Eurovision Young Musicians 2006
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2017) |
| Eurovision Young Musicians 2006 | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Dates and venues | |
| Semi-final 1 |
|
| Semi-final 2 |
|
| Final |
|
| Organisation | |
| Organiser | European Broadcasting Union (EBU) |
| Production | |
| Host broadcaster | Österreichischer Rundfunk (ORF) |
| Director | Heidelinde Haschek |
| Musical director | Christian Arming |
| Presenter | Schallbert "Sillety" Gilet |
| Participants | |
| Number of entries | 18 |
| Number of finalists | 7 |
| Debuting countries | |
| Returning countries | |
| Non-returning countries | |
| |
| Vote | |
| Voting system | Jury voting |
| Winning musician | Andreas Brantelid |
The Eurovision Young Musicians 2006 was the 13th edition of the Eurovision Young Musicians. It consisted of two semi-finals on 7 and 8 May, held at Konzerthaus, and a final on 12 May 2006, held at the Rathausplatz in Vienna, Austria, and presented by Schallbert "Sillety" Gilet. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Österreichischer Rundfunk (ORF). The Vienna Symphony Orchestra conducted by Christian Arming accompanied all competing performers. This was the first time that the competition was held on an open-air stage and was the beginning of the annual Vienna Festival. ORF had previously hosted the contest in Austria in 1990 and 1998.
Musicians representing eighteen countries took part in the competition, with seven of them participating in the televised final.[1][2] The young musicians could not be older than 19 and their performance during the final could not be longer than 7 minutes and 30 seconds. Bulgaria and Serbia and Montenegro made their début while Czech Republic returned. Two countries decided not to participate, they were Estonia and Germany.[3]
The winner was cellist Andreas Brantelid representing Sweden, with trumpeter Tine Thing Helseth representing Norway placing second, and pianist Dmitry Mayboroda representing Russia placing third.[4]
Location
[edit]
Rathausplatz, a square outside the Wiener Rathaus city hall of Vienna, was the host location for the 2006 edition of the Eurovision Young Musicians final. Schubert Hall in the Konzerthaus, a concert hall in Vienna, Austria, hosted the semi-final round. The Great Hall of Konzerthaus previously hosted the contest in 1998.[3]
Format
[edit]Actor Michael Ostrowski in his role as Schallbert "Sillety" Gilet was the host of the 2006 contest.[5] The interval act included performances of several Mozart pieces by the host, and other invited artists.[3]
Participants and results
[edit]Semi-final
[edit]Broadcasters from eighteen countries took part in the semi-final round of the 2006 contest, of which seven qualified to the televised grand final.[3]
Part 1 (7 May)
[edit]| R/O | Country | Broadcaster | Performer | Instrument | Piece(s)[6] | R. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | RTBF | Ilia Laporev | Cello | 1) Sonata in G major, 1st mvt. (allegro brillante) (J. B. Breval) 2) Variations on one string on a theme of Rossini (N. Paganini) |
N/a | |
| 5 | BNT | Ivan Szvetozarevo Gerasimov | Bassoon | 1) Concerto in B flat major, 1st mvt. (W. A. Mozart) 2) Recitativ, Siciliana and Rondo (E. Bozza) |
N/a | |
| 1 | CyBC | Jórgosz Mánnurisz | Piano | 1) Sonata in D minor "Toccata" K 141 (D. Scarlatti) 2) Rondo in D major KV485 (W. A. Mozart) 3) Scherzo in F sharp minor (F. Mendelssohn) |
N/a | |
| 7 | ERT | Jónian-Ilia Kadesa | Violin | 1) Concert in G major No. 3 KV 216, 1st mvt. (W. A. Mozart) 2) Concert in G major No. 3 KV 216, 2nd mvt (W. A. Mozart) |
