Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest 1971

The Netherlands was represented by Saskia & Serge, with the song '"Tijd", at the 1971 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 3 April in Dublin. The song was the winner of the Dutch national final for the contest, held on 24 February. Saskia & Serge were selected internally by broadcaster NOS as the 1971 performers; it is widely thought that this was done in response to the 1970 preselection in which the couple's song "Spinnewiel" was placed runner-up by the juries despite being the overwhelming favourite of the Dutch public.

Eurovision Song Contest 1971
Country Netherlands
National selection
Selection processNationaal Songfestival 1971
Selection date(s)24 February 1971
Selected entrantSaskia & Serge
Selected song"Tijd"
Finals performance
Final result6th=, 85 points
Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1970 1971 1972►

Before Eurovision

Nationaal Songfestival 1971

The national final was held on 24 February 1971 at the NOS studios in Hilversum, hosted by Willy Dobbe. Saskia & Serge performed six songs and the winner was chosen by postcard voting; again it is believed that this method was employed so that there could be no complaints that the public's choice had been overruled by a handful of jury members.[1]

Final – 24 February 1971
Draw Song Televote Place
1 "Lente" 2,335 2
2 "Tijd" 2,866 1
3 "Bobby snobby baard" 2,282 3
4 "Zomernachtcantate" 589 6
5 "Die dag" 623 5
6 "Vandaag begint de toekomst" 1,674 4

At Eurovision

On the night of the final Saskia & Serge performed 14th in the running order, following Ireland and preceding Portugal. Saskia's performance was hampered by a microphone problem on the opening lines of the song, where her voice was inaudible and the audience and TV viewers heard loud audio feedback. At the close of voting "Tijd" had received 85 points, placing the Netherlands joint 6th (with Sweden) of the 18 entries.[2]

The Dutch conductor at the contest was Dolf van der Linden for the 13th and last time (in total, he conducted 18 songs, including few entries from other countries that did not send their own conductors in the contests hosted by the Netherlands).

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.