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Perth synth-metal quintet will voyage to this yearâs Eurovision Song Contest to represent Australia in Liverpool
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The vibrant quintet choreographs an intricate dance between metal and pop; employ a keytar on stage, and bring forward a positive, uplifting feeling to their music, running head-first into the endless parade of heavy bands who see the world in a different light. Voyager âs latest album Colours in the Sun exploded like a supernova onto the worldwide stage with their vivid, uplifting, and exhilarating music and live performance, capturing the excitement of existing fans and the intrigue of new ones from all around the world. Frontman Danny Estrin, a long-time Eurovision fanatic is not only an award-winning, multilingual lawyer by day, he also moonlights as a renowned and respected musician. Dannyâs signature dose of â80s influenced vocals and hook-laden keytar lines over the top of genre-transfiguring, ultra-modern and prismatic hard rock has travelled the world many times over.
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Australiaâs Voyager rock through to Eurovision final
Perth synth-metal band voted among 10 winners of their semi-final in Liverpool, and will perform their song Promise in the final on Sunday morning AEST
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Perth band Voyager are through to this weekendâs Eurovision final after winning in the semi-final stage in Liverpool.
The Australian synth-metal musicians entered the stage on a car, before rocking out on the carâs bonnet with guitars and keytars as they performed their song Promise in the competition on Thursday evening in the UK.
They faced off against Albania, Armenia, Cyprus, Romania, Austria, Denmark, Lithuania, San Marino, Belgium, Slovenia, Iceland, Georgia, Greece, Poland and Estonia in round two of the semi-finals.
Australia will now compete against 25 other countries at the grand final on Sunday morning AEST, under a typically convoluted voting system that collates audience polls in Europe and â for the first time â around the world.
Becoming a part of the Eurovision family was a dream Voyagerâs lead singer and keytarist, Danny Estrin, had for a lot longer than the seven years Australia has been part of the competition. On Thursday, he told Australian Associated Press that the bandâs success had already exceeded their expectations, so they were not feeling the pressure to take out the trophy.
âYou are fiercely competitive in some ways but in other ways, youâre just all there to have a good time and perform to the best of your abilities and itâs all about the music for the end of the day,â Estrin said. âDoes it mean we donât have what it takes to win it? I think we do.â
But if worst comes to worst, the group is philosophical.
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Alex Canion, the bassist, said: âWeâre a progressive metal band from Perth, Western Australia, playing Eurovision in Liverpool. I mean, how could we ever consider ourselves losers in this?â
Unlike many competitions in life, a music contest can come down to tastes and on-the-day performance, the band said.
âWeâre not running a hundred-metre race. Well we are, but weâve all got different costumes on,â said Estrin, adding their finals costumes would be âextraâ.
Canion agreed: âItâs so subjective. Thereâs no âwho can perform the song fastestâ.â
And with a potential final audience of 180 million viewers, the exposure is second to none, according to the drummer, Ashley Doodkorte.
âOn the day, on the night, we all get that same three minutes in front of that same audience,â he said. âEveryone wins.â
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Eurovision should go some way to developing a global following for the band that has existed in one form or another for some two decades.
âThis has all been an elaborate and highly effective album release strategy for our eighth album which comes out after we finish Eurovision,â joked Estrin, who is a part-time lawyer. âAlready, up to this point now, weâve already won.â
Denmark, Romania, Iceland, Greece, Georgia, and San Marino were sent home on Thursday night, with Malta, Latvia, Ireland, Azerbaijan and the Netherlands eliminated earlier in the first semi-final.
The âBig Fiveâ countries â Italy, Spain, Germany, France and the UK â are given automatic spots in the Eurovision final.
Eurovision is being hosted by the UK this year on behalf of Ukraine due to the Russian invasion. Ukrainian hip-hop band Kalush Orchestra claimed victory last year.
Australia first competed in Eurovision in 2015, having been invited to take part due to the popularity of the song contest among European diaspora communities. Australia has been in the top 10 four times and is the second country outside of the Eurasia region to take part in the contest since Morocco competed in 1980.
Australia was granted permission to participate in Eurovision until at least this year. It remains unconfirmed if the country will be invited to participate again.
Australian Associated Press contributed to this report
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Australia's Eurovision Song Contest entrant Voyager finally get to deliver on their 'Promise' in Liverpool
Voyager have had a different sort of journey to get to Eurovision than any of Australia's previous entrants in the world's biggest Song Contest.
For one, they're a band â and we haven't had one of those before. For another, they're a progressive metal band, capable of delivering everything from 80s pop to crunchy metal.
In addition, although the line-up has changed markedly over the band's time, there is nearly a quarter of a century of history there.
The key to their longevity is that, not only have they been able to make seven full-length albums, but they have a solid reputation as a kick-arse live band.
And, aside from Kate Miller-Heidke â who came ninth with Zero Gravity in 2019 â  the Perth-based quintet are the only performers from this country at Eurovision not to come to prominence via a reality TV competition.
So when they take to the stage at Liverpool Arena for their semi-final, seeking a place in Sunday morning's grand final, their song Promise will not look or sound like anything we've sent before.
Of the three students who began Voyager at the University of Western Australia, more than two decades ago, only lead singer Estrin remains in the current line-up â who have been together since 2011 â along with drummer Ash Doodkorte, bassist Alex Canion and guitarists Simone Dow and Scott Kay.
