far (as of February)
- Feb 28, 2023
- 48 min read

As usual, I'll first go through the general facts, and then go into each country and what news, if any, I could find regarding them. Most of the irrelevant details have been truncated, and you can read about them on my previous blogs.
Eurovision Song Contest 2023
Host Country: United Kingdom
The EBU has confirmed that Ukraine, the winner of Eurovision 2022, cannot fulfil required safety standards for hosting the contest, thus the runner-up, being the United Kingdom, will be hosting the contest instead, with the BBC taking over most of the hosting operations and UA:PBC, the Ukrainian broadcaster, will work with the BBC to implement Ukrainian elements in the live show. The two broadcasters will cooperate on: 1. design and music, 2. use of Ukrainian locations in postcards and show programming, 3. use of Ukrainian cultural elements, and 4. selection of hosts.
Host City: Liverpool (Liverpool Arena / M&S Bank Arena)
On 7/10, Liverpool was announced as the host city for the 2023 contest. The arena will be the M&S Bank Arena, which for Eurovision purposes will simply be known as the Liverpool Arena. It has a capacity of about 11000, and is situated right next to the river Mersey.
Hosts: Julia Sanina, Graham Norton, Hannah Waddingham, Alesha Dixon
These four hosts were announced on the 22nd, live on BBC Radio 2 on the Zoe Ball Show.
Alesha Dixon is a British TV presenter and pop star, known especially for her 2008 hit "The Boy Does Nothing", and more recently as a judge on Britain's Got Talent.
Hannah Waddingham is a British actress, most well-known for her role in Game of Thrones as the nun who said "shame" as well as Rebecca Welton in Ted Lasso.
Graham Norton is the resident grand final commentator for the BBC, and is actually of Irish origin. He took over from Terry Wogan in the early 2000s, and has also hosted several British national finals. Earlier in the season he said that he did not want to give up commentating, which many took as a sign of him not hosting. However, it was also revealed on the 22nd that he will indeed still commentate on the grand final, but will be alternating the duty with Mel Giedroyc, who had previously been the 2018 UK spokesperson and one of the BBC semi-final commentators in 2016 and 2017. Like with the commentary, Norton will not appear in the semi-finals.
Julia (pronounced "Yuliya") Sanina is the lead singer of the group The Hardkiss, which took part in Vidbir, the Ukrainian selection, in 2016 and came second after Jamala. Back in late January, she had appeared in a video played at the Allocation Draw featuring Eurovision-adjacent Ukrainians, which led fans to speculate on The Hardkiss' possible involvement in Eurovision 2023. Some also noted that The Hardkiss' latest tour will be ending in April, right before Eurovision. Sure enough, Sanina was announced as one of the hosts for Eurovision 2023, and is the only one from Ukraine.
Previously many had expected Timur Mirošnyčenko, the resident UA:PBC commentator and 2017 green room host, to be one of the hosts; however it was revealed that for the three shows, he would only take up his usual commentating duties, except for appearing occasionally in VT inserts during the show. For the opening ceremony however, he will be one of the hosts, the other being Liverpudlian broadcaster Sam Quek.
The semi-final commentary for the BBC will be taken up by Rylan Clark and Scott Mills as usual.
Show Dates: 9 May (SF1), 11 May (SF2), 13 May (Grand Final)
First odd-number dates Eurovision since 2017, which incidentally was hosted on the exact same days as 2023.
Slogan & Theming: United By Music
The theme art features four main colours: dark blue, light blue, yellow, and pink/red, with the light and yellow referencing Ukraine's national flag and the dark blue and red representing the UK, although the red could also be interpreted as pink in a reference to Kalush Orchestra's iconic pink bucket hat. This visual identity was devised jointly by UK agency Superunion and Ukrainian creative studio Starlight Creative.
The theming also features many concentric hearts in its design, named an ECG (electrocardiogram) effect, to "illustrate the collective beating heart of all Eurovision contestants and viewers alike". The typeface is named "Penny Lane", which was the standard typeface used on street name signs in 20th century Liverpool.
Stage Design: seven movable LED panels at the back, with a bridge in the middle leading out to a circular platform; LED strips on edges of semicircular vertical platforms on either side; three large concentric circles on the ceiling with LEDs surrounding them

Or basically this. Worth noting that the standing fan area in the middle has returned, after last appearing on the 2019 stage. The set was designed by Julio Himede, who has also designed a number of stages for other huge musical events, such as the American Song Contest 2022 stage. According to Himede, the architecture "takes inspiration from a wide hug, opening its arms to Ukraine, the show’s performers and guests from across the world". The stage itself occupies over 450 m², while the moving LED panels take up 220 m². Over 700 video tiles will be integrated into the floor and more than 1500m of LED lights. This also marks a second year in a row where Florian Wieder, the resident stage designer in the 2010s, did not design the final Eurovision stage.
Rule Changes: voting changes, no more journalists at pre-jury-show rehearsals, postcards back to in-person
Backing vocals are still permitted to be put on the backing track rather than having live singers provide said vocals, although the latter is still permitted as always. Lead vocals must still be sung live, as in the previous two contests. That said, the EBU has this time specified that it is forbidden to lip sync to vocals.
The EBU also announced voting changes, those being the exclusion of juries from semi-finals, and inclusion of a rest-of-the-world (ROTW) vote in both the semi-finals and final, amounting to the same number of points as the televote of one participating country. The list of eligible voting countries will be released by the EBU in due course.
On the 2nd, it was posted on the Eurovision Media Centre that even accredited journalists may no longer get to watch the first and second rehearsals for each country. The first time a journalist can watch rehearsals will be the first Dress Rehearsal, that is to say the pre-show before the Jury Show. The EBU explains that this is to allow artists to rehearse in private and for the production to perfect the performance before it is seen in full at the Jury Show. Nonetheless, excerpts from these initial rehearsals will still be uploaded to the Eurovision digital channels as well as that of various broadcasters.
On the 18th, Joker Out from Slovenia filmed their postcard, during which RTVSLO revealed that the production company for the 40-second-long postcards wanted segments to be shot in the participants' home countries. Joker Out, for instance, shot their segment on the roof of the RTVSLO building, featuring 4 pinball machines. However, it was also agreed earlier by the BBC and UA:PBC that Ukrainian locations would be used in postcards. How these two may be combined is as yet unknown. The BBC promises that the postcards will "embody the 2023 Eurovision Song Contest slogan ..., and use innovative techniques to showcase each Eurovision entry as well as linking the UK and Ukraine". They will be produced by Windfall Films in conjunction with a Ukrainian company named 23/32.
Tickets: expected by late February
As announced in a graphic posted by the BBC on 31/1.
The M&S Bank Arena on the smaller side in terms of recent Eurovision arenas, which might make ticket procurement more difficult than in other years. The UK government also announced that almost 3000 tickets will be made available at reduced cost (specifically 20 pounds) for displaced Ukrainians, although the tickets being spread across all nine shows means that the material impact will not be very significant.
Interval Acts: Kalush Orchestra performance, The Hardkiss?
Herman Nenov, creative director for ESC2023 from UA:PBC says that an "unprecedented number" of Ukrainian artists will appear in Liverpool, who will mostly be Eurovision artists but 'several others' will also appear. These artists may not necessarily sing however. April is when more details regarding interval acts will be revealed, according to the BBC.
Kalush Orchestra confirmed in a press conference on the 18th that they will indeed be performing in Liverpool, as all previous winners do. Kateryna from Go_A also confirmed attendance of ESC2023, although it is not yet known whether Go_A will perform in Liverpool.
After The Hardkiss' main singer, Julia Sanina, was announced as one of the Eurovision 2023 hosts, it seems quite likely that the group will perform as one of the interval acts, but this has yet to be confirmed.
Allocation Draw: 31st January, St. George's Hall, Liverpool
Was hosted by Rylan (BBC semi-final commentator) and AJ Odudu (UK 2022 spokesperson).
As usual, the host city insignia was handed over from the previous host city mayor, in this case Stefano Lo Russo (the Turin mayor), to Joanne Anderson, the mayor of Liverpool. Young people from a local Liverpool school and members of the Ukrainian community who have settled in Liverpool since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine also assisted in the draw by holding the Big 5 + Ukraine cards while Rylan shuffled and drew the halves.
Germany, France and Italy will vote in the first semi-final, while Spain, the UK, and Ukraine will vote in the second semi-final. The 31 non-automatic-finalists were also drawn into one of the two semi-finals via a 15-16 split. Consensus among fans at the moment is that the first semi-final is far stronger than the second. Norway, Sweden and Finland were all drawn into the first semi, while Cyprus and Greece were both drawn into the second semi.
Budget: ~12 million pounds (or just under 14 million euros)
Of which £2 million come from Liverpool City Council, and the rest are covered by the BBC, the EBU and the British government.
