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Malta in the Eurovision Song Contest 1971

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eurovision Song Contest 1971
Participating broadcasterMaltese Broadcasting Authority (MBA)
Country Malta
National selection
Selection processSong For Europe 1971
Selection date(s)20 January 1971
Selected artist(s)Joe Grech
Selected song"Marija l-Maltija"
Selected songwriter(s)
  • Joe Grech
  • Charles Mifsud
Finals performance
Final result18th (last), 52 points
Malta in the Eurovision Song Contest
1971 1972►

Malta was represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 1971 with the song "Marija l-Maltija", composed by Joe Grech, with lyrics by Charles Mifsud, and performed by Grech himself. The Maltese participating broadcaster, the Maltese Broadcasting Authority (MBA), selected its entry through a national final. This was the first-ever entry from Malta in the Eurovision Song Contest, and the first-ever entry performed in Maltese in the contest.

Before Eurovision

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National selection

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Song For Europe was the national final format developed by the Maltese Broadcasting Authority (MBA) which determined the song that would represent Malta at the Eurovision Song Contest 1971. The competition consisted of two parts. The first part was the Malta Song Festival 1970, where the top 6 songs would then go on to the Song For Europe contest. The two contests were organised by two separate organisations; the Malta Song Festival was organised by the Malta Song Festival Board, while Song For Europe was organised by MBA. The use of Malta Song Festival as part of the Maltese national final was a cooperation between the two organisations, this led to the broadcaster not actually being in control of the songs in its own national final.[1]

Competing Entries

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The Malta Song Festival Board received 60 submissions, from which 12 were chosen to compete in the Malta Song Festival.[1][2]

Song Songwriter(s)
"Dlonk, dlonk" Sammy Galea, Albert M. Cassola
"Ejja fil-qrib" Doreen Galea
"Fi ħdanek" Victor Zammit, Clemente Zammit
"Ħabbejt kitarra" Inez Lombardo, Clemente Zammit
"Ħolma' ta' ftit żmien" C. Fiott, M.F. Tonna, P. Mallia, A. Mamo
"Int u jien" T. Frendo, G. Zammit
"Irrid nghix miegħek biss" Edwin Galea
"Il-festa tal-poplu tad-dinja" Edward Briffa
"L-għanja li ktibt għalik" Carmelo Zammit
"Marija l-Maltija" Joe Grech, Charles Mifsud
"Min int?" Victor Fenech, Clemente Zammit
"Wara x-xejn" Lee Spiteri, Edw. Cassar-Scicluna

Malta Song Festival 1970

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Malta Song Festival 1970 was held on 28 November 1970 at the Malta Hilton. All songs were sung twice, and the top six qualified to Song For Europe 1971. The order in which the songs were performed is unknown.[3]

Artist Song Result
Carmen Schembri "Dlonk, dlonk" Advanced
Enzo Gusman
Carmen Xerry "Ejja fil-qrib" Advanced
Doreen Galea
Carmelo Borg "Fi ħdanek" Eliminated
Carmen Schembri
Monica Cremona "Ħabbejt kitarra" Eliminated
Unknown
Alfred Agius "Ħolma' ta' ftit żmien" Eliminated
Merga
Carmelo Borg "Int u jien" Eliminated
Mary Rose Darmanin
Edwin Galea "Irrid nghix miegħek biss" Advanced
Unknown
Alfred Agius "Il-festa tal-poplu tad-dinja" Advanced
Joe Cutajar
Mary Rose Mallia "L-għanja li ktibt għalik" Eliminated
Mary Spiteri
Joe Grech "Marija l-Maltija" Advanced
The Links
Joe Cutajar "Min int?" Advanced
Mary Spiteri
Franz Frendo "Wara x-xejn" Eliminated
Merga

Song For Europe / Kanzunetta Għall-Ewropa 1971

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Song For Europe 1971 (Maltese title: Kanzunetta Għall-Ewropa 1971) was held on 20 January 1971 at the Malta Television Studios, hosted by Victor Aquilina, Mary Grech, Charles Micallef, and Yvonne Zammit. The voting was done by an internal and external jury. The internal jury consisted of ten people affiliated with the music industry who each gave out 21 points (6 to their favourite, 5 to their 2nd, 4 to their 3rd, 3 to their 4th, 2 to their 5th, and 1 to their last), all the internal jury votes were multiplied by 10 after they were given out. The external jury consisted of 10 groups of 10 members of the public, representing the 10 electoral districts of Malta, and were chosen at random. Each of the jurors gave out 21 points in the same way the internal jury did.[4][5]

A clause in the rules of the national final stated that the selection was only to select the song that would represent Malta and not the artist, however, Joe Grech was selected as the singer of "Marija l-Maltija" for the Eurovision Song Contest anyway.[6]

Draw Artist Song Internal Jury External Jury Total Place
1 Joe Cutajar "Il-festa tal-poplu tad-dinja" 400 309 709 4
2 Carmen Schembri "Ejja fil-qrib" 300 240 540 6
3 Mary Spiteri "Min int?" 390 343 733 3
4 Enzo Gusman "Dlonk, dlonk" 350 399 749 2
5 Edwin Galea "Irrid nghix miegħek biss" 310 387 697 5
6 Joe Grech "Marija l-Maltija" 350 422 772 1

At Eurovision

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On the night of the final Joe Grech performed second in the running order, following Austria and preceding the eventual winner Monaco. At the close of voting "Marija l-Maltija" had received 52 points, getting Malta a last place on their debut.

The Maltese conductor at the contest was Anthony Chircop.

Each participating broadcaster appointed two jury members, one below the age of 25 and the other above, who voted by giving between one and five points to each song, except that representing their own country. All jury members were colocated at the venue in Dublin, and were brought on stage during the voting sequence to present their points.[7] The Maltese jury members were Gaetan Abela and Spiro Sillato.[8]

Voting

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Malta Song Festival compositions chosen". Times of Malta. 28 October 1970. p. 11.
  2. ^ "National Song Festival". Times of Malta. 21 October 1970. p. 14.
  3. ^ "Malta Song Festival At The Hilton". Times of Malta. 18 November 1970. p. 13.
  4. ^ "A Song For Europe". Times of Malta. 18 January 1971. p. 20.
  5. ^ "Preparations Well Ahead For "Song For Europe" Contest". Times of Malta. 13 January 1971. p. 20.
  6. ^ "Today's Festival On Malta Television". Times of Malta. 20 January 1971. p. 20.
  7. ^ Roxburgh, Gordon (2014). Songs for Europe: The United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest. Volume Two: The 1970s. Prestatyn, United Kingdom: Telos Publishing. p. 60. ISBN 978-1-84583-093-9.
  8. ^ Barry, Fred (7 April 1971). "Eurovision Song Contest Analysis – It was all in the game". Times of Malta. p. 11.
  9. ^ a b "Results of the Final of Dublin 1971". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 2 May 2023. Retrieved 2 May 2023.