But in addition to their discography, numerous overseas tours and taking their brand of heavy music across the mainland capital cities in Australia over the years gives them priceless experience for taking on the Contest.
Speaking to ABC from London after a series of preview party performances prior to heading to Liverpool, Estrin â whose other job is as an immigration lawyer â puts Voyager's career in perspective.
"It's the overnight success story that's taken 20 years," he says.
"I assess it as training. And I feel sorry for the people who are doing their first or second or third show at Eurovision because it's really, really hard and it's very intimidating. And we've had a lot of practise over the years.Â
"It's like you've been practising for years, you've honed your art to a fine finesse and you, you're comfortable. You're comfortable on the shitty stages. On the big stages as well."
Estrin grew up in Germany before moving to Australia with his family when he was 11.
"I remember listening to Eurovision [growing up]. My mum had a double vinyl, the Eurovision winners. It's like this bright blue thing. I remember teaching with the song Ding a Dong (Netherlands, 1975). That was one of my favourites.
"And just that melody and just the kind of vibe of Eurovision being very heavily melody focused. That certainly rubbed off on me because most of the stuff that I was listening to at the time was classical music.
"It was kind of the only exposure I had to any sort of vaguely pop music. And it just continued through my university years and then when we moved to Australia. It [Eurovision] has been a part of me for a very, very long time."
Melody is at the heart of what Voyager does, so they are a good fit for the Contest. While Estrin's desire to make it to Eurovision has been there for decades, other band members caught up later.
But the story of how Voyager finally got the gig to represent Australia is a tale of at least three songs, not one.
Runaway just misses out
Voyager had been sending in songs to the national selection ever since Australia first competed in 2015.
The first one Australia heard was the band's 2020 entry for Australia Decides, Runaway.
As an intro to the band, it made a splash. SBS played a short snippet from the video to highlight songs that didn't quite make the final shortlist for Australia Decides.
The melody is there from the start, with strong guitars and big vocals â but the star of the show is the keytar, as Estrin takes special delivery of one of his trademark instruments in the middle of a Western Australian lake.
That year, Montaigne won Australia Decides with Don't Break Me , but never got to perform it on the big stage, as Eurovision was cancelled due to COVID.
Australia's creative director for Eurovision, Paul Clarke, says Runaway was the 11th-rated song, just missing out on the final 10.
Jury doubts spoil Eurovision hopes for Dreamer
Last year it was Dreamer, with the synth sound, fluoro colours and still a metal edge as well.
"Ash [Doodkorte] and Danny [Estrin] flew over to meet us at the Eurovision â Australia Decides (E-AD) show on the Gold Coast and they were lovely guys," Clarke says. "We encouraged them to enter the following year and they came up with Dreamer ⊠hearing that song the idea dawned that they were right for Eurovision."
Voyager were a big hit in the live show on the Gold Coast, but in the end they came second in 2022 to Sheldon Riley , who went to Eurovision in Turin performing his big power ballad, Not the Same.Â
"[Voyager] won the public vote of E-AD last year, but a few of the judges thought that there would be a lot of rock bands following Maneskin's win [for Italy in 2019] â that often happens and didn't want to be seen that we were going with Voyager to 'copycat'," Clarke says.
"After that, we had a 'preservation of friendship' meeting.
"I encouraged them to have another crack. They came up with the song Promise. I thought it was even better than Dreamer."
Kay talks about the changes between Runaway, Dreamer and Promise.
"I think we've been able to think a little bit more about how the staging and the sort of televised nature of Eurovision alters how we write a song," he says.
"I think we've thought a lot more about how it would translate to a stage rather than just writing it for music's sake. So there's a bit more of an analytical approach, but no less creative."
Canion says:
"The biggest learning curve for us was learning how to become a band for TV. Not for a live audience.
"It's such a different way of performing and something that it was such valuable experience for us. Especially going into to Big Eurovision."
Estrin adds:
"Restraint is really important because if you look at the [2023] Madrid pre-party, we were just so raring to go, we're just like, let all our energy loose. Which is not necessarily the best thing to do.
"But we were just so excited to be playing music rather than talking about it for months that we just had to do it. So I think restraint and control are the big things that we learned from Australia Decides."
Promise fulfilled? Voyager can't wait to find out
The band was told they were finally into Eurovision on a Zoom call with organisers after submitting a demo of Promise. Estrin says the band's drive to make it to the Contest was matched by a desire to get there with the right song.
"The song had to be right. We wouldn't have put our hat in the ring if we weren't behind the song. Cause we spend months talking about it and if you're not sure about it then you don't come across as confident.
"Whereas now we're like, yeah, this is sick. We love this. We love every single second of that and we can talk proudly about it. And I think that's really important that that comes across."
Promise is a cleverly crafted three-minute composition, half-anthem, half Eurovision in a snapshot, designed for the biggest stage.
From one perspective, the band throws everything but the kitchen sink at this. There are 80s-style synths, a classic rhythm section from drummer Doodkorte and bassist Canion, some strong, contrasting vocals from Estrin and Canion, and cracking lead guitar from Simone Dow and Scott Kay.
