Fairytale (Alexander Rybak song)
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"Fairytale" is a song composed, written, and recorded by Belarusian-Norwegian singer-songwriter Alexander Rybak. It Template:Esccnty in the Eurovision Song Contest 2009 held in Moscow, winning the contest. It is the first single from Rybak's debut album Fairytales released on 29 May 2009 just after the contest.
Background
Conception
"Fairytale" was composed and written by Alexander Rybak. In February 2009, Norwegian media reported that the song is about Rybak's ex-girlfriend Ingrid Berg Mehus whom he got to know through the Barratt Due Institute of Music in Oslo.[1][2][3] Rybak has since confirmed this. At a press conference in May 2009 he revealed that the song's inspiration came from the Hulder, a beautiful female creature from Scandinavian folklore, who lures young men to her, and then may curse them for all time.[4] The Russian-language version of the song is entitled "Skazka" (Template:Langx).
National selection
Between 24 January and 21 February 2009, "Fairytale" performed by Rybak competed in the Template:Esccnty of the Melodi Grand Prix, the national final organised by Norsk Rikskringkasting (NRK) to select its song and performer for the Template:Escyr of the Eurovision Song Contest. The song won the competition in the biggest landslide of the contest's history,[5] becoming the Template:Esccnty –and Rybak the performer– for Eurovision.[6][7]
"Fairytale" won with a combined televote and jury score of 747,888, in the biggest victory of the Melodi Grand Prix's history. The song received over 600,000 votes more than the runner-up, which made it the clearest win in the history of the competition.[6][5]
Music video
The first official music video for the song, which was used to present the song before the Eurovision final, was Rybak's performance at the Melodi Grand Prix. The most recent video was of Rybak playing the violin and singing with his backing dancers behind him, where the background occasionally changes from white to black.
Eurovision (2009)
On 14 May 2009, the second semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest was held in the Olimpiysky Arena in Moscow hosted by Channel One (C1R) and broadcast live throughout the continent. Rybak performed "Fairytale" sixth on the evening, following Template:Esccnty's "I Don't Wanna Leave" by Lidia Kopania and preceding Template:Esccnty's "Firefly" by Christina Metaxa.[8] After the grand final it was revealed that it had received in its semi-final 201 points, placing first in a field of nineteen and qualifying for the final.[9]
On 16 May 2009, the grand final for the Eurovision Song Contest was held. Rybak performed again "Fairytale" twentieth on the evening, following Template:Esccnty's "Carry Me in Your Dreams" by Kejsi Tola and preceding Template:Esccnty's "Be My Valentine! (Anti-Crisis Girl)" by Svetlana Loboda.[10]
The backing dancers for the Eurovision performances, Sigbjørn Rua, Torkjell Lunde Børsheim and Hallgrim Hansegård, were from the Norwegian dance company Frikar,[11] performing the folk dance halling. The backing singers, Jorunn Hauge[12] and Karianne Kjærnes,[13] wore long pink dresses designed by Norwegian designer Leila Hafzi.[14]
"Fairytale" won with the highest recorded score until then in Eurovision, with 387 points –out of a maximum possible of 492–, surpassing "Hard Rock Hallelujah" Template:Escyr record of 292 by Lordi. It held this record until Template:Escyr when "1944" by Jamala for Template:Esccnty, the first self-written winner after Rybak, won with a record 534 points –but because of the new scoring system with separate sets of televotes and jury votes, the results are not comparable with each other–. Its average score of 9.4 points from every voting nation was the highest since the wide use of televoting began in 1998. "Fairytale" received sixteen scores of 12 points, also a new record, surpassing the previous record of ten held by "Love Shine a Light" by Katrina and the Waves in Template:Escyr and "My Number One" by Helena Paparizou in Template:Escyr; this record was surpassed in Template:Escyr, by "Euphoria" by Loreen, who received eighteen. This was Norway's first Eurovision win since 1995 and third win in overall.
