Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest

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Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest
Serbia
Participating broadcasterRadio-televizija Srbije (RTS)
Participation summary
Appearances15 (12 finals)
First appearance2007
Highest placement1st: 2007
Host2008
Participation history
Related articles
External links
Serbia's page at Eurovision.tv Edit this at Wikidata
For the most recent participation see
Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024

Serbia has participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 15 times since making its debut in 2007. Serbia previously participated as part of Yugoslavia (both the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia from 1961 to 1991 and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992) and as Serbia and Montenegro (20042006). Serbia won the contest on its debut as an independent country in 2007, with "Molitva" by Marija Šerifović. The country's other top five results are third place in 2012 with "Nije ljubav stvar" by Željko Joksimović, and fifth place in 2022 with "In corpore sano" by Konstrakta. Serbia's other top ten results are sixth place (2008) and tenth place (2015).

History[edit]

2000s[edit]

As Serbia was part of Yugoslavia, it had the opportunity to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest after Yugoslavia's debut at the contest in 1961. It debuted the same year as Spain and Finland and became the first and, for three decades, only socialist country to participate in the competition. The best result of Yugoslavia occurred in 1989 when it won with "Rock Me", sung in Serbo-Croatian and English by Riva. Yugoslavia participated regularly until its breakup between 1991 and 1992.

After a period of absence from 1993 until 2003, Serbia and Montenegro returned to the contest in 2004. They finished in second place with song "Lane moje" performed by Željko Joksimović. By 2006, Serbia and Montenegro split, and with Serbia making its debut entry as an independent nation with the ballad "Molitva" by Marija Šerifović. "Molitva" won the 2007 contest, receiving 268 points, making Serbia the first country to win with a debut entry after Switzerland's win at the first edition. Subsequently, Serbia was host of the 2008 contest in its capital Belgrade.

The second Serbian entry, performed in Belgrade was written by past entrant for Serbia as part of Serbia and Montenegro and contest host Željko Joksimović. The song "Oro", an ethnic ballad, performed by Jelena Tomašević came 6th and received 160 points in the overall rankings.

In 2009, Serbia selected Marko Kon and Milaan to represent them in the second semi-final on 14 May. The duo failed to qualify for the final, marking it the first time Serbia failed to qualify for the final since the introduction of semi-finals.

2010s[edit]

In 2010, Milan Stanković was selected to represent the country in the contest with "Ovo je Balkan", an upbeat song with ethno elements, and is about a love story set in Belgrade. It qualified for the final and in the end achieved 13th place with 72 points. In 2011, Nina was selected with her 1960s inspired song, "Čaroban". She was accompanied with three other singers who would be dancing throughout the performance. In the semi-finals She performed 6th and qualified for the final. In the final, she performed 24th and achieved 14th place. After finishing second in 2004 when representing Serbia and Montenegro, Željko Joksimović returned to compete in 2012 with the song "Nije ljubav stvar". On the second semi-final he took second place, while he finished third in the final, below second-placed Russia and the winner, Sweden. Moje 3 represented Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2013 in Malmö with the song "Ljubav je svuda". They would finish 11th in the first semi-final, therefore not qualifying for the final. This was the second time that Serbia did not qualify for the final. On 22 November 2013, Serbian broadcaster Radio Television of Serbia (RTS) announced that it would not participate in the 2014 contest due to financial difficulties and a lack of available sponsorship for a potential Serbian entry.[1] They did, however, broadcast all three shows.

On 26 September 2014, it was reported that Serbia had decided to return to the 2015 contest to be held in Austrian capital, Vienna.[2] On 15 February 2015 Serbia chose their own representative in the TV show "Odbrojavanje za Beč". Odbrojavanje za Beč (English: Countdown for Vienna) was the national final organised by RTS in order to select the Serbian entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2015. The selection featured three songs composed by Vladimir Graić, the composer of Serbia's winning entry "Molitva" in 2007. Two of the songs were performed by established Serbian artists Bojana Stamenov and Aleksa Jelić, while one was performed by Danica Krstić, a new talent chosen by Graić through a scouting process. Bojana Stamenov was selected as the Serbian representative for Vienna through a 50:50 voting system, where both the audience and the jury voted for her song "Ceo svet je moj" (The whole world is mine) to represent Serbia in Austria. It was later announced that she would perform her song in English (a first for a Serbian entry) titled "Beauty Never Lies". Despite being low with the odds and fan votings, Bojana surprised everyone in the first semifinal and became one of the big press and fan favourites. She qualified to the final with 9th place in Semi-Final 1, but managed to achieve another top 10 result for Serbia in the Grand Final, scoring 53 points and the 10th place.