Then add the trademark keytars and a bit of harpsichord â and a massive metal 'growl' from Canion in the breakdown in the middle and there is something in this for everyone.
The song itself is about how we deal with the stresses of modern life, posing a number of questions along the way.
Have you ever been alone too much? /Â Have you ever prayed for human touch? /Â Have you ever just lost a little part of you /Â To find a little something new?
And the chorus allows the crowd to join in with Estrin's vocal before Canion delivers the fierce 'growl'.
Oh-oh, oh-oh, oh-oh, oh-oh, oh-oh / Since you told me everything's alright / Oh-oh, oh-oh, oh-oh, oh-oh, oh-oh / Promise me it's gonna be alâŠRight!Â
The studio version is cohesive, building naturally and nailing a big finish. The normal question that follows at Eurovision is whether entrants can perform live. That is not a concern, here.Â
Voyager have played for and with all sorts of rock and metal royalty, from Queensryche to Nightwish, and they have a big fanbase, including in Europe.
Drummer Ash Doodkorte makes the rather brave statement that "nothing could possibly happen to us on stage [at Eurovision] that hasn't happened to us 10 times worse and 20 times before."
Estrin then recalls a moment that happened at one of the pre-party shows in The Netherlands.
"There's this wonderful scene in Spinal Tap where the band is being led down corridors backstage and they get lost and their usher doesn't know where they're going. And it's probably about a five to six-minute sequence where they're just going down this labyrinth, they can't get on stage.
"We had a very similar situation in Amsterdam, so we've certainly had a lot of Spinal Tap moments in our career and let's hope that the actual event at Eurovision doesn't give us another one."
Musically the band can do anything from big, heavy epics to a stripped-back piano ballad, like Summer Always Comes Again. Do they think their versatility helps them hit numerous audiences at Eurovision?
"Yeah, absolutely," says Estrin. "The wonderful thing about metal generally is when people think metal, they think of Cookie Monster vocals and they think of bands like Slayer and those traditional kind of metal bands that are extremely heavy.
"But there are so many metal genres and sub metal genres which have really beautiful melodies which are sophisticated and refined and don't necessarily sound like metal when you listen to it. So this is such a great way for people to discover not only us, but also heavy music.
"Summer Always Comes Again is not a metal song, but it's in the metal category. And what a shame if people go, I don't want to listen to metal and they're missing out on this wonderful song.
"The beauty of us doing Eurovision is people go, hang on, I didn't like metal, but I like this. Maybe I do like metal. Right?"
Canion joins in.
"It's interesting this year that there's a direct comparison with two bands [at Eurovision] that have metal in their name â us and [Germany's] Lord of the Lost.
"We are both technically metal bands, but sound nothing alike. So it's a great way for people to be like, oh okay, well this is metal and this is metal, but they don't sound the same."
Last year Sheldon Riley had to practise singing his number with carrying sandbags to mimic the wearing of his 40 kilo dress that he wore on stage.
What does training for Eurovision look like for Voyager?
"I don't think I'll need sandbags necessarily, but I think maybe a bit more stretches to make sure that when we are jumping around, I don't want to pull a hammy in front of 180 million people and making sure our impeccable costumes don't break," says Estrin.
Doodkorte provides an intriguing visual of proceedings.
"We've been doing rehearsals in big rooms just tied at each other's waists, like a bunch of mountaineers so we don't run too far from each other.
"Cause it's a very big Eurovision stage and we'll want to use all of it, but then we might not be in frame. So it's a bit of forced discipline."
Clarke is confident in what Voyager bring to the table for 2023.
"They're a pretty special band. They are great friends, they write terrific songs, they've got great singers in Danny and Alex, and they have a really irreverent sense of the moment, while understanding how important it is. They will stand out, trust me."
The video for Promise was an open skies number, with Voyager filming at famous WA locations like Nature's Window, for a show-stopping sequence as Simone Dow shreds on the guitar, and then Estrin performs a rapid keytar solo.
Scott Kay describes it as "the ultimate rockstar's dream. Really."
The man tasked with creating an impact in Liverpool is 2023Â staging director Marvin Dietmann, who has sorted out the vision for many Eurovision numbers over the years, including the 2014 Contest winner, Rise Like A Phoenix by Austria's Conchita Wurst.Â
"It's an interesting song that really encourages a feeling of being by yourself at the start, and builds to a moment that brings everyone together. I love the build â I think Queen would be really happy with the song structure and the solo. So it has to be staging that builds, and relates to them [Voyager]," Clarke says.
Asked if there will be any surprises, Estrin goes straight for one of the cult-hit Eurovision moments of all time, Poland's suggestive visuals from their 2014 entry, Â quipping: "I'm going to be churning a lot of butter suggestively on stage."
He follows up by saying the band does have "something a little extra planned".
"I can tell you what ... there's no ice skaters, there's no monster outfits, but it will be something a little bit extra, which I think people will go, that's special, that's pretty speccy. It is Eurovision, after all!"
The elephant in the room is the fact that this is Australia's last year of the contract with the Eurovision Broadcasting Union (EBU) to compete at the Contest, and there are no guarantees we will be back in 2024.
"We sure have done our best to deliver great music, performances and staging. At this stage, our future in the song contest is a live discussion, but itâs no secret we love being part of Eurovision," Clarke says. "Right now, weâre focused on giving the best performance we can with our very first band entry."
