Moscow in the Turkvision Song Contest

Moscow Oblast, one of the Federal subjects of Russia and was competing under the name of Moscow, made their debut at Turkvision Song Contest when they competed at the Turkvision Song Contest 2014, held in Kazan, Tatarstan. It is unknown which of the Russian broadcasters who organised the participation of Moscow.[1] Moscow withdrew after their one and only appearance.

Moscow
Member stationTMV TV
Participation summary
Appearances1
First appearance2014
Last appearance2014
Best result12th: 2014
Worst result12th: 2014
For the most recent participation see
Moscow in the Turkvision Song Contest 2014

History

2014

Russia were one of the original twenty-four participating countries and regions that were competing at the first Turkvision Song Contest in 2013, but later withdrew from the contest.[2] On 20 July 2014 it was confirmed that Russia would make their official début at the 2014 Song Contest to be held in Kazan, Tatarstan instead.[1] Further confirmation was revealed on 16 November 2014, that the federal subject of Russia, Moscow Oblast, would be the Russian region taking part in Kazan. During the contest the region would go solely under the common-name of "Moscow".[3] Moscow were represented by Kazan World who finished 2nd in the selection process for Tatarstan in 2014.

Moscow performed 12th in the semi final and finished in 5th place with 190 points meaning they qualified for the final. In the final Moscow performed 14th out of the 15 finalists and finished 12th with 170 points.

Participation

Table key

 1st place   2nd place   3rd place   Last place   Withdrew/Disqualified 

Year Artist Title Language Final Points Semi Points
2014 Kazan World "Sine kotem" Tatar 12 170 5 190
2015 Did not participate
2016 Did not participate Contest cancelled
gollark: What is this ”project” of which you speak?
gollark: I just block all ads everywhere unless they follow some standards (no persistent tracking, static images only, clearly delineated ads, small out of the way ones), since it's basically the only thing I can do to influence advertisers.
gollark: Practically, assuming you have remotely user-controllable computers and stuff, and you can't meddle with the network, you probably can't do much to stop people from doing necromancy outside of saying "WARNING: bargaining with mysterious entities on the extranet is a Bad Idea™".
gollark: I was referring to filtering "liches and other stuff necromancers stumble upon".
gollark: *Can* they actually filter that (EDIT: referring to "liches and other stuff necromancers stumble upon") in practice, given the whole "end to end encryption" thing, apart from somehow not letting those on the network?

See also

References

  1. Granger, Anthony (20 July 2014). "Turkvizyon '14: Agreement signed with a number of countries". eurovoix.com. Eurovoix. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
  2. Granger, Anthony (19 October 2013). "Participating Countries Revealed". Eurovoix. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
  3. Granger, Anthony (16 November 2014). "Russia: Moscow Replaces Russia At Turkvizyon". eurovoix.com. Eurovoix. Retrieved 17 November 2014.
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