Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2017

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Participating broadcasterRadiotelevisión Española (RTVE)
Country Spain
SelectionprocessObjetivo Eurovisión 2017
Selectiondate11 February 2017
Spain in the
Eurovision Song Contest 2017
Eurovision Song Contest 2017
Participating broadcasterRadiotelevisión Española (RTVE)
Country Spain
Selection processObjetivo Eurovisión 2017
Selection date11 February 2017
Competing entry
Song"Do It for Your Lover"
ArtistManel Navarro
Songwriters
Placement
Final result26th, 5 points
Participation chronology
◄2016 2017 2018►

Spain was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 2017 with the song "Do It for Your Lover", written by Manel Navarro and Antonio Rayo "Rayito", and performed by Manel Navarro himself. The Spanish participating broadcaster, Radiotelevisión Española (RTVE), organised the national final Objetivo Eurovisión 2017 in order to select its entry for the contest. Six artists and songs, one of which was selected through the wildcard round Eurocasting, competed in the televised show where an in-studio jury and a public vote selected "Do It for Your Lover" performed by Manel Navarro as the winner.

As a member of the "Big Five", Spain automatically qualified to compete in the final of the Eurovision Song Contest. Performing in position 16, Spain placed twenty-sixth (last) out of the 26 participating countries with 5 points.

Prior to the 2017 contest, Televisión Española (TVE) until 2006, and Radiotelevisión Española (RTVE) since 2007, had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Spain fifty-six times since TVE's first entry in 1961.[1] They have won the contest on two occasions: in 1968 with the song "La, la, la" performed by Massiel and in 1969 with the song "Vivo cantando" performed by Salomé, the latter having won in a four-way tie with France, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. They have also finished second four times, with "En un mundo nuevo" by Karina in 1971, "Eres tú" by Mocedades in 1973, "Su canción" by Betty Missiego in 1979, and "Vuelve conmigo" by Anabel Conde in 1995. In 2016, RTVE placed twenty-second with the song "Say Yay!" performed by Barei.

As part of its duties as participating broadcaster, RTVE organises the selection of its entry in the Eurovision Song Contest and broadcasts the event in the country. RTVE confirmed its intentions to participate at the 2017 contest on 14 September 2016.[2] In 2016, RTVE organised the national final Objetivo Eurovisión featuring a competition among several artists and songs to select both the artist and song that would represent Spain, a procedure which was continued for its 2017 entry.[3]

Before Eurovision

Eurocasting

Eurocasting was the wildcard round of the national final organised by RTVE that selected its entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2017. A submission period was open from 27 October 2016 until 27 November 2016, and 392 entries were received at the conclusion of the submission period.[4] Professionals at RTVE Digital, the digital branch of the broadcaster, evaluated the entries received and selected thirty entries.[5] The selected entries were revealed via RTVE's official website on 1 December 2016 and among the competing artists was Javi Soleil who represented Spain in 2007 as part of D'Nash.[6]

