Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest 2012

Moldova participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2012 in Baku, Azerbaijan. The Moldovan entry was selected through a national final, organised by the Moldovan broadcaster TeleRadio-Moldova (TRM). Pasha Parfeny represented Moldova with the song "Lăutar", which qualified from the first semi-final and went on to place 11th in the final, scoring 81 points.[1][2]

Eurovision Song Contest 2012
Country Moldova
National selection
Selection processSelecția Națională 2012
Selection date(s)11 March 2012
Selected entrantPasha Parfeny
Selected song"Lăutar"
Finals performance
Semi-final resultQualified (5th, 100 points)
Final result11th, 81 points
Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄2011 2012 2013►

Before Eurovision

Selecția Națională 2012

On 28 December 2011, TRM confirmed their participation in the Eurovision Song Contest 2012. On 3 January 2012, TRM announced that the Moldovan national final would take place on 10 March 2012.[3] Selecția Națională 2012 was the national final format developed by TRM in order to select Moldova's entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2012. The event included a final to be held on 11 March 2012.

Format

The selection of the competing entries for the national final and ultimately the Moldovan Eurovision entry took place in three rounds. The first round occurred on 26 February 2011 and involved a jury panel shortlisting sixty entries from the received submissions based on criteria such as the quality of the melody and composition, vocals and manner of the performance and the originality of the song. The second round was a live audition of the sixty selected artists and their entries in front of a jury panel that took place on 25 and 29 January 2012. The panel selected twenty finalists to proceed to the third round, the televised national final. An additional finalist was selected from the remaining entries which failed to be among the finalists by an online vote which ran between 1 February and 12 February 2012. Twenty-one finalists competed in the final on 11 March 2012 where the winner was selected by the 50/50 combination of an expert jury vote and a public televote. In the event of a tie, the entry that received the highest score from the jury vote would be declared the winner.

Competing entries

Artists and composers had the opportunity to submit their entries until 16 January 2012.[3][4] Artists were required to have Moldovan citizenship, however international artists were able to compete only if they were part of a duo or group where there were no more than two foreigners. Songwriters could hold any nationality.[5] At the conclusion of the submission deadline, 85 valid entries were received by the broadcaster, and were published online between 14 January and 18 January 2012.[6] Submissions included those from 2008 entrant Geta Burlacu, 2009 entrant Nelly Ciobanu and 2010 entrants Olia Tira and SunStroke Project.[7] A jury selected 60 out of the 85 received entries to proceed to the audition round.[8] The live audition round took place on 29 January 2012 where 20 finalists were selected to advance.[9] The jury panel that evaluated the songs during the live auditions and selected the 20 finalists consisted of Olga Ciolacu (singer), Igor Dinga (producer and composer), Vali Boghean (instrumentist, actor and composer), Tatiana Cerga (singer), Andrei Sava (composer), Victoria Tcacenco (professor at the Music, Theatre and Fine Arts Academy) and Dana Argint (Orange Moldova representative).[10] An additional wildcard finalist was selected from the 33 entries which failed to be among the 20 semi-finalists by an online vote which ran between 1 February and 12 February 2012. On 20 February 2012, "Live On Forever" performed by Mariana Mihăilă was selected as the wildcard finalist.[11] The allocation and running order draw for the final took place on 5 March 2012.

On 20 February 2012, "Turn On The Light" performed by Nelly Ciobanu was withdrawn from the competition due to personal reasons and replaced with the runner-up in the online wildcard vote, "Live the Show" performed by Akord.[11][12]

Artist Song Composer (m) – Lyricist (l)
Adrian Ursu "Be Yourself" Adrian Ursu (m), Vica Demici (l)
Akord "Live the Show" Igor Stribițchi (m), Vica Demici (l)
Alexandru Manciu "If You Leave" Alexandru Manciu (m), Mihai Teodor (l)
Anna Gulko "Ballad of Love" Anna Gulko (m/l)
Cristina Croitoru "Fight for Love" Doina Sclifos (m/l)
Dara "Open Your Eyes" Eugen Doibani (m/l)
Doinița Gherman "Welcome to Moldova" Vadim Luchin (m/l), T. Tregubenco (m), Doinița Gherman (l)
Geta Burlacu "Never Ever Stop" Valentin Schirca (m), Alexandru Aquilar (l)
INAYA "Lights" Max Chissaru (m), Mihai Teodor (l)
Irina Tarasiuc & MC Gootsa "Save a Little Sunshine" Ralph Siegel (m), John O’Flynn (l)
Ksenya Nikora "You Better Rush" Serghei Bilcenco (m), Roman Lupu (l)
Leria "A Ray of Sun" Michalis Antoniou (m), Alexandru Bușă (l)
M Studio "Open Your Eyes" M Studio (m/l)
Mariana Mihăilă "Live On Forever" Gorgi (m), Aidan O'Connor (l)
MC Mike & Human Place "The Mole Girl" Ilie Gorincioi (Tadevs) (m/l)
Nelly Ciobanu "Turn On the Light" Eugene Oleinik (m), Kjell Dahlander (l)
Nicoleta Gavriliță "Crazy Little Thing" Nicoleta Gavriliță (m), Serghei Bilcenco (m), Liuba Perciun (l)
Paralela 47 "Arde" Paralela 47 (m), Alecu Mătrăgună (l)
Pasha Parfeny "Lăutar" Pavel Parfeni (m/l), Alex Brașoveanu (m)
Ruslan Țăranu "Blanche" Ruslan Țăranu (m/l)
Transbalkanica "Balkan Riders" Marcel Ștefăneț (m), Ghenadie Cubasov (l)
Univox "Moody Numbers" Nicolai Andrus (m), Renata Platon (l)

