Bundesvision Song Contest 2005

The Bundesvision Song Contest 2005 was the first edition of the annual Bundesvision Song Contest musical event. The contest was held on 12 February 2005 at the König Pilsener Arena in Oberhausen, North Rhine-Westphalia.[1] The contest was hosted by Stefan Raab, Annette Frier, and Oliver Pocher in the green room.[2] It was the first Germany-wide music competition in this format.

Bundesvision Song Contest 2005
Dates
Final12 February 2005
Host
VenueKönig Pilsener Arena, Oberhausen, North Rhine-Westphalia
Presenter(s)
Participation map
  • A coloured map of the states of Germany
    Legend
    •      1st place     2nd place     3rd place     4th place     5th place     6th place     7th place     8th place     9th place     10th place     11th place     12th place     13th place     14th place     15th place     16th place
Vote
Voting systemEach state awards 12, 10, 8–1 points to their top 10 songs.
Winning song Hesse
"Geile Zeit" by Juli

Origins

The concept of the Bundesvision Song Contest was first introduced during episode 657 of the late-night television comedy talk show TV total by presenter Stefan Raab on 20 December 2004. The structure of the Bundesvision Song Contest is very similar to that of the Eurovision Song Contest, held among European countries; the Bundesvision Song Contest uses the sixteen states of Germany, only songs with (at least partially) German-speaking text were allowed, Stefan Raab also announced that the winning state would host the Bundesvision Song Contest 2006.

From 17 January 2005, the participants and their states were presented on TV total, for four weeks a themed evening was organised for each artist, in addition to a discussion with Raab about the chosen song.

Because suitable representatives were not found for all states, some artists represented states, to which they had no or only a very indirect tie, earning some criticism of the contest, for example, Cologne based band Klee representing Saarland, and not North Rhine-Westphalia.

Contest overview

The winner of the Bundesvision Song Contest 2005 was alternative pop band Juli with the song "Geile Zeit", representing Hessen. In second place were Fettes Brot representing Schleswig-Holstein, and third place to Sido with Brainless Wankers representing Berlin.[1][3][4]

14 of the 16 states awarded themselves the maximum of 12 points, with North Rhine-Westphalia, and Rhineland-Palatinate, awarding themselves 10 points each.

The contest was broadcast by ProSieben and watched by 3.23 million people (11% market share). In the 14-49 age range 2.55 million people watched the contest (21.2% market share).[3]

Results

Draw State Artist Song English translation Radio station Place[4] Points[1]
01  North Rhine-Westphalia Mamadee feat. Gentleman "Lass los" Let go Radio NRW 15 10
02  Hamburg Samy Deluxe "Generation" Tide 96.0 9 44
03  Rhineland-Palatinate Sandy feat. Manuellsen "Unexpected" bigFM 15 10
04  Bremen Lukas Hilbert feat. Trina "Kommt meine Liebe nicht bei dir an" Does my love not reach to you Energy Bremen 11 31
05  Bavaria Slut "Why Pourquoi (I Think I Like You)" Rock Antenne 12 17
06  Brandenburg Virginia Jetzt! "Wahre Liebe" True love 94,3 rs2 8 54
07  Schleswig-Holstein Fettes Brot "Emanuela" delta radio 2 130
08  Saarland Klee "Gold" Radio Salü 10 37
09  Saxony De Randfichten "Jetzt geht die Party richtig los" Now the party really starts Radio PSR 6 71
10  Baden-Württemberg Apocalyptica feat. Marta Jandová "Wie weit" How far bigFM 5 77
11  Saxony-Anhalt Jansen & Kowalski "Mamacita" Radio Brocken 13 15
12  Hesse Juli "Geile Zeit" Great time Hit Radio FFH 1 159
13  Thuringia Clueso "Kein Bock zu gehen" No desire to go Radio Top 40 7 63
14  Berlin Sido with Brainless Wankers "Mama ist stolz" Mum is proud Kiss FM 3 113
15  Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Deichkind "Electric Super Dance Band" Antenne MV 14 12
16  Lower Saxony Mousse T. with Emma Lanford "Right About Now" radio ffn 4 85

Scoreboard

Voting results
North Rhine-Westphalia 1010
Hamburg 441122528441122
Rhineland-Palatinate 1010
Bremen 3121123111316
Bavaria 1711123
Brandenburg 54112362524865
Schleswig-Holstein 1308108886128886107788
Saarland 37231412223251
Saxony 71544713123868253
Baden-Württemberg 774654545551235644
Saxony-Anhalt 15312
Hesse 15912812710810101010101210101010
Thuringia 633532352245441263
Berlin 113746671067777851277
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern 1212
Lower Saxony 8567710627636171412

Spokespersons

  • North Rhine-Westphalia – Tobias Häusler
  • Hamburg – Matthias Lorenz-Meyer & Beata Arnold
  • Rhineland-Palatinate – Carmen Christin Burger
  • Bremen – Bella Lesnik
  • Bavaria – Holger Barnsteiner
  • Brandenburg – Marcus Kaiser
  • Schleswig-Holstein – Kaya Laß
  • Saarland – Martina Straten
  • Saxony – Peter Imhof
  • Baden-Württemberg – Hans Blomberg
  • Sachsen-Anhalt – Thomas Schminke
  • Hesse – Johannes Scherer
  • Thuringia – Anne Voigt
  • Berlin – Boussa Thiam
  • Mecklenburg-Vorpommern – Jens Herrmann
  • Lower Saxony – Frank Schambor

References

  1. "Bundesvision Song Contest 2005". fernsehserien.de (in German). Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  2. "Bundesvision Song Contest". fernsehserien.de (in German). Retrieved 19 April 2015.
  3. "Juli Gewinner bei Stefan Raabs Bundesvision Song Contest auf Pro Sieben" [Juli wins Stefan Raab's Bundesvision Song Contest on Pro Sieben] (in German). Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  4. "Bundesvision Song Contest". fan-lexikon.de (in German). Retrieved 19 April 2015.
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