Artist Song Songwriter(s)
Alicia Nurho Band "Under the Light" Alicia García Garcés
Ander and Rossi "Ahora soy yo"
  • Andersón José Peña
  • Rosendo Sánchez
Brequette "No Enemy"
Carmel "Waiting for a Better End"
  • Carmen Senra
  • Roel García Serrano
Dani J "Sin ti"
  • Daniel Retamosa Jaenes
  • David Carmona
Detergente Líquido "131 bpm" Alberto Rodway Chamorro
E-Twins "Chica del vestido rojo"
  • David Espinosa García
  • Víctor Espinosa García
Ektor Pan "Perfect Storm"
  • Héctor Panedas
  • Florin Boncutiu
Fruela "Live It Up"
  • Ander Pérez
  • Javi Reina
  • Albert Rousseau
  • Jeremy Warder
  • Fruela Fuente
Gio "Vuelve a mí" Sergio Bermejo Romero
Íñigo "Hoy es por mí"
  • Íñigo Etayo
  • Tomás Virgós
Iranzo Iranzinix "Bye te digo" Iranzo Iranzinix
Ivet Vidal "Do You Want Me"
  • Ivet Vidal
  • Melissa Erpen
  • Christian Gulino
  • Igor Fejzula
Javi Soleil "Alas mojadas"
  • Javi Soleil
  • Juan Guevara
Javián "No somos héroes"
  • Javián
  • José Abraham
  • Juanma Leal
Jon Josdi "Dónde estabas tú" Jon Josdi
LeKlein "Ouch!!"
  • David Ascanio
  • Vanesa Cortés
  • Albert Neve
  • Abel Ramos
Lem Baquero "Hard to Love You" Jake Boncuitiu
Milena Brody "Momento" Milena Brody
Nicky Triphook "Daddy's Little Girl" Nicolás González Triphook
Nieves Hidalgo "Esclava" Rafael Artesero
Nito "Luna"
  • Nito Solsona
  • Chus Santana
Padre Damián "Thousand Suns"
  • Andreas Öhrn
  • Sebastian Thoth
Paradise Phantoms "Madrifornia" Marcos Miranda
Pedro Elipe "Del dolor" Pedro Elipe
Rebeca Moss "Volveré por ti"
  • Rebeca Moss
  • Luis Rodríguez
Romy Low "In Love"
  • Romy Low
  • Xasqui Ten
Shannel "Bailando" David Villas
Stvrkid feat. Silence of the Wolves "Sparkling Lights"
  • Jose Coll
  • Angela Carpio
  • Julio Marqués Emés
Wildback "Noches de verano"
  • Pol Sancho
  • Edu Brun
  • Eudald Reixach

Selection

In the first stage, Internet users had between 2 and 12 December 2016 to vote for their favourite song on RTVE's official website. Votes from 55,264 users were received at the conclusion of the voting, and the top ten entries that qualified for the next stage were announced on 15 December 2016 on the special webcast show Spain Calling, presented by Irene Mahía and Paloma G. Quirós and broadcast on RTVE's official website.[7][8] In the second stage, a seven-member jury evaluated the ten entries and selected three entries for the final stage which were announced on 20 December 2016 on Spain Calling.[9][10] The members of the jury were Juan Magán (jury chairperson, singer-songwriter and music producer), Sheila Blanco [es] (singer-songwriter and vocal coach), Sebas E. Alonso (journalist and co-director of Jenesaispop), David Feito (singer-songwriter and musician, represented Spain in 2013 as part of El Sueño de Morfeo), Pepe Herrero (composer and conductor), Guille Milkyway [es] (singer-songwriter and producer, creator and frontman of La Casa Azul) and Pascual Osa [es] (composer and conductor).[11]

First stage – 15 December 2016
Artist Song Percentage Place Result
Alicia Nurho Band "Under the Light" 3.25% 15 N/a
Brequette "No Enemy" 4.59% 3 Advanced
Dani J "Sin ti" 3.37% 13 N/a
E-Twins "Chica del vestido rojo" 2.86% 25 N/a
Fruela "Live It Up" 3.72% 6 Advanced
Íñigo "Hoy es por mí" 2.91% 23 N/a
Ivet Vidal "Do You Want Me" 3.07% 20 N/a
Javián "No somos héroes" 4.67% 2 Advanced
LeKlein "Ouch!!" 4.11% 4 Advanced
Milena Brody "Momento" 2.89% 24 N/a
Nieves Hidalgo "Esclava" 3.66% 8 Advanced
Padre Damián "Thousand Suns" 2.66% 26 N/a
Pedro Elipe "Del dolor" 3.87% 5 Advanced
Romy Low "In Love" 3.72% 7 Advanced
Stvrkid feat. Silence of the Wolves "Sparkling Lights" 3.42% 12 N/a
Ander and Rossi "Ahora soy yo" 2.98% 22 N/a
Carmel "Waiting for a Better End" 3.19% 18 N/a
Detergente Líquido "131 bpm" 2.53% 28 N/a
Ektor Pan "Perfect Storm" 3.01% 21 N/a
Gio "Vuelve a mí" 3.37% 14 N/a
Iranzo Iranzinix "Bye te digo" 2.32% 30 N/a
Javi Soleil "Alas mojadas" 3.43% 11 N/a
Jon Josdi "Dónde estabas tú" 2.41% 29 N/a
Lem Baquero "Hard to Love You" 3.10% 19 N/a
Nicky Triphook "Daddy's Little Girl" 3.59% 9 Advanced
Nito "Luna" 4.81% 1 Advanced
Paradise Phantoms "Madrifornia" 3.20% 17 N/a
Rebeca Moss "Volveré por ti" 3.46% 10 Advanced
Shannel "Bailando" 3.24% 16 N/a
Wildback "Noches de verano" 2.62% 27 N/a
Second stage – 20 December 2016
Artist Song Jurors Total Place Result
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Brequette "No Enemy" 2 1 1 2 6 4 N/a
Fruela "Live It Up" 3 2 3 8 2 Advanced
Javián "No somos héroes" 3 1 3 7 3 Advanced
LeKlein "Ouch!!" 1 3 2 3 9 1 Advanced
Nieves Hidalgo "Esclava" 2 2 6 N/a
Pedro Elipe "Del dolor" 2 2 6 N/a
Romy Low "In Love" 1 1 8 N/a
Nicky Triphook "Daddy's Little Girl" 3 2 1 6 4 N/a
Nito "Luna" 0 10 N/a
Rebeca Moss "Volveré por ti" 1 1 8 N/a

