Yugoslavia in the Eurovision Song Contest 1964
- Srđan Matijević
- Stevan Raičković
◄1963 • | 1964 | • 1965► |
Yugoslavia was present at the Eurovision Song Contest 1964, held in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Before Eurovision
Jugovizija 1964
The Yugoslav national final to select their entry, was held on 5 February at the Delavski Dom in Trbovlje[a], hosted by Helena Koder. There were 8 songs in the final, each from the four subnational public broadcasters: RTV Ljubljana, RTV Zagreb, RTV Belgrade, and RTV Sarajevo. The winner was chosen by the votes of an eight-member jury of experts, one juror for each of the six republics and the two autonomous provinces.[b] At the end of the contest, there was a tie between Sabahudin Kurt's song "Život je sklopio krug" and Marjana Deržaj's "Zlati April". Since the Bosnian singer Sabahudin Kurt and his song received more top marks than Marjana Deržaj's, it was chosen as the winner. "Život je sklopio krug" was written by Srđan Matijević and Stevan Raičković.[1]
Final – 6 February 1964 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Draw | Broadcaster | Artist | Song | Points | Place |
1 | RTV Sarajevo | Boško Orobović | "Veče" | 5 | 5 |
2 | RTV Belgrade | Krsta Petrović | "Oka tvog da nema" | 1 | 7 |
3 | RTV Ljubljana | Stane Mancini | "Kakor bela snežinka" | 3 | 6 |
4 | RTV Zagreb | Ivo Robić | "Njen prvi ples" | 0 | 8 |
5 | RTV Sarajevo | Sabahudin Kurt | "Život je sklopio krug" | 21 | 1 |
6 | RTV Belgrade | Lola Novaković | "Tragom zvezda" | 8 | 4 |
7 | RTV Ljubljana | Marjana Deržaj | "Zlati April" | 21 | 2 |
8 | RTV Zagreb | Arsen Dedić | "Odluči se" | 13 | 3 |
At Eurovision
Sabahudin Kurt performed 13th on the night of the Contest following Italy and preceding Switzerland. At the close of the voting the song had received 0 points (nul points), sharing 13th (last) place in the field of 16 competing countries.[2]
Voting
Yugoslavia did not receive any points at the 1964 Eurovision Song Contest.[3]
Score | Country |
---|---|
5 points | Italy |
3 points | Monaco |
1 point | France |
Notes
References
- ^ "Yugoslavian National Final 1964 at Eurodalmatia official ESC club". Archived from the original on 26 February 2008. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
- ^ "Eurovision Song Contest 1964". EBU. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
- ^ a b "Results of the Final of Copenhagen 1964". Eurovision Song Contest. Archived from the original on 6 April 2021. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
External links
- Eurodalmatia official ESC club
- Eurovision Song Contest National Finals´ Homepage
- Eurovision France
- ECSSerbia.com
- v
- t
- e
- Ambasadori
- Berta Ambrož
- Aska
- Baby Doll
- Luči Capurso and Hamo Hajdarhodžić
- Zdravko Čolić
- Daniel
- Doris Dragović
- Extra Nena
- Ida
- Ivan and 4M
- Tereza Kesovija
- Korni Grupa
- Sabahudin Kurt
- Lado Leskovar
- Seid Memić Vajta
- Lola Novaković
- Novi fosili
- Pepel in kri
- Ljiljana Petrović
- Riva
- Krunoslav Slabinac
- Srebrna krila
- Eva Sršen
- Tajči
- Vlado
- Vice Vukov
- "Brazil"
- "Brez besed"
- "Brodovi"
- "Čežnja"
- "Ciao, amore"
- "Dan ljubezni"
- "Džuli"
- "Gori vatra"
- "Hajde da ludujemo"
- "Halo, Halo"
- "Ja sam za ples"
- "Jedan dan"
- "Lejla"
- "Ljubim te pesmama"
- "Mangup"
- "Moja generacija"
- "Muzika i ti"
- "Ne mogu skriti svoju bol"
- "Ne pali svetla u sumrak"
- "Neke davne zvezde"
- "Pozdrav svijetu"
- "Pridi, dala ti bom cvet"
- "Rock Me"
- "Tvoj dječak je tužan"
- "Vse rože sveta"
- "Željo moja"
- "Život je sklopio krug"
- Successor states: Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Croatia
- Kosovo (none)
- Montenegro
- North Macedonia
- Serbia
- Serbia and Montenegro (2004–2006)
- Slovenia