Regardless of the result, and the future of the Contest in Australia, those present at Liverpool Arena and the viewers watching and streaming at home can be clear on one thing â Voyager will be putting on a show at Eurovision. And that's a promise.
Australia's Eurovision semi-final is on Friday morning at 5am AEST. ABC will have a wrap of the semi, and will live blog the Grand Final on Sunday from 4:30am AEST.
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Australia's Voyager through to Eurovision grand final
Australia's voyager made it through to the eurovision song contest grand final with their performance of promise..
Australian band Voyager is through to the Eurovision finals. Source: AAP / Sanjin Strukic/PIXSELL/PA/Alamy
- Voyager's song Promise won over fan votes from the 37 countries competing at this year's song contest.
- They will compete in the grand final on Sunday 14 May at 5:00am AEST.
- If they win they would be the first Australians to do so.
Eurovision: Voyager's Danny Estrin gatecrashes SBS World News in Liverpool
Australia's Eurovision entrant is also an immigration lawyer
Australia's Voyager through to Eurovision grand final - how did they get into the contest?
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AUSTRALIE - Voyager
Le diffuseur australien SBS a annoncé que le groupe Voyager représentera l'Australie au Concours Eurovision de la chanson 2023, avec sa chanson Promise .
C'est la première fois qu'un groupe va représenter l'Australie au Concours Eurovision. Le Quintette synth-métal avait déjà tenté sa chance l'année dernière grace à l'émission "Australia Decides" mais n'était arrivé qu'en seconde position avec sa chanson Dreamer . L'Autralie est d'ailleurs toute jeune dans le Concours puisqu'elle ne participe que depuis 2015, à l'époque en tant que Guest (invité).
Voyager mélange des voix New Romantic des années 80 avec un cadre technique et mélodique, des lignes de basse groovy, une batterie explosive et ce qui est en train de devenir l'instrument emblématique du groupe, le keytar. La chanson Promise a été conçue pour avoir un impact maximum à Liverpool.
Le groupe est composé de Danny Estrin (chant, keytar), Simone Dow (guitares), Simone Dow (guitares), Alex Canion (basse) et de Ash Doodkorte (batterie).
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Vidéos malmö 2024.
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Culture | Music
Who are metal band Voyager? Australiaâs Eurovision entry set to rock the contest
Australia has a short but impactful history in Eurovision , and its 2023 entry looks set to be among its most memorable.
Metal band Voyager have been trying to get a place on the show since before Australia was even competing, so when Europe was extended to a land down under for the show in 2015, they were keen to join the fun.
Bass player Alex Cainon told the NME : âThe most common feedback we get is that we look like weâre having fun onstage â which weâve found, over the years, translates into the crowd themselves having fun. And thatâs exactly what Eurovision is about, you know?â
Voyager formed in 1999 in the Western Australian city of Perth - a place other Aussies will tell you is in âwoop woopâ (a million miles from anywhere). And perhaps as geographical outsiders they have had what it takes to form a cult following which has seen them release eight albums - most recently Fearless in Love this year.
There is a huge Eurovision following in Australia and the country was set to compete only once in 2015 to mark the 50th anniversary, but has returned every year since - although it has yet to win. While it is not unheard of for a metal band to win the competition (remember Lordi in 2006?) Voyager are considered outsiders for this yearâs competition which begins, for them, on Thursday, May 11 with the second semi-final.
But winning is not everything and the band are instead hoping to put Australian metal onto the global stage.
âEurovision is the kind of thing you can do and come out of with a completely new fanbase,â guitarist Scott Kay told NME .
âIf theyâre into more obscure types of music, hopefully theyâll see us and then check out all the other amazing talent we have in Australia.â
Voyager will enter the 2023 competition with their song Promise which they hope will provide a solid entry point for fans. The band have crossed the boundary and are now in the host city of Liverpool hoping to make the final which will be on Saturday.
To find out more about Eurovision 2023 click here .
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- L’Australie envoie Ă Liverpool le groupe Voyager avecâŠ
L’Australie envoie Ă Liverpool le groupe Voyager avec la chanson Promise
- Actualités Participants 2023
- Mis Ă jour le 5 mars 2024
- Publié le 22 février 2023
Le diffuseur australien SBS a annoncĂ© ses reprĂ©sentants au concours Eurovision de la chanson 2023, il s’agit du groupe Voyager avec leur chanson « Promise ». Il a Ă©tĂ© choisi en interne pour reprĂ©senter l’Australie Ă Liverpool. Ce sont les premiers participants australiens Ă l’Eurovision Ă ĂȘtre sĂ©lectionnĂ©s en interne depuis 2018. Une sĂ©lection nationale « Eurovision â Australia Decides » a Ă©tĂ© utilisĂ©e entre 2019 et 2022 pour choisir le reprĂ©sentant. Voyager n’est pas inconnu dans le monde Eurovision, ce dernier a participĂ© l’annĂ©e derniĂšre Ă la finale australienne, en se classant Ă la deuxiĂšme position, juste Ă quelques points du gagnant Sheldon Riley. Ils avaient remportĂ© le vote du public avec leur chanson « Dreamer ».
