Bundesvision Song Contest




























































Bundesvision Song Contest
Genre Song contest
Created by Stefan Raab
Based on Eurovision Song Contest
Country of origin Germany
Original language(s)
German

No. of episodes
11 contests
Production
Executive producer(s)
Jörg Grabosch
Production company(s)
Brainpool TV
Release
Original network ProSieben
Original release 12 February 2005; 14 years ago (2005-02-12) –
29 August 2015; 3 years ago (2015-08-29)
Chronology
Related shows TV total
External links
Official website
Production website

The Bundesvision Song Contest (short BSC or BuViSoCo) was an annual song competition created by German TV entertainer Stefan Raab in 2005. For each of the 16 states of Germany a song was chosen by regional radio stations. The songs were performed on live television in order to find the most popular song in the competition. The TV format made use of premium-priced viewer interactivity, with viewers voting for their favourite songs by phone or SMS. The show was loosely based on the Eurovision Song Contest and its rules aimed at promoting German-language music by requiring that at least 50 percent of the lyrics had to be performed in German.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 States


  • 3 Presenters


  • 4 Contests


  • 5 Total ranking


  • 6 Host cities


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links





History





Stefan Raab, head and creator of the show


Stefan Raab wrote the music for the German entry in the 1998 Eurovision Song Contest, Guildo Horn's "Guildo Hat Euch Lieb!", and represented Germany in the 2000 Eurovision Song Contest with "Wadde Hadde Dudde Da?".


Raab cast the German entry for the 2004 Eurovision Song Contest on his TV total show in a competition he called SSDSGPS (Stefan sucht den Super-Grand-Prix-Star, Stefan seeks the super Grand-Prix star, mocking Deutschland sucht den Superstar – DSDS, the German version of the Idol franchise). The winner of this casting, Maximilian Mutzke, came in 8th place at the ESC with "Can't Wait Until Tonight".


Bored with the Eurovision Song Contest, Raab came up with the Bundesvision Song Contest in 2005 (The Federal Republic of Germany officially being called Bundesrepublik Deutschland in German). The contest featured representatives from each of the 16 German states (Bundesländer) and stipulated that their song had to be (at least partly) in German.


In 2010, due to Raab searching for the German representative at the Eurovision Song Contest 2010 with the show Unser Star für Oslo (Our Star for Oslo), the 2010 edition of the show was postponed to October.



States




































































1
 Baden-Württemberg

Karte Deutsche Bundesländer (nummeriert).svg

2
 Bavaria
3
 Berlin
4
 Brandenburg
5
 Bremen
6
 Hamburg
7
 Hesse
8
 Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
9
 Lower Saxony
10
 North Rhine-Westphalia
11
 Rhineland-Palatinate
12
 Saarland
13
 Saxony
14
 Saxony-Anhalt
15
 Schleswig-Holstein
16
 Thuringia


Presenters





Johanna Klum, who co-presented the show from 2007–2011














































Year Host Main presenter Green Room Fan block
2005 Stefan Raab Annette Frier Oliver Pocher N/A
2006 Janin Reinhardt
Elton
2007
Johanna Klum

2008

2009

2010
2011 Lena Meyer-Landrut Elton
2012
Sandra Rieß [de]
Elton N/A

2013
2014 N/A

2015


Contests














































































































Year
Date
Host city
Winner
Artist
Song
Points

2005
12 February

North Rhine-Westphalia Oberhausen

 Hesse

Juli
"Geile Zeit"
159

2006
9 February

Hesse Wetzlar

 Berlin

Seeed
"Ding"
151

2007
9 February

Berlin Berlin

 Lower Saxony

Oomph! feat. Marta Jandová
"Träumst Du?"
147

2008
14 February

Lower Saxony Hanover

 Brandenburg

Subway to Sally
"Auf Kiel"

2009
13 February

Brandenburg Potsdam

 Berlin

Peter Fox
"Schwarz zu blau"
174

2010
1 October

Berlin Berlin

 North Rhine-Westphalia

Unheilig
"Unter deiner Flagge"
164

2011
29 September

North Rhine-Westphalia Cologne

 Berlin

Tim Bendzko
"Wenn Worte meine Sprache wären"
141

2012
28 September

Berlin Berlin

 Baden-Württemberg

Xavas (Xavier Naidoo and Kool Savas)
"Schau nicht mehr zurück"
172

2013
26 September

Baden-Württemberg Mannheim

 Lower Saxony

Bosse
"So oder so"
153

2014
20 September

Lower Saxony Göttingen

 Bremen

Revolverheld
"Lass uns gehen"
180

2015
29 August

Bremen (state) Bremen

Rhineland-Palatinate Rhineland-Palatinate

Mark Forster
"Bauch und Kopf"
170


Total ranking




















































































































































































































































































Bundesland
Points
Wins

2015

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

 Berlin
1035
3
23
(11)

