Photo Credit: www.entertainmentdaily.co.uk |
1. Dami Im, Australia
“Sound of Silence” (composers: Anthony Egizii and David Musumeci)
Official ranking: Second place
“Sound of Silence” (composers: Anthony Egizii and David Musumeci)
Official ranking: Second place
Yes, I know Australia is not part of the continent that puts the “Euro” in Eurovision. So?
An exception should of course be made for this dynamite performer. (To
clarify, Australia started participating in Eurovision last year,
somewhat controversially.) The Season 5 X Factor Australia
champ channeled circa-2008 Lady Gaga with her sculptural bubble-gown,
blunt bangs, and booming vocals. All that was missing was the
disco-stick, really. As for “Sound of Silence,” it clearly had nothing in common with that Simon & Garfunkel song (it’s basically the loudest song about “silence,” ever), but on Saturday, it sounded like an instant Eurovision classic.
2. Nika Kocharov & Young Georgian Lolitaz, Georgia
“Midnight Gold” (composers: Kote Kalandadze and Thomas G:son)
Official ranking: 20th place
“Midnight Gold” (composers: Kote Kalandadze and Thomas G:son)
Official ranking: 20th place
The
Least Cheesy Performance Award goes to this hard-charging hipster band.
This basically seemed like the Gallagher brothers’ long-lost Georgian
cousins playing a long-lost outtake from Kasabian’s first album at
Glastonbury. (It’s no wonder, then, that this Anglophilic song received
the allotted 12 points from England’s professional jury.) Kudos to the
trippy, psychedelic production, too, which almost made it seem like the
scruffy indie rockers were competing at Eurovision 1969. The colors, the
colors!
3. Poli Genova, Bulgaria
“If Love Was a Crime” (composers: Borislav Milanov, Sebastian Arman, Joacim, Bo Persson, and Poli Genova)
Official ranking: Fourth place
“If Love Was a Crime” (composers: Borislav Milanov, Sebastian Arman, Joacim, Bo Persson, and Poli Genova)
Official ranking: Fourth place
This asymmetrically emo-haired former child star, onetime X Factor Bulgaria
judge, and Eurovision 2009/2011 veteran delivered a vivacious, adorable
performance that came across like a Robyn-fronted Spice Girls starring
in an off-off-off-Broadway musical production of TRON. What’s not to love?
4. Sergey Lazarev, Russia
“You Are the Only One” (composers: Philipp Kirkorov, Dimitris Kontopoulos, John Ballard, and Ralph Charlie)
Official ranking: Third place
“You Are the Only One” (composers: Philipp Kirkorov, Dimitris Kontopoulos, John Ballard, and Ralph Charlie)
Official ranking: Third place
The
Best Production Award goes to this seemingly Sprockets-inspired number.
Lazarev (one half of the popular, double-exclamation-pointed Russian
pop duo Smash!!, and a former member of a children’s group featuring
members of t.A.T.u.) began by dramatically casting shapes like a visitor
at a Children’s Museum shadowbox display, then he bravely climbed
inside what looked like wall-sized versions of Asteroids and Q-Bert
video-game consoles. This performance was a smash (!!), indeed.
5. Jamie-Lee, Germany
“Ghost” (Thomas Burchia, Anna Leyne, and Conrad Hensel)
Official ranking: 26th place
“Ghost” (Thomas Burchia, Anna Leyne, and Conrad Hensel)
Official ranking: 26th place
The Sanrio- and Kpop-obsessed winner of The Voice Germany Season
5 hit the stage looking like Gwen Stefani’s Harajuku Girls threw up all
over her. And her cutesy performance made it seem like she’s watched Avril Lavigne’s “Hello Kitty” music video
a few too many times. Despite all the awkward cultural appropriation, I
thought she pulled off her performance of this Halsey-lite track
nicely, but voters didn’t agree: Jamie came in dead last.