Ă propos de
Voyager est un groupe de mĂ©tal progressif originaire de Perth en Australie occidentale. Le groupe a Ă©tĂ© formĂ© en 1999 autour du chanteur et claviĂ©riste originaire d’Allemagne Danny Estrin et a sorti sept albums. Le groupe compote 5 membres (de gauche Ă droite) : Simone Dow, Danny Estrin, Alex Canion, Ash Doodkorte et Scott Kay.
En 2020, ils avaient soumis une chanson pour reprĂ©senter l’Australie au concours Eurovision de la chanson intitulĂ©e « Runaway », mais ils n’ont finalement pas Ă©tĂ© retenus comme l’un des 10 artistes en compĂ©tition pour la finale. Et bien qu’ils n’aient pas rĂ©ussi, Voyager a Ă©tĂ© reconnu pour son travail le soir de la finale.
Chaque annĂ©e, nous avons soumis un morceau Ă l’Eurovision via le portail du diffuseur, sans jamais imaginer que nous pourrions un jour ĂȘtre sĂ©lectionnĂ© en tant que groupe de mĂ©tal. Mais cette annĂ©e, nous avons reçu un appel pour dire que nous avions Ă©tĂ© prĂ©sĂ©lectionnĂ©s et que nous Ă©tions invitĂ©s Ă l’Ă©mission de tĂ©lĂ©vision en direct. Danny Estrin
En 2023, Voyager a enfin la chance de battre le drapeau australien au concours, devenant ainsi le premier groupe Ă le faire dans l’histoire de la participation du pays. Voyager se produira dans la deuxiĂšme moitiĂ© de la deuxiĂšme demi-finale le 11 mai prochain.
Version studio de la chanson « Promise »
8e participation du pays Ă lâEurovision
L’Australie a fait ses dĂ©buts au concours Eurovision de la chanson en 2015 dans le cadre des cĂ©lĂ©brations marquant les 60 ans du concours. Le diffuseur SBS diffuse l’Eurovision en Australie depuis 1983. Le meilleur rĂ©sultat du pays Ă ce jour est survenu en 2016 avec la reprĂ©sentante Dami Im, et sa chanson « Sound of Silence », elle a terminĂ© Ă la 2e place de la finale avec 511 points, Ă seulement 23 points de la victoire.
En 2022, Sheldon Riley a reprĂ©sentĂ© lâAustralie Ă Turin avec la chanson « Not The Same » terminant Ă la 15e place avec un total de 125 points dont 123 points du jury (9e), avec 10 points provenant du jury suĂ©dois, et seulement 2 points du tĂ©lĂ©vote exclusivement de lâAzerbaĂŻdjan (24e).
L’Australie fera-t-elle mieux cette annĂ©e ? NâhĂ©sitez pas Ă partager votre avis dans notre bloc discussion.
Credits Photo : SBS
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Why is Australia in Eurovision? When the country joined and what happens if Voyager win the Song Contest
Australia first entered eurovision in 2015 and has appeared at every edition since, making the final on all but one occasion.
Eurovision 2023 is in full swing, with Liverpool embracing the spirit of the Song Contest with suitable enthusiam this week .
The UK is hosting this yearâs competition instead of last yearâs winners Ukraine due to the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine , with the best (and worst) of European music descending for the semi-finals and final .
One unexpected nation that has become something of a fixture in recent years is Australia , despite the fact that itâs very obviously not in Europe â so why can they enter Eurovision ?
Why is Australia in Eurovision 2023?
On 10 February 2015, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) announced that in honour of the 60th anniversary of Eurovision, it had invited Australia to participate in the finals of the contest .
The decision, expected at the time to be a one-off, was in keeping with the theme that year, which was Building Bridges.
Australian broadcaster SBS has aired the event since 1983, and it has built a significant following Down Under.
Countries are usually eligible to take part if their broadcaster is a member of the EBU and broadcasts within a pre-defined âEuropean Broadcasting Areaâ â a deliberately over-expansive region that also covers swathes of the Middle East and North Africa.
The quirk means Eurovision has seen entries from Israel and Morocco over the years, while nations as far afield as Syria and Egypt could technically take part in the future if they wanted. Even the loosest definition of âEuropeâ, however, would logically preclude Australia, but the EBU agreed to waive the rules to allow the nation to take part.
Australiaâs participation brought the number of the finalists to 27, the highest number of entries in a final in the contestâs history. After a top-five finish in 2015, Australia was invited back the next year, when it placed second.
The continued success of Australia at the contest led to several more decisions to invite them back on a case-by-case basis â until, in 2019, Eurovision bosses confirmed that Australia would be allowed to stay in the contest until at least 2023.
In its first year of entry, the Australian entry â sung by Guy Sebastian â was placed directly in the grand final but, since then, the countryâs entry has had to qualify through the semi-finals, winning the heats in 2016 and 2019.
Australia has only ever failed to make the grand final on one occasion so far, in 2021 â last year, its entry Sheldon Riley came 15th in the final with the song âNot the Sameâ.
Who is Australiaâs 2023 Eurovision entry Voyager?
This year, Australia is being represented by Voyager, a progressive metal band from Perth.
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The five-piece has released seven albums since forming in 1999, and become the first band to represent their country, after a succession of solo acts.
