I Am What I Am (Emma Muscat song)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LanguageEnglish
Released14 March 2022
Length3:02
"I Am What I Am"
The official cover for "I Am What I Am"
Single by Emma Muscat
from the EP I Am Emma
LanguageEnglish
Released14 March 2022
Length3:02
LabelWarner Music Italy
Songwriters
  • Dino Medanhodžić
  • Emma Muscat
  • Julie Aagaard
  • Stine Kinck
Music video
"I Am What I Am" on YouTube
Eurovision Song Contest 2022 entry
Country
Artist
Language
English
Composers
  • Dino Medanhodžić
  • Emma Muscat
  • Julie Aagaard
  • Stine Kinck
Lyricists
  • Dino Medanhodžić
  • Emma Muscat
  • Julie Aagaard
  • Stine Kinck
Finals performance
Semi-final result
16th
Semi-final points
47
Entry chronology
◄ "Je me casse" (2021)
"Dance (Our Own Party)" (2023) ►

"I Am What I Am" is a 2022 song by Maltese singer Emma Muscat. The song was released on 14 March 2022, as a replacement for Muscat's previous entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2022, "Out of Sight".[1] The song represented Malta in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022 after Muscat won Malta Eurovision Song Contest 2022, Malta's national final.

The song was released on 14 March 2022, after heavy speculation that Muscat would change her song.[2] According to the rules of the contest, the winner could send any song they wished, and could change it if they wanted to.[3]

Swedish singer Dotter, fiancée of Dino Medanhodžić, one of the song's composers, provides backing vocals on the studio version of the song.[4]

Reception

the song was met with mixed critique by the fans, calling it pretentious and repetitive and more notably a big cliché of a girl coming from a very privileged, upper class background bringing an self-love empowerment anthem.[5][6]

Eurovision Song Contest

At Eurovision

According to Eurovision rules, all nations with the exceptions of the host country and the "Big Five" (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) are required to qualify from one of two semi-finals in order to compete for the final; the top ten countries from each semi-final progress to the final. The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) split up the competing countries into six different pots based on voting patterns from previous contests, with countries with favourable voting histories put into the same pot. On 25 January 2022, an allocation draw was held which placed each country into one of the two semi-finals, as well as which half of the show they would perform in. Malta was placed into the second semi-final, held on 12 May 2022, and performed sixth, in the first half of the show.[7][8] it had finished 16th out of 18 in semi 2, with 27 points by the jury (12th) and 20 points by the televote (15th), making Muscat's entry the first ever NQ in both juries and televotes for Malta.

Charts

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI