ButterTart
Succulent Chinese meal
I was hoping to be dead before you figured that one out. It’s very high 100s!
I was hoping to be dead before you figured that one out. It’s very high 100s!
I wish I could tell you there aren’t any in the top ten, I really do.I have honestly never seen so many men on a Moopy countdown before
CRYING!
11. Sanna Nielsen – I’m in Love
Finalist – 4th place
“What the hell was that hair”
@Suomi, 12/02/2011
Christ, our Sanna is tall, isn’t she? Like, A Place in the Sun presenter tall. Why would she choose to pair her excessive length with such a brutal hairstyle? It makes her look like Belsen’s most aggressively lesbian aufseherin.
Beyond that minor quibble, ‘I’m in Love’ is actually flawless; easily and objectively one of the absolute best songs ever to appear at Melodifestivalen. It’s confident, assured, powerful schlager delivered by a woman fully aware of her own star quality.
‘I’m in Love’ immediately curries favour with me by treating verses as the irrelevance they are; we’re at the first line of the chorus in well under 30 seconds which is ruthless efficiency I fully endorse. And Jesus, WHAT a chorus it is – soaring and uplifting from the get-go with the titular hook designed to be a proper punch-the-air moment. It’s massive, shameless and instant – it’s a classic from the moment you hear it. Of course, it’s towards the end where the song really kicks into overdrive and leaves a trail of pulverised prostates in its wake. Leading into it with that simple piano accompaniment makes the ensuing EXPLOSION of schlager sound fucking HUGE – ‘Hero’ huge. The final choruses are the sound of triumph; what the rapture would sound like if God discovered poppers shortly before it started. ‘I’m in Love’ is Melodifestivalen being done expertly by a singer who totally gets her target audience.
Sanna looks incredibly pleased with herself during the performance, and why wouldn’t she? This was 2011 and she was up there with a song that had already booked its ticket to the final in the first thirty seconds. When she steps out of that head massager and struts her colossal frame down to the front of the stage, it feels like a proper moment (Enhanced by the crowd audibly going NUTS for her). The surprise choreo and jubilant big notes cap off an almighty showing from our Sanna – this is a statement performance and everything about it just feels big and important.
Obviously, Sanna went on to undo the sad of her multiple near-misses by winning the whole thing three years later, but I don’t think that song is worthy of being her enduring legacy at Melodifestivalen. That honour should go to ‘I’m in Love’, which is a perfect snapshot of everything the contest should be about. This was so nearly in my top ten, but 11th is still a Hell of a showing for Sanna and, I think, sufficient tribute to the iconic status of this song.
YES - was having a Roger renaissance yesterday morning.
You must listen to this - the key change
Imagine you're in the audience when a twelve foot woman is released from her cage and starts slowly strutting towards you. Now tell me there's no drama.Never rated this, it's probably her worst entry in my book? It's just a bit too twee and happy, where is the DRAMA.
Sent to prison last year for drink driving, dearAm I correct in thinking Roger is beloved and considered a demigod by the people of Sweden? According to a blog post I wrote, that seems to be the case.
I mean, Ant McPartlin nearly killed several people while he was off his cock and is still one of the biggest stars in Britain.Sent to prison last year for drink driving, dear
Are you confusing Roger Pontare with Julie Covington again?The staging was completely inappropriate and confusing for a song about Argentina.
It's all very on-brand. It wouldn't be a ButterTart top 100 if I didn't inspire murderous rage with at least 97 of my choices.I come back to this thread every now and then and now we’re in the top ten and all I can think of saying is:
WHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOU?
Sahlene has said since that it would have worked much better if just one of them had sung it, as it doesn’t quite make sense a duet
Did I not even quote you for Still Young?I’m so happy to make the quote list
I always feel like the audience was generally very po-faced in 2008. I just assumed Hero was a touch too rich for Europe's blood that year.This is probably going to sound like sacrilege, particularly coming from me, but having re-watched the 2008 Semi Final recently, poor old grayscale Charl’s accidental 12th place totally tracks. A running order with Euroband in 1st, Charlotte in 2nd and Ani Loral 4th would never be allowed to happen today, and with good reason!
Did I not even quote you for Still Young?
=7. Charlotte Perrelli – Hero (2008)
WINNER!
“if that goes through over Linda I will be MIFFED”
@Ill Advised, 01/03/2008
Heroes may live on their own, but Keri Hilson dies AT HOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOME
Confession time: I originally placed ‘Hero’ a bit lower in this ranking but I had to have a word with myself; I think over-familiarity had caused me to overlook what a jaw-dropping pop song this is.
And it IS jaw-dropping, almost as jaw-dropping as the fact this needed a jury save to get it to the Eurovision final because the public are ungrateful shithouses. Why is it that whenever Sweden sends a forehead on legs, Europe spitefully tries to deny them a place in the final?
Our Lady of the Immobile Face was in the form of her life with ‘Hero’, delivering an instant classic, all-time fan favourite which still occupies the upper portions of everyone’s ‘all-time greatest’ lists. I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone who’s said ‘that Charlotte one was a bit shit, wasn’t it?’. It’s universally beloved, and correctly so. It’s thunderous, life-affirming schlager pop from a true master of the art. From the moment that iconic intro hits, it’s a masterclass in reducing unwary homosexuals to quivering puddles of jelly. That chorus is one for the ages – massive, insanely quotable and just precision pop engineering. Of course, this features an immortal final chorus; everything from ‘heroes may live on their own’ onwards is basically perfect, complete with a savage key change, a ton of ad-libs and an explosive finish which makes you feel like you’ve just been on a JOURNEY.
The performance is similarly iconic. The black and white opening was a bold choice, considering the #stillyoung Charlotte was born decades after the introduction of colour television. She works the stage like a pro; she has an indefinable quality which makes her feel like a big deal whenever she’s on stage; she just looks like she belongs up there. The bit where she and her dancers glare down the camera as they deliver the key change is the stuff of LEGEND; that dance move where they point in three different directions is somewhere just above the moon landings on the list of the most important televised events of all time.
I don’t really need to bang on about this because you all already know ‘Hero’ is world-endingly brilliant. Brexit happened because the UK didn’t like the way Europe treated this poor woman and, though we live in poverty and nothing works properly, we can nourish ourselves on our feeling of moral superiority. Viva La Perrelli.
the actual greatest moment. When that ROTTEN GREY CLAW reaches out for that DISCO MICROPHONE