Aftermath
The song was the first single from Rybak's debut album Fairytales released on 29 May 2009 just after the contest.
A video of Rybak's performance of the song at the Eurovision Song Contest final was chosen by YouTube as one of its 31 most memorable videos of 2009.[15]
Commercial performance
The song also debuted on the Norwegian Singles Chart on the week of 11 February 2009 at number 3,[16] before rising to number one on the following week, the week of the Melodi Grand Prix final.[17] This was the first time that the Melodi Grand Prix winner reached number 1 before winning the contest. The song remained at number 1 for 8 consecutive weeks.[18] The song has since entered the Swedish Sverigetopplistan, debuting at number 47, before rising to number 7 in its third week, the week of Eurovision - eventually reaching the top spot. After the song gaining the Top Spot on Eurovision, it entered the Top Ten of many Charts across Europe, and also the No. 1 position in many countries.[19] The song debuted on the UK charts at #10 on Downloads Alone and then dropped to #38 the next week, it also reached Number 3 on the Download Chart. "Fairytale" is the ninth non-UK Eurovision entry to reach the top ten in the UK charts since the contest began in 1956, most recently Johnny Logan reached #2 representing Template:Esccnty in 1987.[20] It was certified Gold in Finland[21] and Norway.[22] The single went multi-platinum in different formats in Russia. It first went platinum as realtone full track and sold 100,000 copies.[23] Then it was certified 2× platinum as ring-back tone with another 400,000 copies sold.[24] Combined sales of the song are 500,000 copies without online downloads.
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Certifications
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Release history
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| Region | Date | Format | Version |
|---|---|---|---|
| Norway | 12 January 2009 | Digital download | Original |
| Germany[39] | 15 May 2009 | Digital download | Original |
| United Kingdom | 17 May 2009 | Digital download[40] | Original |
| Germany[41] | 20 October 2017 | CD-Maxi | Duet with Franziska Wiese |
References
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Her er hun! (Norwegian), Romerikes Blad, February 24, 2009
- ↑ Dette er Alexanders eventyrdame (Norwegian), VG, February 24, 2009
- ↑ Avslørte hvem «Fairytale» egentlig handler om (Norwegian), TV2 Norway, 28 May 2009
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- ↑ Frikar til Moskva! Template:Webarchive (Norwegian), Folkemusikk.no, 22 February 2009
- ↑ Til MGP-finale for 4. gang Template:Webarchive (Norwegian), Agderposten, 22 February 2009
- ↑ - Det gikk som forventet Template:Webarchive (Norwegian), Moss Avis, 22 February 2009
- ↑ Alle vil ha Hafzis kjoler (Norwegian), Adresseavisen, 15 May 2009
- ↑ Fairytale reprise one of YouTube's most memorable of 2009, The official website of the Eurovision Song Contest, December 24, 2009
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- ↑ Archive of Eurovision Song Contest Winners and British entries from 1956 to the present day, everyHit.com
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- ↑ Czech IFPI Singles Chart
- ↑ Search result, Alexander Rybak, billboard.com
- ↑ French Download Single Top 50 - 23 May 2009 Template:Webarchive
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- ↑ Slovakian IFPI Singles Chart
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- ↑ Fairytales: Alexander Rybak - Artist Home - EMI Template:Webarchive, emimusic.de
- ↑ Eminem comeback crowns UK chart, BBC, 24 May 2009
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External links
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- Pages with script errors
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- Alexander Rybak songs
- Norwegian folk songs
- Eurovision songs of 2009
- Eurovision songs of Norway
- Ultratop 50 Singles (Flanders) number-one singles
- Number-one singles in Denmark
- Number-one singles in Finland
- Number-one singles in Iceland
- Number-one singles in Norway
- Number-one singles in Russia
- Number-one singles in Sweden
- Eurovision Song Contest-winning songs
- 2008 songs
- 2009 debut singles
- Songs written by Alexander Rybak
- EMI Records singles
- English-language Norwegian songs