Eurovision Song Contest 2024 | ||||
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Country | Italy | |||
National selection | ||||
Selection process | Sanremo Music Festival 2024 | |||
Selection date(s) | 10 February 2024 | |||
Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest | ||||
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Italy is set to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024 in Malmö, Sweden. Italian broadcaster RAI announced that the winning performer(s) of the Sanremo Music Festival 2024 will earn the right to represent the nation at the contest.[1]
As a member of the "Big Five", Italy automatically qualifies to compete in the final of the Eurovision Song Contest.
Background
Prior to the 2024 contest, Italy has participated in the Eurovision Song Contest forty-seven times since its first entry at the inaugural contest in 1956.[2] Since then, Italy has won the contest on three occasions: in 1964 with the song "Non ho l'età" performed by Gigliola Cinquetti, in 1990 with "Insieme: 1992" by Toto Cutugno, and in 2021 with "Zitti e buoni" by Måneskin. Italy has withdrawn from the Eurovision Song Contest a number of times, with their most recent absence spanning from 1998 until 2010. Italy made its return in 2011, and their entry "Madness of Love", performed by Raphael Gualazzi, placed second—their highest result, to that point, since their victory in 1990. A number of top 10 placements followed in the next editions, culminating with their victory in 2021. In 2023, Italy placed fourth with "Due vite" performed by Marco Mengoni.[2]
The Italian national broadcaster, Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI), broadcasts the event within Italy and organises the selection process for the nation's entry. Between 2011 and 2013 and since 2015, the Sanremo Music Festival has regularly been used to select the Italian entrant to the contest, at first through an intermediate stage of internal selection among the contestants, and after 2014 (when a full internal selection took place), the winner of the festival has always earned the right of first refusal to represent Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest.
Before Eurovision
Sanremo Music Festival 2024
Italian broadcaster RAI is organising the Sanremo Music Festival 2024, the 74th edition of the event, between 6 and 10 February 2024.[3] It will be hosted for the fifth and final year in a row by Amadeus, who also serves as the artistic director. He will be joined by a co-host on each of the nights: Marco Mengoni on the first, Giorgia on the second, Teresa Mannino on the third, Lorella Cuccarini on the fourth, and Rosario Fiorello on the fifth and final night.[4] On 10 July 2023, the broadcaster published the rules of the competition, confirming that its winner will earn the right to represent the country at the Eurovision Song Contest.[1]
30 artists are scheduled to compete in the festival over the course of five consecutive nights; three contestants directly qualified from the selection Sanremo Giovani on 19 December 2023, while the other 27 were selected by the artistic director by direct invitation and from submissions received by the deadline of 27 November 2023, and were announced on 3 December 2023.[1][5][6][7][8] The titles of the competing entries were revealed after Sanremo Giovani.[9] Four former Eurovision Song Contest entrants are among the competing artists: Ricchi e Poveri (1978), Emma (2014), Il Volo (2015), and Mahmood (2019 and 2022), in addition to Diodato, who was set to represent Italy in 2020 before that year's contest was cancelled.[10]
Artist(s) | Song | Songwriter(s) |
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Alessandra Amoroso | "Fino a qui" |
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Alfa | "Vai!" |
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Angelina Mango | "La noia" |
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Annalisa | "Sinceramente" |
|
BigMama | "La rabbia non ti basta" | Marianna Mammone |
Bnkr44 | "Governo punk" |
|
Clara | "Diamanti grezzi" |
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Dargen D'Amico | "Onda alta" |
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Diodato | "Ti muovi" | Antonio Diodato |
Emma | "Apnea" |
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Fiorella Mannoia | "Mariposa" |
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Francesco Renga and Nek | "Pazzo di te" |
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Fred De Palma | "Il cielo non ci vuole" |
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Gazzelle | "Tutto qui" |