Final

The final took place on 11 March 2012 at TRM studios in Chișinău, hosted by Marcel Spataru, Evelina Vârlan and Dorina Gherganov. The winner was selected based on the combination of a public televote and the votes of an expert jury. "Lăutar" performed by Pasha Parfeny was selected as the winner.[2] The jury included Olga Ciolacu (singer), Igor Dinga (producer and composer), Vali Boghean (instrumentist, actor and composer), Tatiana Cerga (singer), Andrei Sava (composer), Victoria Tcacenco (professor at the Music, Theatre and Fine Arts Academy), Angela Braşoveanu (journalist), Nicu Țărnă (singer), Anatol Chiriac (composer), Igor Cobileanski (director) and Ludmila Climoc (Orange Moldova representative).

Final – 11 March 2012
Draw Artist Song Jury Televote Total Place
1 Ruslan Țăranu "Blanche" 0 0.48% 0 0 14
2 Irina Tarasiuc & MC Gootsa "Save a Little Sunshine" 0 6.82% 8 8 6
3 Pasha Parfeny "Lăutar" 12 20.44% 10 22 1
4 Alexandru Manciu "If You Leave" 1 5.02% 4 5 10
5 Paralela 47 "Arde" 0 1.43% 0 0 15
6 Ksenya Nikora "You Better Rush" 0 2.02% 0 0 16
7 Leria "A Ray of Sun" 0 0.88% 0 0 17
8 Cristina Croitoru "Fight for Love" 4 23.68% 12 16 2
9 Mariana Mihăilă "Live On Forever" 0 3.93% 2 2 12
10 MC Mike & Human Place "The Mole Girl" 0 1.29% 0 0 18
11 Nicoleta Gavriliță "Crazy Little Thing" 6 1.86% 0 6 8
12 Geta Burlacu "Never Ever Stop" 7 2.57% 0 7 7
13 Adrian Ursu "Be Yourself" 2 6.62% 7 9 5
14 Doinița Gherman "Welcome to Moldova" 0 2.90% 1 1 13
15 M Studio "Open Your Eyes" 0 1.54% 0 0 19
16 Anna Gulko "Ballad of Love" 0 0.64% 0 0 20
17 Transbalkanica "Balkan Riders" 8 6.03% 6 14 4
18 Dara "Open Your Eyes" 10 5.89% 5 15 3
19 Univox "Moody Numbers" 5 0.61% 0 5 11
20 Akord "Live the Show" 3 4.12% 3 6 9
21 INAYA "Lights" 0 1.23% 0 0 21

At Eurovision

Moldova competed in the second half of the first semi-final (17th on stage), on 22 May 2012, following Austria and preceding Ireland. Moldova received 100 points and placed 5th, thus qualifying for the final on 26 May.[13]

In the final, Moldova was drawn to close the final and perform 26th, following Ukraine. The Moldovan entry scored a total of 81 points and placed 11th in the final.[1]

Split results

  • In the Semi-final Moldova came 5th with 100 points: the public awarded Moldova 7th place with 85 points and the jury awarded 2nd place with 107 points.[14]
  • In the Final Moldova came 11th with 81 points: the public awarded Moldova 13th place with 75 points and the jury awarded 9th place with 104 points.[14]

Points awarded to Moldova

Points awarded to Moldova (semi-final 1)[13]
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point
Points awarded to Moldova (final)[1]
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point

Points awarded by Moldova

References

  1. "Eurovision Song Contest 2012 Grand Final". Eurovision.tv.
  2. Brey, Marco (11 March 2012). "It's Pasha Parfeny for Moldova!". Eurovision.tv.
  3. Hondal, Victor (28 December 2011). "Moldova: TRM calls for songs". Esctoday.com. Archived from the original on 2 May 2012. Retrieved 3 January 2012.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  4. Hondal, Victor (3 January 2012). "Moldova: National final on March 10th". Esctoday.com. Archived from the original on 2 May 2012. Retrieved 3 January 2012.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  5. Brey, Marco (4 January 2012). "Moldova: National final on March 10th". Eurovision.tv.
  6. Hondal, Victor (14 January 2012). "Moldova: First 23 songs available online". Esctoday.com. Archived from the original on 30 April 2012.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  7. Brey, Marco (19 January 2012). "Moldova: Listen to 85 songs online!". Eurovision.tv.
  8. Hondal, Victor (21 January 2012). "Moldova: Sixty acts proceed to the auditions phase". Esctoday.com. Archived from the original on 2 May 2012.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  9. Brey, Marco (29 January 2012). "Moldova: Jury picks 20 national final entries". Eurovision.tv.
  10. Mikheev, Andy. "Moldova at the Eurovision Song Contest 2012". ESCKaz.
  11. Fajgelj, Milica (20 February 2012). "Moldova: National final running order decided". Esctoday.com. Archived from the original on 11 April 2012.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  12. Hondal, Victor (20 February 2012). "Moldova: National final line-up is set". Esctoday.com. Archived from the original on 9 May 2012.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  13. "Eurovision Song Contest Semi-Final (1)". Eurovision.tv.
  14. Siim, Jarmo (18 June 2012). "Eurovision 2012 split jury-televote results revealed". Eurovision.tv.

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