Administrative Directors: Rachel Ashdown, Martin Green, Andrew Cartmell, Lee Smithurst, Twan van de Nieuwehuizen, James O'Brien; Nikki Parsons, Richard Valentine and Ollie Bartlett, Dan Shipton, Kojo Samuel, Julio Himede, Robert Edwards, Tim Routledge
You may find detailed descriptions of these directors either on my blog post from December, or just on the Eurovision website.
Pre-parties:
Barcelona Eurovision Party (23rd - 25th March, Sant Jordi Club, Barcelona, Spain)
Featuring names such as Albina & Familja Kelmendi, Barei, Beth, Dami Im, Destiny, Efendi, Gustaph, Iru Khechanovi, Megara, Monika Linkyte, Poli Genova, Ronela Hajati, Rosa Lopez, Susanne Georgi, Suzy, Wild Youth, and WRS.
Polish Eurovision Party (1st April, Praga Centrum, Warsaw, Poland)
To be hosted by Poli Genova (Bulgaria 2011, 2016) and Konrad Zemlik. Will feature several 2023 acts, such as Albina & Familja Kelmendi. Tickets on sale since the 15th of January.
PrePartyES (7th - 8th April, Sala La Riviera, Madrid, Spain)
50 acts have been promised and around 16 hours of concerts. Confirmed names so far include Alika, Joker Out, Theodor Andrei, Gustaph, Monika Linkyte, as well as Aritz Aren, E'Femme, Fusa Nocta, Karmento, Megara, Meler, Rakky Ripper, Sofia Martin, and Siderland from Benidorm Fest 2023.
Eurovision in Concert (15th April, AFAS Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands)
No exact lineup yet, but as per tradition a mix of old Eurovision acts and upcoming 2023 acts are expected. Confirmed 2023 acts so far include Mia Nicolai & Dion Cooper, Gustaph, Joker Out, Wild Youth, Voyager, Monika Linkyte, Teya & Salena, and Albina & Familja Kelmendi. To be hosted by Cornald Maas and Hila Noorzai.
London Eurovision Party (16th April, HERE at Outernet, London, United Kingdom)
Pre-sale tickets will be available to OGAE UK and DICE.fm members at 10am on the 4th, while tickets will officially go on sale 24 hours later. Confirmed names so far include Joker Out, Wild Youth, Voyager, Teya & Salena, and Tamara Todevska.
Israel Calling 2023 (March - April, Tel Aviv, Israel)
Little is known yet, except that the preparty will happen, as implied in Eurovision Albania's Instagram post. One confirmed name is Albina & Familja Kelmendi.
Additional Events: cultural festival, Douze Points!, Eurovisioncast, Baileys sponsorship, The Greatest Show On Earth, And The Winner Isn't
Culture Liverpool has made a call for artists to take part in this festival, which will showcase UK and Ukrainian music as well as Ukrainian culture. Support will be provided to match a British artist with a Ukrainian artist.
"Douze Points!" is a show taking place on the 12th of May at 7:30pm UK time where the Philharmonic Orchestra Liverpool will perform a series of Eurovision hits, ranging from ABBA's Waterloo to Kalush Orchestra's Stefania. Tickets to attend the performance from the orchestra will range from £35 to £75. The show will be hosted by Owain Wyn Evans.
Eurovisioncast is a BBC podcast which features Måns Zelmerlöw, Nina Warhurst, Daniel Rosney and Ngunan Adamu. The podcast will "bring the inside scoop on plans and unique insights on the competition", and will also have former participants, 2023 participants and "celebrity fans" as guests. The weekly podcast launched on 31/1 and is available on BBC Sounds, BBC Radio 5 and BBC Radio Merseyside.
Free Baileys (one might even say, Alcohol Is Free) for everyone in the green room and press centre. Hooray! If previous sponsors are any indication, then there will likely be a special Eurovision line of Baileys' products coming out soon as well. Not too many details available at this time.
"The Greatest Show On Earth" and "And The Winner Isn't" are two documentaries that will be produced for BBC One and BBC iPlayer, and will be broadcast in May. The former celebrates 25 years since the UK's last Eurovision hosting as well as featuring a sneak peek into this year's production backstage, while the latter delves into Eurovision contestants which did not win the contest, but have found great success afterwards in the music industry.
EuroClub Location: Camp and Furnace
The Baltic Triangle location is only a 5-minute walk from the arena, and is also located on the riverfront. The club will take place between the 5th and 13th of May. It will be hosted by OGAE, and tickets for the club (both day passes and week passes) will be available in March. A pre-general public allocation of week passes is also available for OGAE members, which started going on sale on the 16th.
Current confirmed guest performers include Conchita Wurst, Charlotte Perrelli, and Linda Martin.
EuroVillage: Pier Head
The fan zone, also known as the Eurovision Village or Eurovillage, will be open from the 4th to the 13th. It has a capacity of around 25000, and opens at 1pm each day, and closes at 11pm for days other than the grand final. The Liverpool Echo reported that it will NOT be completely free to enter the Eurovillage. It was noted in an open letter that while the Eurovillage will be free for access for the semi-finals, there will be a fee to enter it during the grand final, and everyone in the area will be dispersed by 12:30am. The councillor who posted the letter explained that this was to 'protect residents' interests', as Pier Head is also a residential area.
Important Dates:
early March?: tickets go on sale
11th of March: national selections for Portugal and Sweden - last national finals of the season
some time after the 26th of March: stage construction (the Gymnastics British Championships will take place from the 23rd to the 26th)
Next Known Eurovision Song: Netherlands (1/3)
Non-participating Countries: Andorra, Belarus, Bulgaria, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Russia, Slovakia
You can read their reasoning on the Wikipedia page. It largely revolves around disinterest and/or financial inability.
Also Enisa (New York, American Song Contest 2022) tweets that she was allegedly supposed to represent Montenegro in Eurovision 2023, but the broadcaster could not find a way to finance it. She also tweeted later on that her song that was meant for Montenegro 2023 was named "OLÈ", and released the full song on 8/12.
Some Turkish politicians have called for Turkey to return to Eurovision. Most of these politicians are of opposition parties, and they have in fact made a pledge to return Turkey to Eurovision should they be elected into office.
Fazla (Bosnia and Herzegovina 1993) says that he, now as a politician (a senior advisor to the minister of defence to be exact), will be working to get BiH back into Eurovision. The funding shortfalls could be dealt with, in his words, as quickly as 2024.
The prime minister of Luxembourg, Xavier Bettel, who is also the Minister for Communications and Media, has begun communications with RTL, the Luxembourgish national broadcaster, as well as the Council of Luxembourg, regarding potentially returning to the contest in 2024; and in fact the Luxembourgish government has created a special team to focus on returning the country to the contest. Other than Morocco, Luxembourg remains the only previous participant which has not made any appearance at the contest in the 21st century. But this could very well change in 2024.
Participating Countries: 37 countries, which are as follows:
Albania
Festivali I Këngës 61 took place from the 19th to the 22nd of December, and was hosted by Arbana Osmani. Crucially, there were two winners: one being the jury-picked winner, where the top 3 was announced one by one as usual; but there was now also a public winner, which was determined by SMS voting during the festival. The Albanian representative to Eurovision would be the public winner, rather than the jury winner. In other words, as far as Eurovision is concerned, FIK is now 100% televote.
One big name was Elsa Lila, while Fifi was another hyped name that some speculated could win the televote. Ultimately, "Duje" by Albina and the Kelmendi family won the public vote, especially being propped up by the Kosovar public as Albina Kelmendi (and her family of course) is from Kosovo. Elsa Lila meanwhile won the jury vote with "Evita", becoming a 3-time winner of the festival. Albina & Familja Kelmendi will now be representing Albania in Liverpool, becoming the third Kosovan representative of Albania after Rona Nishliu (2012) and Lindita (2017). Albina has confirmed that the song will undergo a revamp, although there will not be any English lyric additions.
On the 4th, Eurovision Albania reported on Instagram that the host Arbana Osmani and her husband Eduart Grishaj (FIK61 director) will remain for FIK62 and 63. This could mean that the new televote system will remain for at least two more years.
Recently it was found that Albina Kelmendi had started following well-known Swedish Melodifestivalen and Eurovision staging director Sacha Jean-Baptiste. Later, Eurovision Albania confirmed on their Instagram page that the Albanian entry will indeed be staged by Sacha Jean-Baptiste. Furthermore, the revamp is now finished, and features 60+ live instruments, mostly strings. Albina Kelmendi (unclear if by herself or with family) will also attend and perform at the various preparties in Tel Aviv, Barcelona, Madrid, Amsterdam, and Warsaw over the next two months.