Concert show

The final stage took place in the form of a webcast concert show on 12 January 2017 at the Ciudad de la Imagen in Pozuelo de Alarcón (Madrid), hosted by Irene Mahía and Paloma G. Quirós and broadcast on RTVE's official website.[9] The three entries that qualified from the second stage competed and "Ouch!!" performed by LeKlein qualified for the national final exclusively through a public vote via RTVE's official website and Eurovision app. More than 7,000 votes were received, with a majority coming from the app.[12][13][14] In addition to the performances of the competing entries, guest performers included David Rees and former Eurovision contestant Azúcar Moreno which represented Spain in 1990.[15] The concert show was watched by more than 20,000 unique users, with the hashtag #Eurocastingfinal becoming the #1 worldwide trending topic on social media.[14]

Concert show – 12 January 2017
R/O Artist Song Percentage Place Result
1 Javián "No somos héroes" 21.7% 2 N/a
2 Fruela "Live It Up" 15.0% 3 N/a
3 LeKlein "Ouch!!" 63.3% 1 Qualified

Objetivo Eurovisión 2017

Objetivo Eurovisión 2017 was the national final organised by RTVE that took place on 11 February 2017 at the VAV studios in Leganés (Madrid), hosted by Jaime Cantizano.[16][17] The show was broadcast on La 1 as well as online via RTVE's official website rtve.es.[18] Six artists and songs competed with the winner being decided upon through a combination of public televoting and an in-studio expert jury.[3] The national final was watched by 1.449 million viewers in Spain with a market share of 8.9%.[19]

The three members of the in-studio jury that evaluated the entries during the final were:[20]

Competing entries

The six competing acts were announced on 12 January 2017 during the concert show of Eurocasting.[21] One of the artists, LeKlein, was selected through Eurocasting, while the remaining five artists were professional and established acts invited by RTVE for the national final.[22][23]

Artist Song Songwriter(s)
LeKlein "Ouch!!" David Ascanio, Vanesa Cortés, Albert Neve, Abel Ramos
Maika "Momento crítico" Rafael Artesero, José Juan Santana
Manel Navarro "Do It for Your Lover" Manel Navarro, Antonio Rayo "Rayito"
Mario Jefferson "Spin My Head" Chris Wahle
Mirela "Contigo" Tony Sánchez-Ohlsson, Isaac Luke, Ander Pérez
Paula Rojo "Lo que nunca fue" Paula Rojo, Álvaro Bárcena

