Melodifestivalen 1973 (partially found Swedish TV broadcast; 1973)

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Melodifestivalen 1973 (eng: The Melody Festival 1973) was the Swedish contest for representation in the Eurovision Song Contest 1973. The contest took place in the form of a TV program, broadcasted at Swedish Television (SVT) TV1 on 10 February 1973 from Studio 1 in TV-huset, Stockholm, Sweden [1] at 20:15 (8:15 pm) CET [2].

ABBA in Melodifestivalen 1973.png

ABBA performing "Ring, Ring" in a still from Melodifestivalen 1973. Photograph by SVT Bild.

Status: Partially Found

This contest and airing of Melodifestivalen is notorious for being one of the first major TV appearances of the Swedish pop group ABBA, as they participated under the name of "Björn & Benny, Agnetha & Anni-Frid" (they would take the name ABBA shortly after), with the song "Ring, Ring". The entry ended up at third place.

The airing is one of few Swedish selection rounds to the Eurovision Song Contest that has not been saved in either the Swedish Media Database or in the archives of SVT. Apart from stills and press photographs from the contest, only a few audio snippets of the broadcast are known to exist, as well as one short video clip. A full video recording of the program has not resurfaced.

It is not known what happened to the master tape. It is believed to have been erased by SVT, or to have been destroyed in a fire, but nothing has been confirmed [3]. Some sources suggest that the broadcast was filmed on magnetic tapes, which makes the recording hard to archive.

All songs that participated in the contest exist on studio recordings, but most of the live material from the program is presumed lost.

Content and format

The contest was filmed in the afternoon of 10 February 1973, and broadcasted later the same evening.[3]

The broadcast was split into two pieces, with the first part starting at 20:15 (8:15 pm). The contest was (according to schedule) interrupted by news program Aktuellt at 21:00 (9 pm), after which the contest was resumed at 21:30 (9:30 pm) [2]. The program was broadcasted in color [2].

The program was structured as a competition where all entries performed their songs live together with an orchestra. Afterwards, an "expert jury" composed by musicians gave out points and in the end determined the winner. The host of the program was Swedish TV personality Alicia Lundberg.[1]

The group Malta (entry no. 9) won the contest, and went on to represent Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest 1973.[1]

Table

Contestants
Number Artist Song Status
1 Lasse Berghagen Ding-dong Lost
2 Ted Gärdestad Oh, vilken härlig dag Lost
3 Inga-Lill Nilsson En frusen ros Lost
4 Björn & Benny, Agnetha & Anni-Frid Ring, Ring (Bara du slog en signal) Partially Found (only the full audio has resurfaced)
5 Glenmarks En liten sång (som alla andra) Lost
6 Kerstin Aulén & Mona Wessman Helledudane, en sån karl Lost
7 Claes-Göran Hederström Historien om en vän Lost
8 Lill-Babs Avsked från en vän Partially Found (only the full audio has resurfaced)
9 Malta Sommar'n som aldrig säger nej Partially Found (only clip of the full broadcast available)
10 Ann-Kristin Hedmark I våran värld Lost

Trivia

  • The judging by the jury caused a national outrage in Sweden by the public mass, who believed that the wrong entry won the contest. The entry by ABBA went on to be the by far most popular song in Sweden from the contest that year, and when they again participated the following year, they went on to win both the Swedish selection round, as well as the entire Eurovision Song Contest.[1] The format with an "expert jury" was discarded and never used again.[1]
  • The winner, group "Malta", had to change their name when participating in Eurovision Song Contest, to not be confused with the country Malta. They participated under the name "Nova".[1]

Links

References