Armenia
There were various rumours that Brunette, an artist with two very popular songs in Armenia as well as a JESC2022 juror, had been close to the Armenian delegation lately and may even soon be announced as the Armenian representative to Liverpool.
In fact, on 25/1, Armenian news outlet Hraparak reported that Brunette will indeed represent Armenia in Eurovision 2023, specifically with an R&B song which will be released in late February. According to other sources, she is the main producer of the song alongside Artem Valter, who was responsible for revamping "Chains On You" after Athena Manoukian had won Depi Yevratesil 2020.
This news was confirmed on the 1st, when Brunette was officially announced as the Armenian representative. David Tserunyan, the head of the Armenian delegation, states that the song and (music) video are being worked on at the moment, and that the song will be released next month.
Some sources have compared Brunette's song to the Armenian entries from 2014 and 2016, but also featuring rap elements. The chorus will be in the Armenian language.
Australia
It was announced on 14/11 that Australia Decides will not be returning for a fourth edition on the Gold Coast. Instead, an internal selection was held. Publicly interested artists included Jaguar Jonze, Dami Im, Sheppard and Voyager.
After months of silence, SBS suddenly announced the Australian representative and the song on the 21st this month with little notice. It was revealed to be Voyager with the song "Promise". Voyager are an electro-rock band based in western Australia, who had already taken part in Australia Decides 2022 with the song "Dreamer" and had in fact won the televote.
Their new song, "Promise", was released on the same day as the artist reveal. Much of the music video was filmed in Perth in western Australia. The announcement of Voyager makes them the second Eurovision 2023 artist to come from Australia Decides 2022, the first being Andrew Lambrou for Cyprus.
Austria
On 31/1, ORF announced that Teya & Salena will be representing Austria in Liverpool. Teya is Thea Devy, who participated in the Serbian national final in 2020. Their uptempo pop song will be released on the 8th of March, and according to rumours their song will be named "Edgar Allan Poe". William Lee Adams from Wiwibloggs, who was on the jury which selected the song, says that he thinks the song is "absolutely crazy", but was also consistently at the top of his list. He also thinks that the song has a good chance of qualification with the televote-only system.
Their music video for the song was filmed around the 18th in Prague, working with the Czech videographer Ruy Okamura. Their song appears to feature choreography.
Azerbaijan
On 7/12, Isa Melikov, the Azerbaijani head of delegation, resigned from his post. He was replaced by Vasif Mammadov, Deputy Director-general of İctimai TV. Just a day later, İTV officially opened calls for singers and/or composers to apply to represent Azerbaijan in Eurovision 2023. On 11/12, Eldar Gasimov, part of the winning duo in 2011, joined the Azerbaijani delegation as the official music producer. Submissions closed on the 31st of December, although it was suddenly extended to 15/1 a few days AFTER submissions had initially already closed.
On 1/1, 12xal, the main Azerbaijani Eurovision news site, reported that more than 200 submissions were received, most of which came from foreign composers. That said, Mammadov appears to prefer Azerbaijani talent this time around, and says that they will select the local song if a local and foreign song met the same criteria. Mammadov also says that the selection process of song and representative was expected to be completed by the end of January.
Recently, rumours have emerged that Mamagama have been selected to represent Azerbaijan in Liverpool, although this has yet to be confirmed by İTV. Mamagama had previously participated in Albanian music competition Kënga Magjike 2022, alongside such names as Alvan, Stefan, We Are Domi, and Andrea (North Macedonia 2022). They placed 4th overall, becoming the highest-placed international artist in KM that year and winning the "Best New International Artist" category.
These rumours emerged as Rauf Kingsley, one of the artists who submitted a song to the broadcaster, accused the Azerbaijani broadcaster of selecting Mamagama early on due to ties with the delegation, and that submissions were only being received for appearances sake. İctimai has since posted a statement on the 1st denying this, and says that five acts are still in the running to represent the country.
These five acts were revealed on the 2nd, and in addition to Mamagama (whose producer was recently replaced by two other Azerbaijani musicians), there was also Azər Nəsibov, Humay Aslanova & Əmrah Musayev, Leyla İzzətova, and Turan & Tural Bağmanovlar. It was also reported that all five acts in the running to represent Azerbaijan had written their songs in Azerbaijan, with only one of the songs featuring a foreign composer. This will thus mark the first time since 2008 (their debut) that Azerbaijan will send a locally produced track, as they are known to obtain songs from foreign (usually Swedish) songwriters for their entries.
Belgium
VRT returned to their national final Eurosong for the first time since 2016. It was hosted by Peter van De Veire, the VRT commentator for Eurovision as well as (co-)host of previous Eurosongs.
7 songs competed to represent Belgium on 14/1 in the Paleis 12, and despite the initial favourites being Cherine and Gala Dragot, it was Gustaph who unexpectedly (even to himself) came out on top, scoring just one point more than The Starlings. Regardless, Gustaph, who had previously been a backing vocalist for Sennek and a vocal coach for Hooverphonic, will now represent Belgium in Liverpool.
Croatia
The national final Dora took place in February in the city of Opatija on the 11th. On 9/12, the 18 names in Dora 2023, plus the 4 reserves, were revealed alongside their song names and songwriters, among which was Damir Kedžo. However, unlike 2020, his song this year was in English, rather than Croatian. All the songs were released at once on 12/1. Favourites included Harmonija Disonance, Đana, and Hana Mašić, although Let 3 are also very popular locally. The show was be hosted by Mario Lipovšek Battifiaca and Marko Tolja, as well as Mirko Fodor. Reigning Dora winner Mia Dimšić opened the show singing a different version of Guilty Pleasure.
On the 11th, the national final took place, and Let 3 stormed to victory with the song "Mama ŠČ", which featured a very distinctive and perhaps polarizing staging. The group will now represent Croatia in Liverpool, despite a slight delay in the official announcement on the eurovision.tv website.
Cyprus
It was announced on 17/10 that Andrew Lambrou will be representing Cyprus. Andrew Lambrou is an Australian singer with Cypriot ancestry. He lives and works in Sydney, and entered a song named "Electrify" into Australia Decides 2022. Ultimately, he ended up 7th out of 11 entries.
It was revealed later that he went to Stockholm to record his track, and some of his songwriters include Jimmy Thörnfeldt, Jimmy Jansson and Thomas Stengaard, all of which are co-authors of numerous Melodifestivalen entries, so it seems there will be Swedish involvement in the Cypriot entry for 2023.
On 6/1, OGAE Greece reports that Lambrou's song will include a recording of the Stockholm String Orchestra, and the music video will be filmed between late January and early February, and released in mid-February. Lambrou on a TV interview also described the performance to be "epic". According to various rumours from Greek and Cypriot sources, Lambrou's song is said to resemble the style of Imagine Dragons.
On the 18th, Lambrou revealed to INFE Greece that his song will be released on the 2nd of March. Furthermore, his music video was filmed in Athens. The stage performance will be directed by Marvin Dietmann and Ross Nicholson. He also revealed that his song will be named "Break A Broken Heart".
Czech Republic => Czechia
This edition of ESCZ took place on 30/1. It was also a live national final, for the first time in 15 years. On the 4th, it was announced by the Czech broadcaster that more than 170 songs had been received, more than that from last year.
Furthermore, the voting system was 100% public vote, and it will take a 70/30 split between the international vote and the domestic Czech vote. The voting opened on the Eurovision app and escz2023.com after the show ended, and ended on the 6th, after which the winner and Czech representative was announced. The show was broadcasted on the official Eurovision YouTube channel for international viewers, and on iVysílání for Czech audiences. The national final itself took place in the Kavčí Hory television centre in Prague.
On 30/1, Adam Mišík, a Czech actor and artist, hosted the 38-minute-long national final, while Rob Lilley and James Rowe, the hosts of the Euro Trip Podcast, acted as co-hosts in the green room, interviewing the artists before their performances.
The grand favourite was Vesna, with the Czech Republic rising from 28th to *5th* in the Eurovision 2023 winning odds after the release of "My Sister's Crown", and with many fans saying that the song can win Eurovision.
Ultimately, it was announced by Mišík in a press conference on the 7th that Vesna had indeed won both the Czech vote and international vote and hence the overall national final. Vesna will now represent the Czech Republic in Liverpool.
It took the official Eurovision media about 3 days to announce Vesna as the Czech representatives. As it turns out, the Czech Republic in Eurovision has now officially rebranded - to Czechia. We Are Domi were thus the last representatives of the Czech Republic, while Vesna will be the first-ever representatives of Czechia at Eurovision.
The last Eurovision country name change before this took place in June 2018 (i.e. only took effect for Eurovision 2019), which was when FYR Macedonia changed to North Macedonia.
Denmark
The final of DMGP took place on the 11th in the Arena Næstved, in the city of Næstved. The hosts were Tina Müller and Heino Hansen.
