Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000

Spain participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 2000 with an entry selected through a national preselection called Eurocanción 2000. It was the first national final organized by Televisión Española (TVE) since 1979.[1] Serafín Zubiri, who had already participated for Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 1992, was the winner with the song "Colgado de un sueño". The song was composed by José María Purón, composer of the Spanish entry that finished second in the 1995 Contest, "Vuelve conmigo". At Eurovision, Serafín Zubiri finished 18th with 18 points.

Eurovision Song Contest 2000
Country Spain
National selection
Selection processEurocanción 2000
Selection date(s)8 February 2000
Selected entrantSerafín Zubiri
Selected song"Colgado de un sueño"
Selected songwriter(s)José María Purón
Finals performance
Final result18th, 18 points
Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄1999 2000 2001►

Before Eurovision

Eurocanción 2000

The final took place on 8 February 2000 at TVE's studios in Madrid, hosted by Carlos Lozano and Paloma Lago. TVE selected 15 songs internally for the national final.

The winner was decided by a combination of 17 regional juries (70%) and televoting (30%). Each jury awarded points from 1 to 10, then the televoting results of the Spanish public were added to the top 3 songs only. Serafín Zubiri got the highest number of points from the jury and the audience and was proclaimed winner and entrant for Spain at the Eurovision Song Contest 2000.[2]

Apart from Serafín Zubiri, Anabel Conde, who finished second in the Eurovision Song Contest 1995, participated in the contest in a duo with David Domínguez.

Final – 8 February 2000
Draw Artist Song Songwriter(s) Jury Televote Total Place
1 Raúl "Sueño su boca" José Ogara, Josep Llobell 112 40 152 2
2 Anabel Conde and David Domínguez "Ni colores ni fronteras" David Domínguez 83 0 83 4
3 Alto Rango "Sin fronteras" Faustino Gómez, Rosa Berna 75 0 75 6
4 Ángel Caramé "Suave" Alberto Manuel Guzmán, Rafael Pastor, Pedro Morales 45 0 45 11
5 Alazán "Alcanzarás la luna" José Antonio Granados 76 0 76 5
6 Yago "No quiero" Manolo Morvizón, Luis Baras, L. Roldán, Voss 103 30 133 3
7 Olga Domínguez "Si te vas" Luis Villa 49 0 49 10
8 Aguadulce "Buscaré" J. M. Alvarez, J. César Odro, Fernando Portillo 20 0 20 14
9 Serafín Zubiri "Colgado de un sueño" José Maria Purón 155 50 205 1
10 20 Años de Cuna "El reloj" Fernando Calleja, Raquel Justicia 23 0 23 12
11 Manuel Bravo "Muy mujer" Manuel Bravo 3 0 3 15
12 Sur S.A. "Mala racha" José Taboada, J. García, J. Laguna, Antonio Mellado 22 0 22 13
13 Myriam Fultz "Gotas de algodón" Oscar Gómez 58 0 58 8
14 Sito Abalos "Bailando en la oscuridad" S. Templa 52 0 52 9
15 Dulce "Dónde estabas" Dulce Hernández 59 0 59 7
Detailed Regional Jury Results
Draw Song
Andalusia
Aragon
Asturias
Balearic Islands
Canary Islands
Cantabria
Castilla–La Mancha
Castile and León
Catalonia
Extremadura
Galicia
Madrid
Murcia
Navarre
Basque Country
La Rioja
Valencia
Total score
1 "Sueño su boca" 373868589610951078112
2 "Ni colores ni fronteras" 7269766817674783
3 "Sin fronteras" 8691742971825675
4 "Suave" 735358234545
5 "Alcanzarás la luna" 9816854186642876
6 "No quiero" 495109910210448109103
7 "Si te vas" 5667567749
8 "Buscaré" 2451331120
9 "Colgado de un sueño" 1010101091010107104810108910155
10 "El reloj" 1131293323
11 "Muy mujer" 123
12 "Mala racha" 8432522
13 "Gotas de algodón" 74181723199658
14 "Bailando en la oscuridad" 54424945563152
15 "Dónde estabas" 632272233955312459

At Eurovision

At Eurovision, Zubiri performed 13th. At the close of the voting he had received 18 points, placing 18th of 24.[3]

Voting

References

  1. "eurovision-spain.com | eurofan.tv". www.eurovision-spain.com. Archived from the original on 6 September 2006.
  2. https://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.geocities.com/national_finals_90s_00s/Spain2000.html&date=2009-10-26+02:40:49
  3. "Final of Stockholm 2000". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 10 April 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  4. "Results of the Final of Stockholm 2000". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 10 April 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
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