016
(12)
105
(03)

050
(07)

141
(01)
100
(03)

174
(01)

066
(07)

096
(04)

151
(01)
113
(03)

 Lower Saxony

0864
2
84
(04)

015
(13)

153
(01)
109
(03)
102
(03)

004
(16)

012
(15)

094
(04)

147
(01)

059
(06)

085
(04)

 Baden-Württemberg

0789
1
82
(06)

058
(07)

051
(08)

172
(1)

091
(04)

039
(09)
103
(04)

046
(09)

023
(10)

047
(09)

077
(05)

 Thuringia

0761
0
114
(03)

025
(11)

013
(13)

033
(09)

013
(12)

079
(06)

053
(06)
146
(02)

088
(06)
134
(03)

063
(07)

 North Rhine-Westphalia

0759
1
117
(02)

046
(08)

020
(12)

097
(04)

076
(07)

164
(01)
112
(03)

016
(14)

095
(05)

006
(16)

010
(15)

 Schleswig-Holstein

0703
0
28
(10)

087
(05)

068
(06)

076
(06)

008
(16)

060
(07)

044
(08)

075
(06)
101
(03)

026
(11)
130
(02)

 Bremen

0668
1
46
(09)

180
(01)

061
(07)

018
(13)
111
(02)

020
(11)

025
(11)

020
(11)

020
(11)
136
(02)

031
(11)

 Hamburg

0665
0
14
(13)

028
(10)
145
(02)

028
(10)

066
(08)

040
(08)

073
(05)

019
(12)
138
(02)

070
(05)

044
(09)

 Hesse

0621
1
76
(07)

033
(09)

029
(11)

019
(11)

012
(13)

018
(13)

053
(06)

051
(08)

067
(07)
104
(04)

159
(01)

 Saxony

0617
0
84
(04)

010
(16)

035
(09)
142
(02)

089
(05)

020
(11)
131
(02)

012
(15)

013
(13)

010
(15)

071
(06)

 Brandenburg

0545
1
50
(08)

010
(015)

094
(04)

008
(16)

012
(13)

087
(05)

037
(09)

147
(01)

011
(15)

035
(10)

054
(08)

 Rhineland-Palatinate

0526
1

170
(01)
124
(02)

031
(10)

020
(11)

086
(06)

017
(14)

023
(12)

017
(13)

010
(16)

018
(12)

010
(15)

 Saxony-Anhalt

0490
0
13
(14)
102
(03)

012
(14)

010
(15)

012
(13)
152
(02)

010
(16)

096
(03)

056
(08)

012
(14)

015
(13)

 Mecklenburg-Vorpommern

0425
0
10
(15)
101
(04)

008
(16)

041
(08)

066
(08)

022
(10)

023
(12)

079
(05)

013
(13)

050
(08)

012
(14)

 Bavaria

0397
0
2
(16)

081
(06)

012
(14)

013
(14)

026
(10)

094
(04)

034
(10)

032
(10)

033
(09)

053
(07)

017
(12)

 Saarland

0328
0
15
(12)

012
(14)

091
(05)

092
(05)

017
(11)

012
(15)

021
(14)

012
(15)

017
(12)

017
(13)

037
(10)


Host cities




Host bundeslands and cities of the Bundesvision Song Contest


3 times



  • Berlin Berlin (2007, 2010, 2012)

1 time




  • Bremen (state) Bremen (2015)


  • Lower Saxony Göttingen (2014)


  • Baden-Württemberg Mannheim (2013)


  • North Rhine-Westphalia Cologne (2011)


  • Lower Saxony Hanover (2008)


  • North Rhine-Westphalia Oberhausen (2005)


  • Brandenburg Potsdam (2009)


  • Hesse Wetzlar (2006)



See also




  • ABU Song Festivals

  • Cân i Gymru

  • Caribbean Song Festival

  • Eurovision Dance Contest

  • Eurovision Song Contest

  • Eurovision Young Dancers

  • Eurovision Young Musicians

  • Intervision Song Contest

  • Junior Eurovision Song Contest

  • OGAE

  • OGAE Second Chance Contest

  • OGAE Video Contest

  • Sopot International Song Festival

  • Turkvision Song Contest




References





External links







  • Official BSC website at tvtotal.de







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