Voyager were also the first Australian entry to be selected internally the the broadcaster SBS, rather than through the Eurovision â Australia Decides selection show used previously.
They released their entry song âPromiseâ in February, and it climbed to a peak of number three in the Australia singles chart.
Lead singer Danny Estrin moonlights as an immigration lawyer, and told SBS ahead of the Song Contest that he believes this makes him unique in Eurovision history.
He said: âI think I might be the first lawyer to take part in it. I know San Marino sent a dentist a while ago, so Iâm fairly confident saying Iâm the only immigration lawyer who has participated in the contest.â
What happens if Australia wins?
Australiaâs highest placing at the Eurovision final so far came in 2016, when Dami Im came second with âSound of Silenceâ.
In the event that Australia should win, the EBU confirmed that, in accordance with the rules, Australia would not host the event in the southern hemisphere. Instead, it would have to nominate a co-host nation from Europe.
At the time, it was thought Germany would be the first choice, with the UK and the BBC being the back-up hosts should Germany decline.
However, other broadcasters have since voiced their interest in co-hosting the contest if Australia wins.
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- Apr 20, 2023
Eurovision 2023 Australia profile: 'Promise' by Voyager
Australia in the Eurovision Song Contest
Australia made its Eurovision debut in 2015 with Guy Sebastian performing 'Tonight Again'. Since then Australia has reached the final in all but one of its seven participations. The nation's best result came in 2016 when Dami Im finished second with 'Sound of Silence', topping the jury vote in the Grand Final.
Last year, Sheldon Riley represented Australia with 'Not the Same', qualifying in second place from the second semi-final and ultimately finishing 15th in the Grand Final.
2023 Entry: Voyager - 'Promise'
Voyager will perform in 16th spot in semi-final 2 and close the show
My Eurovision Scoreboard ranking: 22nd
Odds to win ranking: 16th
(Rankings as of 20 April 2023)
About the act
Voyager is currently a quintet consisting of Danny Estrin (vocals, keytar), Simone Dow (guitars), Alex Canion (bass), Scott Kay (guitars) and Ashley Doodkorte (drums). The band was originally formed as a three-piece in 1999 in Perth, with Danny being a founding member. There have been several line-up changes over the years.
The group released its debut album 'Element V' in 2003 in Australia. The following year it was distributed throughout Europe by Dutch label DVS Records. Voyager's second album 'uniVers', released in 2007, received critical acclaim worldwide. In Finland it was voted album of the week in Imperiumi magazine, and in Belgium it was voted album of the month in Mindview magazine.
Back home in Australia, 'uniVers' was rated by the Triple J radio station as the seventh best Full Metal Racket album of 2007. Since then, Voyager has released five more albums, including the most recent album 'Colours in the Sun' in 2019.
Voyager has also toured extensively worldwide, first performing overseas at the ProgPower Europe Festival in the Netherlands in 2006. The band has supported many well-known acts including the Deftones, Opeth, Nightwish, Children of Bodom, and Coheed and Cambria.
The band describe themselves as a "progressive pop metal force" that defies genre norms and boundaries. Its most notable musical characteristics include the blending of new-romantic and 80s-infused vocals, keytar solos, groovy bass and bombastic drumming.
About the song
Voyager's Eurovision entry 'Promise' is described by the band as an "epic progressive pop metal offering that transports the listener on an emotive story of adventure and redemption". The song was written for Eurovision specifically, but also for people who have never heard Voyager before.
'Promise' seeks to take the listener on a musical journey, showcasing Voyager's ability to execute various genres. The first two verses of the song groove along quite softly by Voyager standards, whilst the key feature of the chorus is its rock vibe. An explosive synth metal instrumental follows the second chorus, and at the bridge there is a "calm-after-the-storm" feel before the music ramps up again to a guitar solo. The final portion of the song offers up a glorious denouement, both vocally and instrumentally
The lyrics also reflect the travelling nature of the piece: the opening repetition of the question "Have you ever done anything like this before?" and the follow-up response "If you've never done anything like this before then you haven't been alive" encourage the listener to embark on an adventure, with the repetition of the phrase "Promise me it's gonna be alright" throughout the chorus suggesting that throughout every journey support and comradery are essentials.
How Voyager was selected for Eurovision
The band's bid to represent Australia at Eurovision is a story of perseverance and dedication. Voyager first sought to be Australia's entrant at Eurovision back when it was announced we would be debuting at the contest in 2015. In every subsequent year, the band submitted entries in the hope of becoming Australia's representative one day.
Voyager's breakthrough came in 2022 with the group's participation in 'Eurovision - Australia Decides'. The band finished second overall, just three points behind winner Sheldon Riley, topping the televote portion of the voting.
Based on the latter result, SBS took on board the feedback of the Australian public and internally selected Voyager to represent Australia at Eurovision 2023, announcing in the early hours of February 21 the group's upcoming (and for them long-awaited) appearance at Eurovision.
Australia will compete in Semi-final 2 on May 11 (European time) in Liverpool.
