Katarína Koščová

Katarína Koščová (born 11 February 1982 in Prešov, Slovakia) is a Slovak singer who rose to popularity after winning Slovensko Hľadá SuperStar, the Slovak version of Pop Idol, shown by STV.

Katarína Koščová
Katarína Koščová
Born (1982-02-11) February 11, 1982
NationalitySlovakia
Occupationsinger
Children1

Slovensko hľadá SuperStar Performances

Episode Theme Song choice Original artist Result
Semi-final - Group 3 Personal Choice "Rome Wasn't Built in a Day" Morcheeba Advanced
Top 11 My Idol "You Had Me" Joss Stone Safe
Top 10 Ballads "Little Sister" Jana Kirschner Safe
Top 9 1970s Disco "We Are Family" Sister Sledge Safe
Top 8 Hits of Year 2004 "Powerless (Say What You Want)" Nelly Furtado Safe
Top 7 Rock Edition "You Oughta Know" Alanis Morissette Safe
Top 6 Duets "Say Say Say"
with Zdenka Predná
Michael Jackson and George Michael Bottom 3
"Oh Me Oh My"
with Miro Jaroš
Jana Kirschner and Miroslav Žbirka
"The Shoop Shoop Song"
with Martina Šindlerová
Cher
Top 5 The Beatles vs Elvis Presley "I Saw Her Standing There" The Beatles Safe
"Jailhouse Rock" Elvis Presley
Top 4 Slovak Hits "Tam kde sa neumiera" Zuzana Smatanová Safe
"Pomätená" Marika Gombitová
Top 3 Swing "Sing, Sing, Sing (With a Swing)" Louis Prima Safe
"Summertime" Abbie Mitchell
"Cheek to Cheek" Ginger Rogers
Finale Favorite song "Rome Wasn't Built in a Day" Morcheeba Winner
"You Oughta Know" Alanis Morissette
Winner's song "Najkrajšia SMS-ka" Katarína Koščová
Finalist duet "Zasvieť"
with Martina Šindlerová
TOP 2

Discography

Albums

  • Slovensko hľadá Superstar Top 11 (April 2005)
  • Ešte sa nepoznáme (July 2005)
  • Naboso (October 2006)
  • Nebotrasenie (February 2009)
  • Štedrý večer (October 2012)
  • Oknom (September 2014)

Singles

  • Katka
  • Pehatá
  • Koľko ešte krát
  • Posledná
gollark: I can't see any reason that wouldn't work, but it *does* seem to introduce a lot of dependence on the registrar.
gollark: How do the registrar and server securely communicate this "one time string/message"?
gollark: So they share a key from data sent over a connection which does *not* require them to both have a key.
gollark: No, those run on asymmetric cryptography.
gollark: So, how does your system actually ensure that both ends trying to encrypt something have one shared key?

See also

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