On the 19th, the 8 songs competing in the national final were released at once. Favourites included Eyjaa, Reiley, and Maia Maia. Ultimately, despite the DR voting app breaking during the national final, out of those three only Reiley entered the superfinal; and it was also Reiley who won the selection, and he will now be representing Denmark in Eurovision 2023 with the song "Breaking Your Heart". It was reported however that this edition of DMGP was the least watched in *30 years*, although it was still the most watched TV show of the week.
Estonia
Returned to Eesti Laul for their selection. The two semi-finals took place on the 12th and 14th this month in the Viimsi Atrium, while the final took place on the 11th of February in the Tondiraba Ice Hall. The hosts were Tõnis Niinemets and Grete Kuld, who also hosted together in 2021.
During 1-2/11, the 20 artists participating in Eesti Laul 2023 were revealed, while the selected songs were revealed on 2/12 on a special ETV broadcast. Favourites among fans included Alika, Ollie, and Sissi.
On 14/1, the second semi-final concluded. Public SMS voting then continued until the 16th, where the two most voted non-qualifiers would be entered into the final as televote wildcards. These wildcards were later revealed to be Elysa and Mia. These two singers joined the other 10 in the final.
For the final, the interval acts included the group Zetod singing Stefan's EL-winning song Hope (but in the Estonian language), while Stefan sang his newer songs. Karl-Erik Taukar, Ines and Púr Múdd also performed. As in previous years, the initial voting was a 50/50 split between the televote and the jury, but the top 3 of that result then entered a televote-only superfinal, where the public alone will decide the Estonian representative.
As speculated by many, Alika came out victorious, having won the international jury vote in the first round of voting, but also the final televote. The superfinal included her as well as the only other two pop-rock acts in the contest, Ollie and Bedwetters. Alika will now represent Estonia with the song "Bridges", which is co-written by Wouter Hardy who also co-wrote Arcade and Tout L'Univers, in Eurovision 2023.
Finland
Returned to Uuden Musiikin Kilpailu for their national final. Samu Haber, former front-man of Sunrise Avenue, hosted the show on the 25th in Logomo in Turku, and there was an after-party that went on until 4am. Reigning UMK winner The Rasmus as well as the UMK2022 commercial success BESS performed as interval acts, as well as the host himself. There were seven finalists, and their songs were revealed one-by-one on each weekday between 12/1 and 20/1.
On 19/12, Iltalehti, a Finnish newspaper, reported a few possible names for UMK 2023, which include Robin Packalen, Portion Boys, Lxandra and Benjamin Peltonen. Sure enough, all the names reported by Iltalehti appeared, as well as Keira, Käärijä, and KUUMAA. The songs, 4 of which were in Finnish, were then released over the next two weeks. Favourites included Käärijä and Benjamin, but especially the former. Starting from the 1st, interviews with each artist were posted on the UMK Youtube channel.
On the 13th, it was announced that in addition to their current UMK broadcasts in Finnish, Swedish, English, Inari Sami, Northern Sami, and Russian, there would now also be broadcasts provided in Ukrainian and Finnish Sign Language, interpreted by Halyna Serhijivna and Miguel Peltomaa respectively. The running order was also revealed. Robin Packalen opened the show, while Portion Boys closed it.
The international jury, which took up 25% of the total vote, was revealed on the 23rd to include Australia, Germany, Poland, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, and Ukraine.
After having generated massive hype both domestically and abroad, Käärijä won UMK by a landslide, getting *539* points and 387 points MORE than the runner-up, which were Portion Boys. Käärijä, real name Jere Pöyhönen, will now represent Finland with the song "Cha Cha Cha" in the second half of the first semi-final. Finland starts off as a strong favourite, with the country having already reached third place in the Eurovision 2023 winning odds, and many speculating that Cha Cha Cha could win the televote in May.
France
After months of near silence from the French delegation, on 12/1, Alexandra Redde-Amiel, the head of delegation, announced that La Zarra had been internally selected as the French representative for Eurovision 2023.
La Zarra, real name Fatima Zahra Hafdi, is a Quebecoise singer of Moroccan origin that currently lives in Paris. She is described as combining "the class and style of Audrey Hepburn and Marilyn Monroe, with the sense of tragedy of Edith Piaf, the post-modern intoxication of Lady Gaga, the naked frankness of Barbara, and the fragility of Dalida". Another famous song of hers is "Tu T'En Iras". Earlier on in the season, Alexandra Redde-Amiel also mentioned that they would like to win Eurovision 2023, and this was reiterated at the press conference. The song is expected to be a French chanson. It was later also revealed that the duo of producers behind Tu T'En Iras will be responsible for her Eurovision 2023 entry, and the song will feature a "surprising mix of genres".
The song was recorded on 24/1, with the French head of delegation also having been present in the recording studio as revealed by various Instagram stories. Despite having been announced that La Zarra's song would be released in two to three weeks from the date of the press conference, recently Alexandra Redde-Amiel tweeted that a further week or two would still be required.
On the 9th, La Zarra posted an Instagram story of her in the studio. The photo revealed that her song for Eurovision is named "Évidemment", meaning "obviously" or "evidently" in French. On the 19th, on the show "20H30 Le Dimanche", her song was premiered for the first time. The song is described as a "disco banger", and it was co-written with producer Benny Adams.
Georgia
For the first time since 2020, Georgia returned to selecting their act via a talent show, though this time the show is The Voice Georgia, as opposed to Georgian Idol for 2019 and 2020. The final of the show took place on the 2nd this month. The members of the judging panel on The Voice Georgia included Stephane Mgebrishvili, Dato Evgenidze, Sopo Toroshelidze, and Dato Porchhidze. The show was hosted by Gvanca Daraselia.
One of the successful participants of the blind auditions was Iru Khechanovi, who was in fact one of the members of Candy (Georgia JESC2011).
The semi-final took place on 26/1, during which Iru sang Rise Like A Phoenix by Conchita Wurst, and she qualified with over 44% of the televote within her coach's team. Despite some drama occurring with an interview quote ahead of the final, Iru Khechanovi eventually reigned supreme in The Voice Georgia, getting 21.88% of the televote with her performance of Euphoria by Loreen. The other favourites Likuna Tutisani and Lika Siradze came 3rd and 4th respectively. Iru Khechanovi will now officially be the Georgian representative for Eurovision 2023, after having represented Georgia in Junior Eurovision 12 years ago in Yerevan and winning as part of Candy.
Iru is now given a month to work on her song for Eurovision, and she will write the song alongside Giga Kukhianidze, who composed many of Georgia's recent Junior Eurovision successes such as Bzz, Candy Music, Mzeo, Let's Count The Smiles and I Believe, the latter of which Iru was in fact a lyricist for. As such, the Georgian song for Liverpool is expected to come out sometime in March.
On the 18th, Iru revealed that her song is almost complete. There had been rumours claiming that her song will be a ballad, however it appears that those rumours have since been recanted.
Germany
The German selection, named "Unser Lied Für Liverpool", will be broadcasted on the 3rd of March at 22:20 German time live from the MMC Studios in Cologne, to be hosted once again by Barbara Schöneberger.
On 9/11, more details about the German selection were revealed. There will be a TikTok wildcard, where the most voted song on the platform complying with the rules will be entered into the selection. Voting will once again involve a pre-show online vote and a televote during the show. The TikTok submissions ended on 28/11, as did the online submissions.
Stefan Leidner from NDR also revealed that the online voting results will not be announced regional broadcaster by regional broadcaster, as was in the case in 2022, but instead put together in one bundle or even combined with the televote outright.
On 27/1, the first 8 acts for Unser Lied Fur Liverpool were announced. Some of these names, such as Will Church, initially only put themselves up as TikTok candidates, however it appears NDR has decided to include them outright in the selection. Current favourites include Patty Gurdy and Anica Russo.
The final act for the national final was, as previously mentioned, decided via TikTok voting. Voting closed on the 3rd, and Ikke Hüftgold was victorious with over 50% of the vote. He will now join the other 8 candidates in the German national final.
On the 4th, Eurovision.de announced the voting system for the national final. There will be an international jury, consisting of 40 jurors from 8 countries, worth 50% of the vote. The other 50% will be made up of the televote, which will be calculated proportionally rather than in scales of 12, 10, 8, etc.. Ticket sales started at 20:00 CET on the 5th and go for 29 euros each. It was revealed on the 20th that The BossHoss and Ilse DeLange will be the interval acts for the national final, performing their new song named "You".
Current favourites include Lord Of The Lost, Patty Gurdy, Anica Russo and Frida Gold. Online voting started on the 24th, and ends on the 3rd next month. Despite earlier comments, it seems the televote will simply be an addition of the live televote and online vote, rather than some specific percentage distribution.