N/a | |
| 8 | HRT | Varga Zita | Cello | 1) Isonata A major, 1st mvt. (L. Boccherini) 2) Sonata in G major 1st mvt. (for Violin), KV 301 (W. A. Mozart) 3) Chant de Menestrel, Op. 71 (A, Glazunov) 4) Dance du Diable Vert (G. Cassado) |
N/a | |
| 4 | NRK | Tine Thing Helseth | Trumpet | 1) Solus, 3rd mvt. (S. Friedman) 2) Legend (G. Enescu) 3) Concerto in E flat major, 2nd mvt (J. B. G. Neruda) |
Q | |
| 9 | TVR | Alina Elena Bercu | Piano | 1) Fantasie in C major Hob. XVII:4 (1789) (J. Haydn) 2) La valse (1914) (M. Ravel) |
Q | |
| 3 | UJRT | Marija Gođevac | Piano | 1) Toccata BWV 914 in E minor (J. S. Bach) 2) Rondo Sonata in C minor, 4th mvt. (C. M. Weber) |
N/a | |
| 10 | BBC | Jennifer Pike | Violin | 1) Sonata in G major KV301, 1st mvt. (W. A. Mozart) 2) Sonata in G minor, 1st mvt. (C. Debussy) 3) Tambourin Chinois (F. Kreisler) 4) Etude Op. 25, No. 12 (F. Chopin) |
Q | |
| 6 | SRG SSR | Simone Sommerhalder | Oboe | 1) Capriccio for oboe and piano (A. Ponchielli) 2) Concerto for oboe in C major, KV 314 (W. A. Mozart) |
Q |
Part 2 (8 May)
[edit]| R/O | Country | Broadcaster | Performer | Instrument | Piece(s)[7] | R. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18 | Yle | Visa Sippola | Piano | 1) Grande Sonate patMtique Op. 13, I grave (L. V. Beethoven) 2) Etude Op. 72, No. 6 (M. Mozskovsky) 3) Etude Op. 25, No. 12 (F. Chopin) |
N/a | |
| 12 | NPS | Kate Sebring | Piano | 1) Etude Op. 2 No. I in C sharp minor (A. Scriabin) 2) Tarantella (F. Liszt) |
N/a | |
| 13 | ORF | Daniela Koch | Flute | 1) Concerto No. 2 in D minor, KV 314, 2nd mvt. (W. A. Mozart) 2) Concerto No 2 in D minor, KV 314, 3rd mvt (W. A. Mozart) 3) Fantaisie sur "Le Freyschutz" (C. P. Taffanel) |
Q | |
| 17 | TVP | Jacek Kortus | Piano | 1) Tarantella (F. Liszt) 2) Etude Op. 25, No. 1l in A minor (F. Chopin) |
N/a | |
| 14 | RTR | Dmitri Majboroda | Piano | 1) Fantasia on a theme of "Largo al factotum" from G. Rossini: "Il Barbiere di Siviglia" (G. Ginzburg) 2) Sonate No. 1l A major KV331 "Rondo alla Torea" (W. A. Mozart) 3) Concerto suite from the ballet "The Nutcracker": March, Andante mozetor (P. I. Tchaikovsky; M. Pletnev) |
Q | |
| 16 | RTVSLO | Luka Šulić | Cello | 1) Sonata for Cello Solo (3rd mvt., Toceata) (G. Crumb) 2) Seven Variations (Thema, I, II, IV, VII) (L. V. Beethoven) 3) Pezzo capriccioso, Op. 62 (P. I. Tchaikovsky) |
N/a | |
| 11 | ČT | Markéta Janoušková | Violin | 1) Romana Andaluzo, Op. 22, Nr. 1 (P. de Sarasate) 2) Danza espagnolo, arr. Fritz Kreisler (M. de Falla) 3) Appasionato (Four Pieces for Violin and Piano), Op. 17 (J. Suk) 4) Scherzo ("Spring" Sonata) (L. V. Beethoven) |
N/a | |
| 15 | SVT | Andreas Brantelid | Cello | 1) Sonata "Arpeggione", Ist mvt. (F. Schubert) 2) from "Carmen fantasie" (own arrangement) (P. d. Sarasate) |
Q |
Final
[edit]Due to the celebrations of the 250th anniversary of the birth of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, the pieces performed by the finalists were restricted to Mozart or pieces from his contemporaries. Awards were given to the top three countries. The table below highlights these using gold, silver, and bronze. The placing results of the remaining participants is unknown and never made public by the European Broadcasting Union.[4]
| R/O | Country | Performer | Instrument | Piece | Composer | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Alina Elena Bercu | Piano | Piano Concerto, KV 503, 1st mov. | W.A. Mozart | ||
| 2 | Simone Sommerhalder | Oboe | Oboe Concerto, KV 314, 1st mov. | W.A. Mozart | ||