In March 2016, Radio Television of Serbia internally decided for Sanja Vučić to represent Serbia in Stockholm, Sweden with the song "Goodbye (Shelter)".[3] In the Eurovision 2016, she performed in the second semi-final, qualifying through. In the grand final, Vučić placed 18th by scoring 115 points.[4] The following Eurovision, Serbia was represented by Tijana Bogićević in Kyiv, Ukraine, again chosen by the national broadcaster.[5] She failed to qualify from the second semi-final by finishing 11th.[6]

In February 2018, Sanja Ilić and the world music group Balkanika were declared the winners of the returning Beovizija contest.[7] They performed in the second semi-final of the Eurovision 2018, hosted in Lisbon, Portugal. In the final, Sanja Ilić and Balkanika finished in 19th place with 113 points.[8] Subsequently, the Beovizija 2019 was won by Nevena Božović and "Kruna", who therefore represented Serbia in Tel Aviv, Israel.[9] Božović, who qualified from the first semi-final, scored 89 points in the final and thus placed 18th.[10]

2020s[edit]

On March 1, 2020, girl group Hurricane won Beovizija 2020 with "Hasta la vista" and were supposed to compete in Rotterdam, Netherlands.[11] The Eurovision 2020 was, however, eventually cancelled due the COVID-19 pandemic. In December 2020, Radio Television of Serbia selected Hurricane internally to represent Serbia in the Eurovision 2021.[12] Hurricane performed their new entry, "Loco loco", in the second semi-final, going through. In the final they went on to place 15th with 102 points.[13]

The following year, Beovizija was replaced by the newly-established national selection contest, Pesma za Evroviziju. The contest's first edition, held in March 2022, was won by Konstrakta and "In corpore sano", who was therefore chosen to represent Serbia in the Eurovision 2022, hosted in Turin, Italy.[14] Konstrakta qualified from the semi-final 2. In the final she placed 5th with 312 points.[15] "In corpore sano" became the most successful Serbian entry since 2012. Furthermore, Konstrakta also won the Artistic Marcel Bezençon Award and two Eurovision Awards - the Most Innovative Staging and the Best Lyrics.[16][17]

At the beginning of March 2023, RTS organized Pesma za Evroviziju '23, where Luke Black with "Samo mi se spava" was declared the winner and Serbian representative in Liverpool, United Kingdom.[18] In Liverpool, Luke finished in 24th place with 30 points.

Pesma za Evroviziju '24 was held to select the Serbian representative in 2024,[19] resulting as Teya Dora with the song "Ramonda".

Participation overview[edit]

Prior to Yugoslavia and Serbia and Montenegro's dissolution, artists from the Serbian federal unit represented Yugoslavia in 1961, 1962, 1974, 1982, 1991 and as a republic unit in 1992 and 2004.

Table key
1 First place
2 Second place
3 Third place
X Entry selected but did not compete
Upcoming event
Year Artist Song Language Final Points Semi Points
2007 Marija Šerifović "Molitva" (Молитва) Serbian 1 268 1 298
2008 Jelena Tomašević feat. Bora Dugić "Oro" (Оро) Serbian 6 160 Host country
2009 Marko Kon and Milaan "Cipela" (Ципела) Serbian Failed to qualify 10[a] 60
2010 Milan Stanković "Ovo je Balkan" (Ово је Балкан) Serbian 13 72 5 79
2011 Nina "Čaroban" (Чаробан) Serbian 14 85 8 67
2012 Željko Joksimović "Nije ljubav stvar" (Није љубав ствар) Serbian 3 214 2 159
2013 Moje 3 "Ljubav je svuda" (Љубав је свуда) Serbian Failed to qualify 11 46
2015 Bojana Stamenov "Beauty Never Lies" English 10 53 9 63
2016 Sanja Vučić Zaa "Goodbye (Shelter)" English 18 115 10 105
2017 Tijana Bogićević "In Too Deep" English Failed to qualify 11 98
2018 Sanja Ilić and Balkanika "Nova deca" (Нова деца) Serbian 19 113 9 117
2019 Nevena Božović "Kruna" (Круна) Serbian 18 89 7 156
2020 Hurricane "Hasta la vista" Serbian Contest cancelled[b] X
2021 Hurricane "Loco loco" Serbian 15 102 8 124
2022 Konstrakta "In corpore sano" Serbian, Latin 5 312 3 237
2023 Luke Black "Samo mi se spava" (Само ми се спава) Serbian, English 24 30 10 37
2024 Teya Dora "Ramonda" (Рамонда) Serbian Upcoming

Hostings[edit]

Year Location Venue Presenters Image
2008 Belgrade Belgrade Arena Jovana Janković and Željko Joksimović

Awards[edit]

Marcel Bezençon Awards[edit]

Year Category Performer Song Final Points Host city Ref.
2007 Artistic Award Marija Šerifović "Molitva" (Молитва) 1 268 Finland Helsinki
2022 Artistic Award Konstrakta "In corpore sano" 5 312 Italy Turin

Winner by OGAE members[edit]

Year Song Performer Final Points Host city Ref.
2007 "Molitva" (Молитва) Marija Šerifović 1 268 Finland Helsinki

Barbara Dex Award[edit]

Year Performer Host city Ref.
2010 Milan Stanković Norway Oslo
2013 Moje 3 Sweden Malmö

Related involvement[edit]

Heads of delegations[edit]

Year Head of delegation Ref.
20072009 Anja Rogljić
20102016 Dragan Ilić
20172022 Anja Rogljić
2023–present Uroš Marković

Commentators and spokespersons[edit]

For the show's broadcast on RTS, various commentators have provided commentary on the contest in the Serbian language. At the Eurovision Song Contest after all points are calculated, the presenters of the show call upon each voting country to invite each respective spokesperson to announce the results of their vote on-screen.[28]

From 1961 until 1992, Serbia competed as part of Yugoslavia and from 2004 to 2005 as part of Serbia and Montenegro and broadcast the contest with Serbian commentary during its span of participation.