Greece
ERT returns to the internal selection for 2023. On 28/12, 70 demoscopic jury members which had been randomly selected earlier went to the ERT studios to listen to the seven remaining songs in the running, and voted for their favourites. The seven artists in the running to represent Greece in Eurovision 2023 were also revealed.
On 19/1, ERT announced that the shortlist had been narrowed down to Melissa Mantzoukis, Victor Vernicos, and Maria Maragou & Antonia Kaouri.
And on 30/1, ERT announced that Victor Vernicos had been selected. Victor Vernicos, full name Victor Vernicos Jørgensen, is a 16-year-old singer of Greek and Danish descent. His song, "What They Say", is described as an emotional ballad. Part of the song was (possibly accidentally) released on TikTok on 31/1.
On the 2nd, Melissa Mantzoukis, the favourite among the demoscopic jury, announced that she would take legal action against the ERT jury, accusing them of intentionally giving low scores to her after seeing that she had done well with the demoscopic jury. Antonia Kaouri and Maria Maragou also revealed that they had in fact withdrawn their entry, but it was nonetheless drafted into the final 3 (and voted as the internal jury's favourite) against their will. Furthermore, from the figures released, it was revealed that the ERT jury had given out *more* points than the demoscopic jury despite the split being stated to be 50.6% demoscopic jury and 49.4% ERT jury, leading to a split closer to 45/55.
On the 8th, it was revealed on a TV interview by Mantzoukis' lawyer that ERT did not respond to Mantzoukis' extrajudicial request, and if they start legal proceedings, the representative selection process may have to be stopped for some time, and this could even result in Greece *withdrawing* from Eurovision 2023.
On the 13th, ERT gave their first official response, acknowledging the possibility of withdrawal, but not addressing the flawed selection process. And on the 19th, Maria Mazakou, one of the ERT1 Eurovision commentators who had been on the ERT committee, went on a talk show to explain how the voting had worked, and basically publicly acknowledged that it was flawed, and that some songs would not receive points even when they should have, which was greeted with a positive response from Mantzoukis. Nonetheless, Mazakou implies that the final representative decision will not change, and that Vernicos is still heading to Liverpool for Greece.
And despite Mantzoukis' positive comments towards Kozakou's revelations, Mantzoukis intends to continue with the legal procedure, thus leaving Greece still at risk of withdrawal from Eurovision 2023. And DESPITE this risk of withdrawal, Victor Vernicos continues to finalize his song for Liverpool, hoping to have it released by early March. And according to Eurovisionfun, the song will be released on the 6th of March.
Iceland
Returning to Söngvakeppnin for their national final. The final will take place on the 4th of March. The show will be hosted by Unnsteinn Manuel Stefánsson, Ragnhildur Steinunn Jónsdóttir, and Sigurður Þorri Gunnarsson. Submissions closed on the 4th of October, and it was later revealed that 132 songs had been received. The competing artists and songs were revealed on the 28th on a special show named "Lögin í Söngvakeppninni 2023".
Almost all finalists have brought both Icelandic and English versions of their songs, although as usual it is up to them which version they would like to sing in the final, while they are required to sing the Icelandic version in the semi-final.
Current favourites include Diljá, Kristín Sesselja, and Silja Rós & Kjalar.
The first semi-final took place on the 18th, and initial fan favourite Celebs was eliminated, while Bragi and Diljá qualified for the final.
The second semi-final took place on the 25th, where fan favourites Kristín Sesselja and Silja Rós & Kjalar were both eliminated, and Sigga Ózk and Langi Seli & Skuggarnir qualified for the final. Celebs was also brought back to the final as a wildcard, having been the most voted non-qualifier out of all 6 NQs.
Ireland
The Irish national final is named Eurosong, and it was held once again on the Late Late Show. The selection took place on the 3rd, and had 6 candidates. On 9/1, all 6 songs were released at once by RTÉ. Among the names are a well-known Dublin-based band Wild Youth, as well as John Lydon, formerly the lead singer of Sex Pistols and was known as Johnny Rotten. The fan favourites were ADGY and CONNOLLY. Both favourites pledged to make changes to their songs, with Adgy adding a 20-second part in the Irish language, while Connolly added vocal moments among other things.
Despite the initial favourites, Wild Youth won the national jury and the televote and subsequently the selection, pipping ahead of Connolly, who had won the international jury, by 2 points. John Lydon, who headed the band Public Image Ltd, only came 4th with 6 points from all three demographics. Wild Youth will now represent Ireland in Liverpool.
On the 15th, it was announced that Ian Banham will be the creative director for the Irish entry. Banham had previously already worked with Wild Youth, as well as groups like Westlife. Conor O'Donohoe, the lead singer, also revealed on Twitter that they are revamping the song and also filming a music video for it.
Israel
Noa Kirel was selected by KAN in July, and she officially confirmed participation in August. Her song is set to be a pop song.
In an interview with local media, Noa Kirel says that her song will have "an Israeli colour", which will be expressed either in the lyrics or production, and will bring ethnic, Mediterranean(??), and Israeli directions. Furthermore, the budget for the Israeli participation in 2023 will be set at 900,000 EUR, two-thirds of which will be covered by Kirel's team and the rest by the public broadcaster KAN. Finally, she reveals that she and her team will have artistic freedom in the selection of the song.
On 23/12, Kirel gave an interview to Yedioth Ahronoth, in which she reveals that her song will mostly be in English, but also contain some Hebrew. Furthermore, she reveals to Channel 12 that there have actually been two songs recorded so far, one about love and the other about power. The ultimate decision on which proposal to bring to Liverpool will depend on officials at KAN, Doron Medalie (who recently joined the Israeli delegation and was a songwriter for Toy), and ultimately herself.
On 17/1, KAN announced that Noa Kirel's song is named "Unicorn", and was co-written by herself, Doron Medalie, Yinon Yahel and May Sfadia. The song will be released in early March, specifically the 8th, the same day as Austria's song release.
Italy
Sanremo continued as Italy's selection method for Eurovision 2023. The event took place between the 7th and 11th. Amadeus remained the main host, although he was joined by Gianni Morandi this year, and also Chiara Ferragni for the first and last nights. Francesca Fagnani was also a co-host for the third night.
On 4/12, Amadeus announced the first 22 of the 28 contestants, the "big" names. The songs themselves were not premiered to the public until the shows happened. On 16/12, the song titles were released. A day later, Sanremo Giovani took place, and the top 6 joined the previously announced 22 names to take part in Sanremo 2023.
Later, it was revealed that Madame forged her Covid vaccination certificate assisted by anti-vax doctors to avoid getting a vaccine. Regardless, it appears that after an apology made on Twitter where she pledged to "do the right thing", Madame remained in Sanremo 2023.
It was announced on 16/1 that the superfinal will now have five superfinalists, up from three previously. Initial press favourites included Marco Mengoni, Ultimo and Colapesce & Dimartino. Mengoni, who had represented Italy in Eurovision 2013 and achieved 7th place, also said that he would like to do Eurovision again.
The first night of Sanremo took place on the 8th, during which Blanco smashed some staging and kicked at some musicians due to an in-ear failure, and Marco Mengoni, Elodie, and Coma_Cose were declared the press favourites of the night. The second night took place on the 9th, and Black Eyed Peas performed as a guest, while Colapesce Dimartino, Madame and Tananai were revealed as the demoscopic jury favourites of the night. On the third night, the televote cast their vote, and the combined results revealed that the overall top 5 favourites were Marco Mengoni, Ultimo, Mr. Rain, Lazza and Tananai. Special guests that performed on the third night included Maneskin, Sangiovanni and Annalisa. On the fourth night, Chiara Francini acted as a co-host for duet covers night, and La Rappresentante Di Lista acted as guest performers.
On the final night, the vote was also purely televote, and 5 male acts were voted into the superfinal, including Marco Mengoni. He won Sanremo after winning pretty much every single local poll ever, and also alluded to the lack of women in the superfinal, which he finds to be a shame. Regardless, Mengoni will now once again be representing his country 10 years on.
At Sanremo, he sang the ballad "Due Vite", but at the Eurovision confirmation press conference, he suggested that he would change the song, possibly to shorten it (Due Vite is 3:45), but also possibly to another song entirely. Such a move is not unprecedented; Nina Zilli, the 2012 representative, had won Sanremo with "Per Sempre", but later changed to a different song, "L'Amore È Femmina", for Baku.
Appearing on the Euro Trip podcast, Claudio Sartorelli from Eurovision IN (the main Italian Eurovision news site) speculates that Mengoni may choose a song under 3 minutes from his upcoming album as his Eurovision entry, and/or do a duet with some female artist given his comments during the superfinal.