| 3 | Jennifer Pike | Violin | Violin Concerto, KV 216, 2nd mov. | W.A. Mozart | ||
| 4 | Tine Thing Helseth | Trumpet | Trumpet Concerto, 1st mov. | Joseph Haydn | 2 | |
| 5 | Andreas Brantelid | Cello | Violoncello Concerto, 1st mov. | Joseph Haydn | 1 | |
| 6 | Daniela Koch | Flute | Flute Concerto, KV 314, 1st mov. | W.A. Mozart | ||
| 7 | Dmitry Mayboroda | Piano | Piano Concerto, KV 467, 3rd mov. | W.A. Mozart | 3 |
Jury members
[edit]The jury members consisted of the following:[3]
Austria – Ranko Markovic (head)
Japan/
Switzerland – Hiroko Sakagami
Sweden – Martin Fröst
United States – Carole Dawn Reinhart
Austria – Heinz Sichrovsky
Norway – Erik Niord Larsen
Austria – Lidia Baich
Broadcasting
[edit]The participating broadcasters received the competition live via the Eurovision Network and broadcast it in their territories.[8]
| Country | Broadcaster(s) | Channel(s) | Commentator(s) | Ref(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ORF | ORF 2 | [9] | ||
| RTBF | La Deux | [10] | ||
| VRT | ||||
| BNT | ||||
| HRT | ||||
| CyBC | ||||
| ČT | ||||
| Yle | Yle Teema | [11] | ||
| ERT | ||||
| NPS | ||||
| NRK | NRK1 | [12] | ||
| TVP | ||||
| TVR | TVR Cultural | |||
| RTR | KTVC | |||
| RTS | RTS 2 | [13] | ||
| RTVSLO | ||||
| SVT | SVT2 | Marianne Söderberg | [14] | |
| SF | SF 1[a] | [15] | ||
| TSR | ||||
| TSI | ||||
| BBC | BBC Four[b] | Howard Goodall | [16][17] |
| Country | Broadcaster(s) | Channel(s) | Commentator(s) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3sat | [18] | |||
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Semifinale I des Eurovision Young Musicians 2006". Wiener Konzerthaus.
- ^ "Semifinale II des Eurovision Young Musicians 2006". Wiener Konzerthaus.
- ^ a b c d e "Eurovision Young Musicians 2006: About the show". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 4 August 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
- ^ a b "Eurovision Young Musicians 2006: Participants". youngmusicians.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 4 August 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
- ^ "45.000 Besucher bei Eröffnung" [45,000 visitors at opening]. Der Standard (in German). 13 May 2006. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
- ^ https://khgblob02.blob.core.windows.net/2005-06/A-Wwk_20060507_1400_SchS.pdf
- ^ https://khgblob02.blob.core.windows.net/2005-06/A-Wwk_20060508_1400_SchS.pdf
- ^ "EBU.CH :: 2006_05_15_eurovision". EBU. 31 August 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-08-31. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
- ^ "Wiener Festwochen: Sendetermine bei ORF 2 08.05.1998–16.05.2025". May 8, 1998 – via www.fernsehserien.de.
- ^ https://viewer.eluxemburgensia.lu/ark:70795/vmxm8bdgwz/pages/129/articles/DIVL2781
- ^ "Nuori suomalainen putosi solistikisasta". Yle Uutiset. May 8, 2006.
- ^ "På TV – lørdag 11. mars". Rogalands Avis. Stavanger, Norway. 11 March 2006. pp. 68–69. Retrieved 4 May 2024 – via National Library of Norway.
- ^ "Bnl viewer". istorijskenovine.unilib.rs.
- ^ "Young Musicians SVT2 2006-05-28 11:15-12:45 | Svensk mediedatabas (SMDB)". smdb.kb.se.
- ^ a b "Eurovision Young Musicians Folge 13: Wien 2006". May 21, 2006 – via www.fernsehserien.de.
- ^ a b "Eurovision Young Musician". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 10 October 2022.
- ^ "Eurovision Young Musicians". www.ukgameshows.com. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
- ^ "Wiener Festwochen: Sendetermine auf 3sat 08.05.1998–16.05.2025". May 8, 1998 – via www.fernsehserien.de.