For continued updates on all the Eurovision Song Contest news follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. All links at: https://linktr.ee/aussievisionnet
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JO de Paris 2024 : Histoire, parcours, coût⊠La flamme olympique en cinq questions
Nicolas Stival
Publié le 16/04/2024 à 11h43 ⹠Mis à jour le 16/04/2024 à 11h43
Pour la flamme olympique, le grand voyage commence. Elle a Ă©tĂ© allumĂ©e ce mardi matin sur le site mythique dâOlympie et arrivera Ă Paris le 26 juillet, jour de la cĂ©rĂ©monie dâouverture des Jeux. Le champion olympique dâaviron grec Stefanos Douskos, sacrĂ© Ă Tokyo, assurera le premier relais, avant de passer le flambeau Ă Laure Manaudou , titrĂ©e Ă Londres voici 20 ans sur 400 mĂštres nage libre. Cette flamme, censĂ©e rĂ©sister au vent et Ă la pluie, reprĂ©sente lâidĂ©al de paix et dâunitĂ© entre les peuples.
Une tradition pas si ancienne
Une « grande prĂȘtresse » dans un costume inspirĂ© de lâAntiquitĂ©, postĂ©e devant les ruines du temple dâHĂ©ra, vieilles de 2.600 ans. A priori, le rituel de la flamme pourrait sembler aussi vieux que les Jeux olympiques, crĂ©Ă©s au VIIIe siĂšcle avant JĂ©sus-Christ avant dâĂȘtre ressuscitĂ©s dans leur forme moderne par le Français Pierre de Coubertin en 1896. En fait, pas du tout.
Si des courses aux flambeaux existaient Ă lâĂ©poque de PĂ©riclĂšs ou dâAristote, elles ne concernaient que certaines festivitĂ©s, mais pas les Jeux olympiques. Le relais actuel de la flamme a Ă©tĂ© instituĂ© pour les Jeux de 1936 Ă Berlin . Les nazis, le ministre de la Propagande Joseph Goebbels en tĂȘte, avaient en effet un penchant pour lâantiquitĂ© grecque. Pour les Jeux dâhiver, il faudra attendre ceux dâOslo, en 1952, beaucoup moins connotĂ©sâŠ
Le retour Ă la normale, enfin
En 2020 et 2021, avant les Jeux dâĂ©tĂ© de Tokyo et dâhiver de PĂ©kin, le cĂ©rĂ©monial avait Ă©tĂ© perturbĂ©, comme tous les autres Ă©vĂ©nements dans le monde, par la pandĂ©mie de Covid. En mars 2020, le relais avait Ă©tĂ© interrompu sur le sol grec pour Ă©viter les rassemblements populaires et donc limiter les risques de contamination, aprĂšs avoir drainĂ© une foule trĂšs importante Ă Sparte. Pour cette Ă©dition, on revient aux fastes anciens, avec prĂ©sence dâofficiels et parcours complet et en public.
Quel parcours ?
Ce mardi, la flamme olympique a entamĂ© un pĂ©riple de 5.000 km Ă travers la GrĂšce. Le voyage va durer onze jours avec comme Ă©tapes les Ăźles de Corfou, de Santorin, ou encore lâAcropole dâAthĂšnes. Câest dans la capitale grecque, au stade panathĂ©ique, quâelle sera transmise aux organisateurs français le 26 avril. La flamme quittera le PirĂ©e Ă bord du Belem, un fameux trois-mĂąts fin comme un oiseau, pour rejoindre la France et Marseille, le 8 mai .
Passera-t-elle dans toute la France ?
Non, 64 territoires, dont cinq dâOutre-Mer, seront parcourus par prĂšs de 10.000 relayeurs sur environ 12.000 km. Certains dĂ©partements, notamment le Gard, lâIsĂšre et la Savoie, ou une grande ville comme Lyon ont renoncĂ© Ă participer Ă la fĂȘte, pour des raisons de coĂ»t, essentiellement. « On aurait aimĂ© le faire, naturellement, mais 180.000 euros pour une action qui dure une journĂ©e, ne nous paraissent pas raisonnables en matiĂšre d'action publique », avait ainsi expliquĂ© Bruno Bernard , le prĂ©sident EELV de la mĂ©tropole en juin 2023.
Quel lieu dâaccueil Ă Paris ?
La vasque qui accueillera la flamme durant toute la durĂ©e de la compĂ©tition ne se trouvera pas au Stade de France, Ă©picentre des Jeux. Elle sera installĂ©e dans le jardin des Tuileries , au niveau du grand bassin rond, soit entre le Louvre et la place de la Concorde, en plein cĆur de la capitale. A lâorigine, câest la Cour carrĂ©e du Louvre qui devait accueillir ce symbole des JO, mais elle a Ă©tĂ© jugĂ©e moins facile dâaccĂšs au public par les organisateurs.
Ă lire aussi
Mont-Saint-Michel, Antilles⊠Le parcours de la flamme olympique dévoilé
Cette résistante de 102 ans portera la flamme olympique dans la Loire
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IMAGES
COMMENTS
Subscribe and đ to Eurovision đ https://www.youtube.com/user/eurovision?sub_confirmation=1Voyager will represent Australia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2...
Voyager - Promise (LIVE) | Australia đŠđș | Grand Final | Eurovision 2023 - YouTube. Eurovision Song Contest. 5.64M subscribers. 22K. 1.4M views 8 months ago #UnitedByMusic. ...more....