On the 21st, Mengoni appeared on a talk show hosted by ESC2022 host Alessandro Cattelan. During the show, he revealed that he still has yet to decide whether to sing "Due Vite" at Eurovision, despite the official Eurovision media already posting the Sanremo performance as the "National Final Performance" and updating the song name on eurovision.tv. He even said that he might sing a song in *English*.
Latvia
Returned to Supernova for their selection. The final took place on the 11th. On 2/12, it was announced that 121 song submissions had been received, 9 down from last year.
On 5/1, LTV released the list of artists and songs at the same time. Favourites included Sudden Lights, Patrisha, Luize, and Raum.
On the 4th, the semi-final took place. Initial fan favourites Inspo and Justs were eliminated, while Sudden Lights may have received over 20% of the vote (out of 14 candidates). Sudden Lights' song "Aijā" also debuted in Latvian Spotify charts at #40, as opposed to "Hush" by Patrisha which debuted at #155 and was the only other Supernova song to chart.
Sure enough, on the 11th, the final took place and Sudden Lights came out on top, having topped the televote and (seemingly) also the jury vote and becoming the Latvian representative for Liverpool. This means that for the first time since 2004, there will be a Latvian song at Eurovision with a non-negligible amount of Latvian-language lyrics in it, as the ending verse of Aijā is in Latvian.
Lithuania
Returned to the national final Pabandom Iš Naujo. The selection consisted of 5 shows, those being 2 heats, 2 semi-finals and 1 final. The two heats took place on the 21st and 28th this month, the semi-finals on the 4th and 11th of February, and the final on the 18th.
On 20/12, LRT announced the 30 participants of the national final, as well as their song titles.
The first semi-final took place on the 4th, with 5 acts qualifying for the final. Rūta Mur won with 10 points each from the jury and televote, while Petunija was 1 point behind receiving 12 from the jury and 7 from the televote. The second semi-final took place on the 11th, with once again 5 acts qualifying for the final. As expected, Beatrich won the semi-final, having received 12 points from the jury and 8 from the televote. Initial fan favourite Gebrasy was eliminated. Guest jurors included Duncan Laurence, Monika Liu and Vaidotas from The Roop.
The running order for the final was released on the 16th. Fan favourite Paulina Paukštaitytė was placed 4th, with the Lithuanian public favourites Beatrich and Rūta Mur directly following, while the main fan favourite Petunija was placed later than both of them at 8th. Monika Linkytė, who had been one half of the duo representative of Lithuania in 2015, closed the show.
The final took place on the 18th, and despite the initial Lithuanian public favourites having been Rūta Mur and Beatrich, it was Monika Linkytė who emerged victorious, after receiving 2nd in the televote and winning the jury vote. Rūta Mur had in fact gotten the same score, except with 12 in televote and 10 in the jury vote. Ultimately, it was decided that the jury who act as the tiebreaker, therefore Linkytė will be representing Lithuania with the song "Stay", which features a phrase in the Lithuanian language repeated several times.
Malta
Returned to MESC, or Malta Eurovision Song Contest, for their selection method. Rules largely remained the same, but quarter-finals were now re-introduced into the national final, giving us a total of 40 songs and 6 shows (three QFs (13/13/14), one semi, one final) which started on 13/1, and ended on the 11th.
On 28/12, 30-second snippets of all 40 songs were released by TVM. Ryan and Josmar, previously the MESC and MJESC hosts in 2022, hosted the quarterfinals, while the semi-final and final were hosted by Glen Vella (Malta 2011) and Amber (Malta 2015). Favourites included Brooke and Aidan, although on 23/1 Aidan was disqualified for excessive advertisement which violates TVM regulations. He has since tried to reverse that decision by taking legal action, although TVM remained firm on their action and Aidan will stay out of MESC2023. On the 4th, TVM announced the 24 semi-finalists.
The semi-final took place on the 9th, in which 24 participants were cut down to 16. Brooke remains the big favourite to win the national final after the staged live performances, although some speculated that The Busker and Maxine Pace were also outsiders with good chances.
The final took place on the 11th, during which Emma Muscat and, wait for it, Aidan, were interval acts. And despite her initial status as a favourite, Brooke only came 5th, while Matt Blxck won the jury vote and The Busker won the televote by a great margin. The latter scored enough points to win the whole national final, therefore the trio will be representing Malta in Eurovision 2023.
In a statement posted by TVM on the 13th, it was announced that unlike last year, there will be "minimal changes" made to The Busker's song, "Dance (Our Own Party)", between the conclusion of MESC and Eurovision. Recall that last year Emma Muscat won MESC with "Out Of Sight" but went to Turin with "I Am What I Am". This year it appears that the song will not change much, and all being well The Busker will perform Dance (Our Own Party) in Liverpool.
Moldova
The selection is now named Etapa Națională, and live auditions were then held on 28/1. A live show will take place on the 4th of March, consisting of 10 acts. Around Christmas of 2022, a new head of delegation was also appointed, that being Daria Căpățînă, who is also the head of children's content at TRM.
On 17/1, Moldovan broadcaster TRM revealed the 33 artists taking part in the live auditions, as well as their songs. Among which we have SunStroke Project with "Yummy Mommy", as well as the 2012 and 2013 Moldovan representatives, Pasha Parfeni ("Lăutar") and Aliona Moon ("O Mie"), this time with songs named "Soarele Și Luna" and "Du-mă" respectively. Regardless, all 33 songs can be accessed on www.eurovision.md . The main favourites appear to be the three aforementioned returning acts.
On 23/1, two acts were disqualified from the national final: Massimo Sinceri ft. DA-MUSE did not meet the 50% Moldovan singers rule, while NÖRDIKA had released their song in *2012*, although they had entered two songs, and the other one appears to remain eligible. NÖRDIKA thus remain in the national final, but only with one song.
On 28/1, the live auditions took place, during which the jury voted on their favourites and decided on the 10 finalists to appear on the live show. SunStroke Project came out on top, followed closely by Pasha Parfeni. Aliona Moon placed fourth with the jury, although it should be noted that this jury will not vote in the national final. Lola, an initial favourite, was disqualified, as she was stuck in traffic and could not attend the live casting on time.
The running order was released on the 10th, with Aliona Moon, SunStroke Project and Pasha Parfeni going in order from 7th to 9th one after another. Donia will open the show, while Corina Ivanov will close the show.
Netherlands
On 1/11, it was announced that Mia Nicolai and Dion Cooper would be representing the Netherlands in Liverpool. Their song is not known yet, but we know that it was co-written by Duncan Laurence, the 2019 winner. And someone found on a song database that one song was registered with the three aforementioned names, as well as a certain Jordan who Laurence also says that he co-wrote the song with. We can't hear this song yet, but we can see the title, which is "Chasing Highs". So this could very easily be their song for Eurovision 2023. Regardless, when the song will be revealed is still unknown.
On the 9th, it was found on the song lyrics website Genius that Chasing Highs will be released on the 2nd of March, although it was later changed to just March.
On the 22nd, it was announced that Nicolai and Cooper's song will be released on the 1st of March. They have said in an interview however that the song is NOT named "Chasing Highs".
Norway
Returned to Melodi Grand Prix for their national final. The songs were released weekly, specifically on the 9th, 16th, and 23rd. The semi-finals themselves took place 5 days after each song release, i.e. on the 14th, 21st, 28th respectively, in Nydalen in Oslo. The final took take place on the 4th in Trondheim. The hosts for this year's edition of MGP were Arianrhod "Arian" Engebø as well as Stian "Staysman" Thorbjørnsen. Major changes to the MGP format were introduced:
The 5 semi-finals became 3. The number of competitors remained unchanged from 2022, with now 7 acts in each semi-final.
There were also NO duels. The three qualifiers in each semi-final were determined solely based on the most voted songs, and there was no "second chance" round.
There were NO pre-qualifiers. All artists were required to go through a semi-final to qualify for the final.
There was an international jury consisting of 10 countries, with 5 jurors each, in the final. The jury took up 50% of the voting power, with the other half going to the televote.
On 4/1, NRK revealed the contestants in a live press conference. It was also announced during the live presentation that now people could only vote for ONE artist per semi-final, as opposed to previously where one could give three votes.
On 6/1, VG.no reported that for the first time ever, artists taking part in MGP will be able to use autotune to correct 'sour' tones in their singing, which NRK claims is to keep up with the rest of the concert industry. Although according to various artists, usage of autotune appears to be optional and depends on how much, if at all, an artist wants to use it.
Ukrainian Eurofan eurovanya uploaded a TikTok of Miss Ukraine from Miss Universe 2022, with Queen of Kings by Alessandra Mele as the soundtrack. This TikTok subsequently went viral and the song with it, making Queen of Kings now the most streamed national final song of the 2023 season, with 10 million streams and counting.