Year Commentator Channel Spokesperson Ref.
2007 Duška Vučinić-Lučić RTS1, RTS Sat (all shows) Maja Nikolić [sr]
2008 Dragan Ilić and Mladen Popović Dušica Spasić [sr]
2009 Dragan Ilić (semi-final 1)
Duška Vučinić-Lučić (semi-final 2, final)
RTS1, RTS Digital [sr], RTS Sat (all shows) Jovana Janković
2010 Duška Vučinić-Lučić (semi-final 1, final)
Dragan Ilić (semi-final 2)
RTS1, RTS Sat (all shows) Maja Nikolić
2011 Marina Nikolić (semi-final 1)
Dragan Ilić (semi-final 2)
Duška Vučinić-Lučić (final)
Tanja Zeljković (Radio Belgrade)
RTS1, RTS Sat, Radio Belgrade (all shows) Dušica Spasić
2012 Dragan Ilić (semi-final 1)
Duška Vučinić-Lučić (semi-final 2, final)
RTS1, RTS Sat (all shows) Maja Nikolić
2013 Duška Vučinić-Lučić (semi-final 1)
Dragoljub Ilić (semi-final 2)
Silvana Grujić (final)
RTS1, RTS Sat (semi-finals)
RTS2, RTS Sat, RTS HD, RTS Digital (final)
2014 Silvana Grujić (all shows)
Dragan Ilić (final)
RTS1, RTS Sat, RTS HD (all shows) Did not participate
2015 Duška Vučinić (semi-final 1, final)
Silvana Grujić (semi-final 2)
RTS1, RTS Sat, RTS HD (SF1, final)
RTS2, RTS SAT (SF2)
Maja Nikolić
2016 Dragan Ilić (semi-final 1)
Duška Vučinić (semi-final 2, final)
RTS1, RTS Sat, RTS HD (all shows) Dragana Kosjerina
2017 Silvana Grujić and Olga Kapor (semi-final 1)
Duška Vučinić (semi-final 2, final)
Sanja Vučić
2018 Silvana Grujić and Tamara Petković (semi-final 1)
Duška Vučinić (semi-final 2, final)
RTS1, RTS Sat, RTS HD, RTS Planeta (all shows) Dragana Kosjerina
2019 Duška Vučinić (semi-final 1, final)
Tamara Petković and Katarina Epštajn (semi-final 2)
Nikoleta Dojčinović and Katarina Epštajn (Radio Belgrade 1)
RTS1, RTS HD, RTS Svet (all shows)
Radio Beograd 1 [sr] (final)
2021 Duška Vučinić (all shows)
Nikoleta Dojčinović and Katarina Epštajn (Radio Belgrade 1)
2022 Silvana Grujić (semi-final 1)
Duška Vučinić-(semi-final 2, final)
RTS1, RTS Planeta, RTS Svet (all shows)
2023[c] Duška Vučinić (all shows) RTS Svet (all shows), RTS 3 (semi-finals), RTS 1 (final)
Radio Beograd 1 (final)
2024 RTS1, RTS Svet, RTS Planeta, Radio Beograd 1 (all shows) TBA

Other shows[edit]

Show Commentator Channel Ref.
Eurovision: Europe Shine a Light Duška Vučinić RTS1, RTS Svet

Kosovan entrants[edit]

After Kosovo's declaration of independence from Serbia in 2008, its broadcaster RTK was applying for EBU membership, and wished to enter Kosovo independently into the Eurovision Song Contest 2009.[86][87] Kosovo is partially recognised and not a member of the United Nations, and UN membership is required to obtain full EBU membership. As of 2013, RTK has observer status within the EBU and has participated in the Eurovision Young Dancers once.[88][89] Several Kosovo Albanian artists have competed in Festivali i Këngës, the national selection for Albania organised by RTSH. The most notable Kosovo Albanian participants to date are Rona Nishliu, Lindita, and Albina Kelmendi and her family, who represented Albania in 2012, 2017 and 2023, respectively.

Several Kosovo Serb artists have competed in the Serbian national selections organised by RTS. Kosovo-born Nevena Božović represented Serbia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest and twice in the Eurovision Song Contest, first as a member of Moje 3 in 2013 and later as a solo artist in 2019.

Photogallery[edit]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ In 2008 and 2009 the top nine countries in each semi-final as determined by televoting qualified automatically, with the tenth place determined based on the votes of the back-up juries among the remaining countries. This resulted in Croatia advancing to the final instead of Serbia in 2009.
  2. ^ The 2020 contest was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  3. ^ Due to technical issues, Tijana Lukić commentated from Belgrade during the first 15 minutes of the first semi-final.

References[edit]

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