Voyager - Promise (LIVE) | Australia đŠđș | Grand Final | Eurovision 2023. Voyager from Australia performed 'Promise' in the Grand Final of Eurovision 2023 in Liverpool, the United Kingdom. The Eurovision Song Contest celebrates diversity through music. Please keep your comments respectful.
"Promise" by Voyager from Australia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2023. Australia finished 9th at Eurovision 2023 with 151 points. Videos and lyrics in English, Azerbaijani, Catalan, Croatian, Dutch, Finnish, French, German and 9 other languages
Australia's Eurovision hopefuls Voyager have performed strongly at the song contest, placing ninth out of a tight field of just 26 acts in the grand final. The synth metal rock band from...
Voyager x Eurovision - TE DEUM (Voyager Mix - EBU Custom Countdown) Voyager [AUS] 12K views5 months ago. Voyager - Promise [Official Music Video] Voyager [AUS] 1M views9 months ago. CC....
Perth synth-metal band Voyager promised and delivered, with Australia taking the top place Semi Final 2 and landing 9th overall Perth synth-metal quintet will voyage to this year's Eurovision Song Contest to represent Australia in Liverpool
Australia's Voyager rock through to Eurovision final. Perth synth-metal band voted among 10 winners of their semi-final in Liverpool, and will perform their song Promise in the final on...
Australia will compete in the 2023 Eurovision grand final, with synth-metal band Voyager voted in after a glittering performance in the second semifinal.
Australia's Eurovision Song Contest entrant Voyager finally get to deliver on their 'Promise' in Liverpool - ABC News. By Andrew McGarry. Posted Wed 10 May 2023 at 12:45pm, updated Wed 10 May 2023 at 7:56pm. Watch. 4m 1s. Voyager 'confident' of qualifying for spot in Eurovision final.
Australia: Voyager to Eurovision 2023 with "Promise" Australia has decided! Voyager has been internally selected to represent the country at the Eurovision Song Contest 2023. Listen to their song "Promise" By Justina Helgeson 21 February 2023. Voyager are no longer dreamers and will get to see the Eurovision stage this year!
The Eurovision Song Contest is organized by the European Broadcasting Union, the world's foremost alliance of public service media, representing over 100 member organizations in 56 countries and an additional 34 Associates in Asia, Africa, Australasia and the Americas.
Australian band Voyager is through to the Eurovision finals. Source: AAP / Sanjin Strukic/PIXSELL/PA/Alamy. Key Points. Voyager's song Promise won over fan votes from the 37 countries competing at this year's song contest. They will compete in the grand final on Sunday 14 May at 5:00am AEST. If they win they would be the first Australians to do so.
Australian broadcaster SBS has announced that the band Voyager will be representing Australia at the 2023 Eurovision Song Contest, with their song 'Promise'. The synth-metal quintet from Perth have been rallying for the opportunity to represent their country at the Eurovision Song Contest ever since Australia started taking part in 2015.
Le diffuseur australien SBS a annoncé que le groupe Voyager représentera l'Australie au Concours Eurovision de la chanson 2023, avec sa chanson Promise. C'est la premiÚre fois qu'un groupe va représenter l'Australie au Concours Eurovision.
Voyager is representing Australia in this year's Eurovision Song Contest. Chloe Hashemi / EBU. There is a huge Eurovision following in Australia and the country was set to compete only...
Danny Estrin. En 2023, Voyager a enfin la chance de battre le drapeau australien au concours, devenant ainsi le premier groupe à le faire dans l'histoire de la participation du pays. Voyager se produira dans la deuxiÚme moitié de la deuxiÚme demi-finale le 11 mai prochain. Les paroles de la chanson. Have you ever done anything like this before?
đŠđș Voyager "Promise" (Australia 2023) - LIVE @ London Eurovision Party 2023 - YouTube. wiwibloggs. 192K subscribers. 690. 19K views 4 months ago #Voyager #Eurovision #LEP2023....
Voyager Australia. 48,721 likes · 786 talking about this. Australian Representative of Eurovision 23 'Fearless In Love' AVAILABLE NOW! ffm.bio/voyagerau.
Voyager are the first band to represent Australia at Eurovision (Photo: AP) The quirk means Eurovision has seen entries from Israel and Morocco over the years, while nations as far afield...
Samuel Lee. Apr 20, 2023. 3 min read. Eurovision 2023 Australia profile: 'Promise' by Voyager. Photo credit: Mike Dann. Australia in the Eurovision Song Contest. Australia made its Eurovision debut in 2015 with Guy Sebastian performing 'Tonight Again'. Since then Australia has reached the final in all but one of its seven participations.
Eurovision Song Contest. 5.66M subscribers. 4.9K. 52K views 10 months ago. ...more. This performance of Promise contains flashing lights.Subscribe and đ to Eurovision đ https://www.youtube...
JO de Paris 2024 : Histoire, parcours, coĂ»tâŠ. La flamme olympique en cinq questions. 00:00. Pour la flamme olympique, le grand voyage commence. Elle a Ă©tĂ© allumĂ©e ce mardi matin sur le site ...
Australia's Eurovision 2023 group Voygaer sings "Promise" live at Eurovision in Concert inside AFAS Live in Amsterdam.#Eurovision #Eurovision2023 #Eurovision...