The final took place on the 5th, with Alessandra Mele storming to victory winning both the international jury and the televote, while Ulrikke placed second. Alessandra, originally from Italy, will now represent Norway in Eurovision 2023.
Poland
TVP revealed on 19/10 that they will be returning to a national final for 2023. Submissions are now open, and were going to remain open until 15/1, but was since extended to the 10th. It was also revealed that the name of the selection will remain "Tu Bije Serce Europy! Wybieramy Hit Na Eurowizję", as with last year.
The selection itself will take place on the 26th, and will consist of 10 songs. The voting will be made up of 50% televote and 50% jury. Two rounds of voting will occur: the first one with all 10 songs, and then a second round where the top 3 most voted songs in the previous round go to a new separate vote. Ties will be broken by the jury.
Possible names included Jann, Dominik Dudek, Patrick Silvar, Natasza Urbańska, Nick Sinckler, Maja Hyży, Maria Niklińska, Kamil Hussein, and Blanka Stajkow.
On the 14th, it was reported that TVP may select a wildcard entry, making it 11 songs for the national final. It was also reported that the jury will be headed up by Edyta Górniak (Poland 1994), and that they will vote on a scale of 1 to 3 for the superfinal. The selected artists must also submit promotional materials such as a music video by the 20th.
On the 15th, the (for now) 10 acts participating in the national final were revealed on the morning show Pytanie na Śniadanie. Among them were Kuba Szmajkowski from last year's selection, Alicja from Eurovision 2020, early fan favourite Jann with the song "Gladiators", as well as the aforementioned Dominik Dudek, Maja Hyży, Natasza, and Blanka. In addition, the list also includes Ahlena, Felivers, and Jan Majewski.
The running order was revealed on the 20th. It was also announced that Kalush Orchestra will perform "Stefania" as an interval act, and interestingly, Stefania from Greece 2020 and 2021 will also perform "Last Dance". Other interval acts include Ochman, Sara James, Efendi, Roksana Węgiel, and head of jury Edyta Górniak.
Portugal
RTP has confirmed Portugal's participation in the upcoming contest, as well as their annual national final of Festival Da Canção. There will now be a televote wildcard for each semi-final, giving us 12 songs in the final.
On 9/11, RTP announced the songwriters for FdC 2023, as well as the dates for the festival. It will take place on the 25th of February, and the 4th and 11th of March. The announced songwriters included such names as Barbara Tinoco, as well as Claudia Pascoal (O Jardim, Portugal 2018), and also a group named You Can't Win Charlie Brown.
On 22/12, RTP released the semi-final draw for the 20 artists, and on 19/1, the songs were released all at once. It was announced that the first semi-final will be hosted by Tânia Ribas de Oliveira and José Carlos Malato, the second semi-final by Sónia Araújo and Jorge Gabriel, and the final by Filomena Cautela (Eurovision 2018 co-host) and Vasco Palmeirim. Favourites include the aforementioned Barbara Tinoco and Cláudia Pascoal, as well as Mimicat, Ivandro, and Edmundo Inácio.
On the 11th, the running order was revealed, and the first four favourites were all placed either in the 5th or 7th slot in their respective semi-final. Edmundo Inácio meanwhile will open semi-final 2.
Confirmed interval acts include Carlos Mendes, Nicolas Alves, and Filipe Sambado for the second semi-final, and David Fonseca and Salvador Sobral for the final.
The first semi-final took place on the 25th. Both major fan favourites, Mimicat and Claudia Pascoal, qualified, along with 5 other artists. It was meant to be 4, one of which is a televote wildcard, however Esse Povo's voting line experienced technical difficulties, and they were given a free pass to the final. The final will now consist of 13 participants instead of the original 12.
Romania
Returned to Selecția Națională for their selection, which took place on the 11th. The team however is a new one, who announced that SN2023 would be 100% televoting, instead of the 17% like 2022. The show was hosted by Ilinca Băcilă (Romania 2017, "Yodel It") and Laurențiu Niculescu.
85 songs were finally received, 12 of which were announced on 17/12 to be the finalists in February. On 23/12, the randomly drawn running order was released, and the songs were released 6 days later. Favourites included Aledaida, Theodor Andrei, and Andreea D & Folclor Orchestra. Starting from 30/1, TVR started posting live performances (akin to the Moldovan live auditions) of each artist with their song, starting with Amia.
On the 11th, the final took place, where Theodor Andrei, having been relatively unnoticed throughout most of the season, stormed to victory with a very unique performance of his track "D.G.T. (off and on)", which is both in Romanian and in English. Andrei will now represent Romania in Liverpool, competing in the second semi-final. In an interview, Theodor Andrei confirms that the song will remain bilingual for Eurovision.
San Marino
Returned to Una Voce Per San Marino for their national final. However, this year there was no "big artists" group that got pre-invited to the grand final, although famous artists may still be invited to the semi-finals without going through the casting round. Senhit and Jonathan Kashanian returned as hosts having already hosted the inaugural edition, while Achille Lauro performed during the show as well.
There were, as usual, two sets of auditions. From there, 106 artists proceeded to the semi-finals. The grand final took place on the 25th, with 5 pre-recorded semi-finals hosted by Ilenia De Sena, being broadcasted between the 21st and 24th of February, ahead of the grand final which contained 20 artists from the semi-finals.
One interested big name is Elettra Lamborghini, who had participated in Sanremo 2020. If she had signed up then she could skip the auditions and directly get put into a semi-final. And on 18/1, some Italian media reported that she had indeed made a submission to the Sammarinese broadcaster. SMRTV also reported that over 1000 submissions had been received, with submissions even coming in from such countries as Azerbaijan, North Macedonia, and Mexico.
On 23/1, it was announced that Al Bano, a very famous Italian artist, as well as the Italian Eurovision representative in 1976 and 1985, would be chairing the jury which will select the Sammarinese act for 2023.
On the 17th, TvBlog reported on several possible semi-finalists for Una Voce Per San Marino, which included Pamela Prati, Francesco Monte, Moreno, Deborah Iurato, *Eiffel 65*, Manuel Aspidi and Le Deva. A day later, SMRTV announced that there would be not 60, not 80, but *106* semi-finalists. The semi-finals were recorded between the 18-20th, and broadcasted between the 20-24th. The jury for the grand final consisted of two jurors chosen by San Marino RTV, one chosen by the Segreteria di Stato of San Marino, two chosen by the production company, as well as the aforementioned Al Bano. There is no televote.
The full list of semifinalists was finally revealed on the 20th. Apart from Pamela Prati, all the names mentioned earlier were confirmed as semifinalists. In the list we also find Ronela Hajati, off of Albania 2022, as well as Nicole Hammett from MESC2022 and Alfie Arcuri from Australia Decides 2019. Elettra Lamborghini was not on the list.
The prerecorded semifinals were then broadcasted over the last full week of February. There are four qualifiers for each round, as well as four second chance qualifiers. The 20th saw Alfie Arcuri qualify for the final. On the 21st, the second semi-final took place, and Eiffel 65 qualified for the final, despite what some perceived to be a poor song and performance from the now-duo. The 24th saw Ronela Hajati, who had only qualified for the Second Chance round the day before, qualify for the final.
The final took place on the 25th, and only the top 10 were revealed. Ronela Hajati did not make this top 10, but fan favourites Le Deva and XGiove came second and third respectively. The winner was revealed to be Piqued Jacks, a band with a song named "Like An Animal". Eiffel 65 meanwhile came 5th. Regardless, Piqued Jacks will now represent San Marino in Liverpool, performing in the second half of the second semi-final.
Serbia
Returning to Pesma Za Evroviziju for their national final. The dates for Pesma Za Evroviziju 2023, will be the 1st and 2nd of March for the two semi-finals, and the 4th for the final. The Head of Entertainment of RTS also says that 200 songs in total were submitted to the selection. The hosts will be Milan Marić and Dragana Kosjerina, the latter of which was also the Serbian spokesperson for 2021 and 2022. Kristina Radenković and Stefan Popović will be the green room hosts.
The participating names were announced on 9/1. Artists such as Tijana Dapčević (North Macedonia 2014) and the rebooted Hurricane were included on the 32-long list, alongside such names as Angellina who had sung "Origami" as a semi-fan-favourite the year prior.
On 27/1, the running order of the semi-finals were revealed, and the songs were also announced to be releasing on the 2nd all at once. One current favourite is Luke Black with the song "Samo Mi Se Spava".
Slovenia
On 8/12, RTVSLO announced in a press conference that they had internally selected Joker Out, a Slovene pop-rock band, to represent Slovenia in Liverpool in May. This is only the third-ever internal selection for Slovenia, the first two being in 2013 and 2020. Joker Out recorded their entry in Hamburg in December, and they describe their song as "retro, lively and sexy". The music video was filmed on 22-23/12.
