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Refrain (Lys Assia song)

1956 song by Lys Assia


Summary

1956 song by Lys Assia

FieldValue
nameRefrain
coverLys Assia - Refrain.jpg
typesong
languageFrench
artistLys Assia
released1956
* orchestral pop<ref name"Petridis 2023"
composerGéo Voumard
lyricistÉmile Gardaz
misc{{Infobox song contest entryembed = yes
songSwitzerland "Refrain"
year1956
countrySwitzerland
artistLys Assia
languageFrench
composerGéo Voumard
lyricistÉmile Gardaz
conductorFernando Paggi
place1st
prevDas alte Karussell
prev_linkDas alte Karussell
prev_year1956
nextL'enfant que j'étais
next_linkL'enfant que j'étais
{{External music videoheaderOfficial performance audio}}

| B-side =

  • Chanson
  • orchestral pop

"Refrain" is a song recorded by Swiss singer Lys Assia with music composed by Géo Voumard and lyrics written by Émile Gardaz. It in the of the Eurovision Song Contest and became the first ever winner of the contest.

Background

Conception

"Refrain" was composed by Géo Voumard with French lyrics by Émile Gardaz, and recorded by Lys Assia. She also recorded the song in German as "Refrain, du gold'ner Traum aus meiner Jugendzeit", and in English as "Last night".

The song is in the classic chanson mode and laments the lost loves of the singer's "adolescence". The French original reads "vingt ans", which can also be rendered "twenties" in English.

Eurovision

On 28 April 1956, "Refrains" was one of the five songs with which Lys Assia competed in the **, the eleven-song national final organized by the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation (SRG SSR) to select its two songs and performers for the of the Eurovision Song Contest. As in this first edition two entries from each country were allowed, two songs won the national final, "Refrains" and "Das alte Karussell", both performed by Assia, becoming the for Eurovision.

On 24 May 1956, the first Eurovision Song Contest was held at Teatro Kursaal in Lugano hosted by Radio svizzera italiana (RSI) on behalf of the SRG SSR, and broadcast live throughout the continent. The countries performed in the same order via two rounds and Assia had previously performed "Das alte Karussell" in German as the second song of the evening. "Refrain" thus performed ninth, following the Netherlands' "Voorgoed voorbij" by Corry Brokken and preceding Belgium's "Le plus beau jour de ma vie" by Mony Marc. Assia was one of only two performers, alongside , to represent their country with both entries. Fernando Paggi conducted the live orchestra in the performance of the Swiss entries. No video recording of the performances is known to have survived, only footage of the winning reprise exists in addition to the audio of the full radio broadcast.

After the interval act, "Refrain" was declared the winner without revealing the other song's ranks nor the number of points to the winner as well. Claims were raised that it won as a result of procedures which included a secret voting with an option for juries to vote for their own country's songs, alongside allowing the Swiss jury to vote on behalf of Luxembourg which couldn't send juries.

The 25 May 1956 issue of the Italian newspaper La Stampa, published the day after the contest, wrote that "Refrain" received 102 points, which represented 72.8% of potential the theoretical total available for each song. This is based on a claim that each jury member ranked each song between 1 and 10 points, meaning each song could have obtained a maximum of 120 to 140 points; depending on whether jury members also voted for their own country.

The two songs were succeeded as Swiss representative at the by Assia again with "L'enfant que j'étais", and "Refrain" was succeeded as Contest winner in 1957 by "Net als toen" by Corry Brokken representing .

Aftermath

Assia performed her song in the Eurovision twenty-fifth anniversary show Songs of Europe held on 22 August 1981 in Mysen. In the Eurovision fiftieth anniversary competition Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest, held on 22 October 2005 in Copenhagen, she performed the song as part of the interval acts.

According to the data calculated at "Hit Parade Italia", which presents weekly and top 100 yearly positions for a mix of both Italian and international songs, "Refrain" is ranked the 50th most successful song in Italy in 1956.

Legacy

A cover version of "Refrain" sung by Mathé Altéry, one of the French representatives in the Eurovision Song Contest 1956, was published in autumn 1956. Other cover versions were recorded by Cora Vaucaire, and Jula De Palma.

Notes

References

References

  1. Petridis, Alexis. (May 11, 2023). "All 69 Eurovision song contest winners – ranked!".
  2. (8 August 2008). "Géo Voumard, a Founder of the Montreux Jazz Festival, Dies at 87". [[The New York Times]].
  3. Faurholt, Jakob. (2014). "Grand Prix Sangbogen". Wilhelm Hansen Musikforlag.
  4. "Refrain - lyrics".
  5. Kaelin, Pierre. (3 May 1956). "Grand-Prix Eurovision 1956 de la Chanson européenne à Radio-Lausanne". [[La Liberté (Switzerland).
  6. Jan Feddersen: Ein Lied kann eine Brücke sein. 1. Auflage. Hoffmann und Campe Verlag, Hamburg 2002, {{ISBN. 3-455-09350-7. S. 374.
  7. (25 March 1956). "Canzoni tristi al concorso di Lugano". La Stampa.
  8. (22 August 1981). "Songs of Europe".
  9. (26 March 2018). "Remembering Lys Assia: Twelve memorable moments".
  10. "The Most Successful singles of 1956".
  11. (December 1956). "45 & 78 Tours : Voix de femmes". Cado Radio.
Wikipedia Source

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