6. Hovi Star, Israel
“Made of Stars” (composer: Doron Medalie)
Official ranking: 14th place
“Made of Stars” (composer: Doron Medalie)
Official ranking: 14th place
Not
the similarly titled Moby tune, “Made of Stars” is instead an
empowerment-anthem power ballad, accompanied Saturday by pyro-laden
production that made it seem like Star was singing his coronation song
on the Israeli Idol finale. (Star actually competed on Israel’s version of Idol, Kokhav Nolad, in 2009, so this makes total sense. Pretty much every Eurovision singer this year seemed to be an Idol, Voice, X Factor, or Got Talent
veteran.) The openly gay Star lived up to his surname as he served what
Logo commentator Michelle Collins called “Adam Lambert realness” – a
triumph after he reportedly experienced homophobic bullying by Russian border police officers last month while on tour promoting “Made of Stars.”
7. Nina Kraljic, Croatia
“Lighthouse” (composers: Andreas Grass and Nikola Paryla)
Official ranking: 23rd place
“Lighthouse” (composers: Andreas Grass and Nikola Paryla)
Official ranking: 23rd place
A 10th place contestant on Croatia’s Got Talent and the winner of the first season of The Voice Croatia, Miss Kraljic – the biggest pop star in her native land – gave me the instant impression that talent shows in Europe are much, much cooler than what we Yanks get on Fox and NBC. The ethereal worldbeat diva appeared in a Homogenic-era Bjork kimono that Drag Race’s own Kim Chi would probably love to borrow for Logo’s Season 8 Drag Race
finale. And before the chorus, she’d already undergone a dramatic
costume change, serving Madonna-at-the-1991-Oscars realness in an Old
Hollywood column gown. Her vocals admittedly wavered on the massive
song, but what Nina lacked in perfect pitch she made up for with
impeccable show-woman-ship and fashion flair.
8. Amir, France
“J'ai cherché” (composers: Amir Haddad, Johan Errami, and Nazim Khaled)
Official ranking: Sixth place
“J'ai cherché” (composers: Amir Haddad, Johan Errami, and Nazim Khaled)
Official ranking: Sixth place
Celine Dion, who won Eurovision 1988
(representing Switzerland), publicly endorsed this Israeli-French
singer-songwriter – and that’s gotta count for something, right? A
veteran of both Israel’s Kokhav Nolad and The Voice France,
Amir didn’t put on the flashiest or splashiest performance, but “J'ai
cherché,” which he co-wrote, was one of this year’s catchiest
contenders.
9. Michal Szpak, Poland
“Color of Your Life” (composers: Kamil Varen and Andy Palmer)
Official ranking: Eighth place
“Color of Your Life” (composers: Kamil Varen and Andy Palmer)
Official ranking: Eighth place
The X Factor Poland
rocker runner-up claimed his “style icon is Marilyn Manson.” Logo
commentator Carson Kressley added, “Maybe with a little Kenny G thrown
in.” I thought Michal looked a bit like Weird Al emceeing the Ringing
Bros.’ circus, personally. But he belted his ballad with all the
earnestness of Michael Bolton in his ponytailed prime. And that tuxedo
jacket was working for Michal. Clearly the color of this guy’s life is
red.
10. Iveta Mukuchyan, Armenia
“LoveWave” (composers: Iveta Mukuchyan, Stephanie Crutchfield, Lilith Navasardyan, and Levon Navasardyan)
Official ranking: Seventh place
“LoveWave” (composers: Iveta Mukuchyan, Stephanie Crutchfield, Lilith Navasardyan, and Levon Navasardyan)
Official ranking: Seventh place
Such eleganza! Why do I feel like if there were ever a RuPaul’s Drag Race Armenia, every queen would lip-sync for her life to “LoveWave”? Incidentally, Iveta is a veteran of both The Voice Germany and the coolest-titled talent show ever, Hay Superstar. When will Logo start broadcasting Hay Superstar Stateside, too?
HONORABLE MENTION: Minus One, Cyprus
“Alter Ego” (composers: Minus One and Thomas G:son)
Official ranking: 21st place
“Alter Ego” (composers: Minus One and Thomas G:son)
Official ranking: 21st place
They didn’t have the best song in this year’s competition by a longshot. But Minus One (a former cover band fronted by The Voice France
contestant Francois Micheletto) deserve a semi-honorable mention for
putting several of its members in faux-iron onstage cages, like
something straight out of a vintage Scorpions music video. Are we sure these guys weren’t representing Germany?