The song was released on the 4th, and was presented on a show named "Misija Liverpool". On 29/1, RTVSLO revealed that Joker Out's song will be named "Carpe Diem", and Carpe Diem was released 6 days later. The song is fully in the Slovene language.
On the 18th, Joker Out became the first participant to film their postcard. It was revealed by RTVSLO that the postcard production company have opted for participants to film their 40-second postcards inside their own country, as Joker Out filmed their postcard segment simply on the roof of the RTVSLO building, also featuring several pinball machines.
Spain
Returned to Benidorm Fest for their national final, for a second time. The national final took place on 31/1 for the first semi-final, the 2nd this month for the second semi-final, and the 4th for the grand final.
The voting system remains the same, but there will now be two more participants in each semi-final, bringing the total number of participants up to 18. The main presenter of the show was Monica Naranjo, while Inés Hernand returns as a co-presenter. It was also later reported that Rodrigo Vázquez would be joining Naranjo and Hernand as co-hosts of the show as well.
The list of participants was released on 26/10, and the songs were released all at once on 19/12. It was announced on the 29th that Edurne (Spain 2015, "Amanecer") and Gloria Trevi would be the interval acts during the semi-finals, while Ana Mena and Manuel Carrasco were the grand final interval acts, in addition to Monica Naranjo herself.
The final took place on the 4th, and Blanca Paloma won the selection, winning both the jury and televote and coming second in the demoscopic vote. Blanca Paloma, who had already been in Benidorm Fest 2022 alongside Chanel, will now represent Spain in Liverpool.
Sweden
Returning to Melodifestivalen for their national final. The two hosts will be Farah Abadi (reprising her role from 2022) and Swedish comedian Jesper Rönndahl. Melodifestivalen is set to tour the country over several heats, starting on the 4th of February and concluding in a grand final in Stockholm on the 11th of March.
The full list of Melodifestivalen participants were revealed by SVT on the 29th and 30th of November.
It was also announced that the semi-final (still known to most fans as Andra Chansen) will no longer feature duels. Instead, it will be a simple vote where the 4 most voted entries out of the 8 will get to progress to the final. However, halfway through the voting, the four highest ranked as well as lowest ranked will be displayed separately (in no particular order within each group), and viewers will get to vote again for their favourites. At the end, for the first time, the scores will be presented live and the viewers will be able to see which of the four finalists were comfortably voted the highest and which ones had to fight for the final.
The first heat took place on the 4th, which saw Jon Henrik Fjällgren and Tone Sekelius advance straight to the finals, Victor Crone to the semi-final, while LouLou LaMotte and Eva & Ewa did not qualify. Interest in the festival appeared however to be experiencing a slump, as the first heat received the poorest viewing figures of any Heat 1 in over a decade.
The second heat took place on the 11th, where Panetoz and Maria Sur (a young Ukrainian singer who recently signed with Sony Music Sweden) went straight to the finals, while Theoz and Tennessee Tears went to the semi-final. Wiktoria, despite her popularity, did not qualify for either. It was reported as well that this was the least watched Melodifestivalen Heat 2 since *2006*.
The third heat took place on the 18th. Marcus & Martinus, as well as Paul Rey, went direkt till final, while Melanie Wehbe and Nordman went to the semi-final. Laurell Barker, despite being a renowned songwriter for Eurovision and Melodifestivalen, only came 6th out of 7 participants as a singer.
The final heat took place in Malmö on the 25th. Despite a stage invader/protestor interrupting Loreen's performance causing her to have to restart, Loreen sailed through the heat, having been the first artist to be announced direkt till final. The other direct finalist was Smash Into Pieces, while Mariette and Kiana will go to the semi-final.
Current bookmaker favourites are Loreen, Marcus & Martinus, and Maria Sur. Although Loreen is the overwhelming favourite, to the point that Sweden has exceeded Ukraine's ESC2023 winning odds lead for the first time in a year.
Switzerland
Continuing to use an internal selection for their Eurovision act. The resulting song and artist will be revealed in "early 2023". On 27/11, Ovi Jacobsen (Romania 2010 and 2014) posted on Facebook as an international juror that the Swiss selection this year was now in its "last round".
After months of silence, Jean-Marc Richard, one of the Swiss French commentators, revealed on the 19th more details on how the Swiss act had been selected (e.g. six songs were shortlisted, which were later whittled down to two), and that the Swiss act for 2023 will be announced on the 7th of March. Jean-Marc also mentioned that they "strongly believe in this exciting project that will offer a quality, modern melody with a strong theme and vocal abilities".
On the 20th, the Swiss representative was announced to be Remo Forrer, the 21-year-old winner of The Voice Switzerland season 3. His song will be released on the 7th of March. The genre of his song is not yet known. He was featured playing the accordion in the official introduction video, although it is not known whether this will also be reflected in his song.
Ukraine
Returned to Vidbir for their national final, although it was pushed early, from the usual date of February to now December of 2022. The event was held in the Majdan Nezaležnosti (Independence Square) metro station in Kyiv, and 10 songs competed.
The national final took place on 17/12, and despite the initial status as favourites, neither KRUTЬ nor Jerry Heil won the selection, with them ending in second and third place respectively. The winner of the selection was instead TVORCHI, a duo consisting of Ukrainian producer Andrij Hucuľak and Nigerian vocalist Jeffrey Kenny (real name Jimoh Augustus Kehinde), with their song "Heart Of Steel". TVORCHI, who had previously also participated in Vidbir back in 2020, will now represent Ukraine in Liverpool.
A participation confirmation agreement between Suspilne and Tvorchi was signed on 28/12. This will thus mark the first time since 2018 that a winner of Vidbir from the same year actually goes to Eurovision. In several interviews, Tvorchi have stated that Heart Of Steel will receive a revamp, especially to strengthen the chorus of the song.
United Kingdom
Selection method is internal and will once again involve TaP Music. The artist announcement is expected sometime in February or March of 2023.
The Daily Mail, a British newspaper, reported on 10/12 that Molly Rainford could be in the running to represent the UK on home turf. Molly Rainford, 22, was a finalist on Strictly Come Dancing 2022, and had in fact rejected Simon Cowell's offer to be under his label 10 years prior at Britain's Got Talent. On the Zoe Ball Breakfast Show, Rainford responded to these rumours saying: "After seeing how brilliant Sam was, it's definitely something that I'd be up for, so we'll see. We've gotta find a good song first."
Some however are speculating that Japanese-British singer Rina Sawayama with the song "Frankenstein" may be selected to represent the UK instead. The rumours involving Rina Sawayama were further stoked when James Rowe, co-host of the Euro Trip podcast and a Newcastle DJ with contacts in the BBC, hinted in a tweet that one of the BRITs Best New Artist nominees (Sam Ryder, Kojey Radical, Rina Sawayama, Mimi Webb, Wet Leg) would be the 2023 UK representative. However, on the 24th, RadioTimes.com reported that Rina's freed-up schedule coinciding with the Eurovision rehearsal schedule is merely a coindence. These rumours were not helped by the fact that Rina inexplicably posted a TikTok on the 2nd this month featuring her spinning around in a green dress, with Euphoria by Loreen playing in the clip.
Others have also speculated Freya Ridings, with the song "Weekends", could be the UK representative.
On 20/1, Ben Mawson from TaP Music has ruled out specifically the song Frankenstein as the British entry, and implied in another Instagram reply that unlike with Sam Ryder the previous year, the song had not been played on air yet, or even the artist decided. In a separate post, he also says that TaP Music "continues the hunt" for the UK entry.
On 31/1, the BBC posted an article, in which there was a graphic stating that the UK entry is expected to be confirmed by early March. Furthermore, on 30/1, the Daily Mirror interviewed Ben Mawson, who said that the selection is now down to four acts "in varying forms of established", while TaP co-founder Ed Millett said that they “should, perhaps, not have a guy”. The act may also not be ethnically English/Scottish/Welsh/Irish, with Ben alluding to the multicultural population in the UK.
It is not known exactly when the British representative will be announced. However, someone noted that the announcement has been made on a Thursday morning since 2020, and that leaves us with either the 2nd or the 9th of March.
On the 25th, The Sun reported on two of the exact identities of the 4 artists still in the running. Firstly, they noted that the 4 artists were all women, as was implied by Ed Millett. Then, they reported that two of those names are Mimi Webb and, would you know it, Rina Sawayama, both of which were of course nominated for the BRITS Best New Artist award. The Sun noted that neither of them were occupied for May. They also reported that the decision will be made in the "next few days" and the act announced in "a couple of weeks".
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So that's all I know about Eurovision 2023 so far! If you know anything else, tweet me @BlueRigel4 or comment on this blog. I fully anticipate making regular updates within the month to this post. Here's the post in video form, but it's very much outdated:

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