Final

The televised final took place on 11 February 2017. The running order for the six participating entries was announced on 2 February 2017.[24] In addition to the performances of the competing entries, guest performers included Roko, Edu Soto and former Eurovision contestants Karina, David Civera, and Barei which represented Spain in 1971, 2001, and 2016, respectively.[25] The winner, "Do It for Your Lover" performed by Manel Navarro, was selected through the combination of the votes of an in-studio jury (50%) and a public vote via telephone, SMS and RTVE's official Eurovision app (50%).[26] Since Manel Navarro and Mirela were tied at 58 points, a jury tie-break was held which declared Navarro as the winner.[27][28]

Final – 11 February 2017
R/O Artist Song Jury Televote Total Place
Phone SMS App Total Points
1 Manel Navarro "Do It for Your Lover" 34 890 1,095 124 2,109 24 58 1
2 LeKlein "Ouch!!" 22 1,471 1,105 136 2,712 30 52 3
3 Paula Rojo "Lo que nunca fue" 21 653 262 20 935 18 39 6
4 Mario Jefferson "Spin My Head" 25 291 240 4 535 15 40 5
5 Maika "Momento crítico" 20 932 844 41 1,817 21 41 4
6 Mirela "Contigo" 22 2,523 1,731 225 4,479 36 58 2

Controversy

During the tie-break voting round of Objetivo Eurovisión 2017, when the jury selected Manel Navarro over the public vote's favourite Mirela, and before his reprise performance, loud boos and accusations of rigging could be heard, which resulted in uneasy moments: Manel Navarro responded with a bras d'honneur as he was being booed while on stage.[29] He would apologise for the gesture two days later during a RTVE press conference.[30] The selection of Xavi Martínez as a jury member, who voted for Navarro during the tie-break voting round, was later challenged over potential conflict of interest since he had promoted Navarro and his song on his radio program on Los 40.[31] In February 2017, members of the Spanish Parliament José Miguel Camacho and Ricardo Sixto placed motions to request RTVE for clarification on the details of the selection process for Eurovision and on the possibility of nullifying the results of the national final.[32][33] On 22 February 2017, TVE's Head of Entertainment and organiser of the national final Toñi Prieto was summoned to appear before RTVE's Audit Committee to clarify allegations of mishandling.[34]

RTVE issued a statement on 26 February 2017, stating that the selection process had been conducted following the regulations set by the European Broadcasting Union and that all candidates had accepted the rules at every stage of the process. The statement also defended the criteria of the jury members, stating that, as music radio hosts from the three main media groups in the country, it is "evident" that they "usually have contact with artists, singers and music producers for professional reasons".[35]

Preparation

The official video of the song, directed by Mauri D. Galiano, was filmed in February 2017 on the north coast of Tenerife, Canary Islands.[36] The video premiered on 9 March 2017, which served as the official preview video for the Spanish entry.[37]

Promotion

Manel Navarro made appearances across Europe to specifically promote "Do It for Your Lover" as the Spanish Eurovision entry. On 18 February and 5 March, Manel Navarro performed "Do It for Your Lover" during the third semi-final of the Ukrainian Eurovision national final and the final of the Romanian Eurovision national final, respectively.[38][39] On 2 April, he performed during the London Eurovision Party, which was held at the Café de Paris venue in London, United Kingdom and hosted by Nicki French and Paddy O'Connell.[40] Between 3 and 6 April, Navarro took part in promotional activities in Tel Aviv, Israel and performed during the Israel Calling event held at the Ha'teatron venue.[39] On 8 April, he performed during the Eurovision in Concert event which was held at the Melkweg venue in Amsterdam, Netherlands and hosted by Cornald Maas and Selma Björnsdóttir.[41] Navarro also took part in promotional activities in Portugal on 26 and 27 April where he appeared during the RTP1 talk show 5 Para A Meia-Noite.[42][43]

In addition to his international appearances, he performed the song on the talk show ¡Qué tiempo tan feliz! on Telecinco on 25 February.[44] On 15 April, Navarro performed during the Eurovision Spain Pre-Party, which was held at the Sala La Riviera venue in Madrid.[45] On 25 April, a farewell party was held for Navarro before he travelled to Kyiv for the contest, which took place at the Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid, hosted by Ambassador Anatoly Scherba.[46]

At Eurovision

Notes and references

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