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Geolier | "I p' me, tu p' te" |
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Ghali | "Casa mia" |
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Il Tre | "Fragili" |
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Il Volo | "Capolavoro" |
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Irama | "Tu no" | Filippo Maria Fanti |
La Sad | "Autodistruttivo" |
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Loredana Bertè | "Pazza" |
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Mahmood | "Tuta gold" |
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Maninni | "Spettacolare" |
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Mr. Rain | "Due altalene" |
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Negramaro | "Ricominciamo tutto" | Giuliano Sangiorgi |
Ricchi e Poveri | "Ma non tutta la vita" |
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Rose Villain | "Click Boom!" |
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Sangiovanni | "Finiscimi" |
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Santi Francesi | "L'amore in bocca" |
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The Kolors | "Un ragazzo una ragazza" |
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At Eurovision
The Eurovision Song Contest 2024 will take place at the Malmö Arena in Malmö, Sweden, and consist of two semi-finals held on the respective dates of 7 and 9 May and the final on 11 May 2024. All nations with the exceptions of the host country and the "Big Five" (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) are required to qualify from one of two semi-finals in order to compete in the final; the top ten countries from each semi-final progress to the final. As a member of the "Big Five", Italy automatically qualifies to compete in the final on 11 May 2024. In addition to its participation in the final, Italy is also required to broadcast and vote in one of the two semi-finals. This will be decided via a draw held during the semi-final allocation draw on 30 January 2024.[11]
In May 2023, Claudio Fasulo, deputy head of primetime entertainment at RAI (as well as member of the EBU's Eurovision reference group), discussed the possibility of expanding Eurovision-related programming on Rai 1, including moving the broadcast of the semi-finals from Rai 2 to Rai 1.[12]
References
- 1 2 3 "Regolamento Sanremo 2024" [Rules of Sanremo 2024] (PDF) (in Italian). RAI. 10 July 2023. Retrieved 10 July 2023.
- 1 2 "Italy". Eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Retrieved 9 August 2023.
- ↑ Mariani, Cristiana (7 July 2023). "Festival di Sanremo 2024, ecco le date ufficiali" [Sanremo Festival 2024, here are the official dates]. Quotidiano Nazionale (in Italian). Retrieved 7 July 2023.
- ↑ "Sanremo 2024: le co-conduttrici e i co-conduttori al fianco di Amadeus" [Sanremo 2024: the co-hosts alongside Amadeus]. TV Sorrisi e Canzoni (in Italian). 29 November 2023. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
- ↑ "Regolamento Sanremo Giovani ed. 2023" [Rules of Sanremo Giovani 2023] (PDF). Rai (in Italian). 5 June 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2023.
- ↑ Granger, Anthony (8 July 2023). "Italy: Sanremo 2024 & Sanremo Giovani 2023 Dates Announced". Eurovoix. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
- ↑ "Tutte le novità del nuovo regolamento del 74/mo Sanremo" [All that is new about the new rules for the 74th edition of Sanremo]. ansa.it (in Italian). ANSA. 9 July 2023. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
- ↑ Washak, James (24 November 2023). "Italy: Sanremo 2024 Participants to be Revealed on December 3". Eurovoix. Retrieved 24 November 2023.
- ↑ "'Sanremo' 2024: Lineup complete and song titles revealed". Eurovison.tv. EBU. 20 December 2023. Retrieved 20 December 2023.
- ↑ Damacco, Beppe (3 December 2023). "Sanremo 2024: l'elenco dei partecipanti. Sale a 30 il numero degli artisti in gara" [Sanremo 2024: the list of participants. The number of competing artists rises to 30]. Eurofestival News (in Italian). Retrieved 11 January 2024.
- ↑ Van Dijk, Sem Anne (13 December 2023). "Eurovision 2024: Semi-Final Allocation Draw on January 30". Eurovoix. Retrieved 13 December 2023.
- ↑ Trasatti, Ruben (15 May 2023). "Claudio Fasulo: 'Più Eurovision su Rai1 nel 2024. Mengoni e la bandiera arcobaleno? Non lo sapevamo'" [Claudio Fasulo: "More Eurovision on Rai1 in 2024. Mengoni's rainbow flag? We did not know about it"]. Fanpage.it (in Italian). Retrieved 16 May 2023.