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Germany in the Eurovision Young Musicians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Germany
Germany
Participating broadcasterWDR (ARD) (2008–)
Former members
  • 1982–2004: ZDF
Participation summary
Appearances20 (13 finals)
First appearance1982
Highest placement1st: 1982,[N 1] 1996
Host2002, 2014, 2016

Germany has officially participated in the biennial classical music competition Eurovision Young Musicians twenty times since its debut in 1982, winning the inaugural contest that year. Before German reunification in 1990, it was presented as West Germany, representing the Federal Republic of Germany. East Germany (the German Democratic Republic) did not compete. Germany won again in 1996 and have hosted the contest twice, in 2002 and 2014.[1]

Participation overview

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Judith Stapf on stage in Cologne
Raul Maria Dignola in Cologne (2016)
Table key
1
Winner
2
Second place
3
Third place
Year[1] Entrant Instrument Final Semi
1982 Markus Pawlik Piano 1 No semi-final
1984 Andreas Bach Piano -
1986 Martin Menking Cello Did not qualify -
1988 Nikolai Schneider Cello - -
1990 Koh Gabriel Kameda Violin 2 -
1992 Florence Sitruk Harp Did not qualify -
1994 Luise Wiedemann Bassoon -
1996 Julia Fischer Violin 1 -
1998 Un­known[2] Did not qualify -
2000 Martin Helmchen Piano -
2002 Alina Pogostkin Violin - -
2004 Koryun Asatryan Saxophone 2 -
2006 Did not participate
2008 Kathy Kang Violin Did not qualify -
2010 Hayrapet Arakelyan Saxophone - -
2012 Dominic Chamot Piano - -
2014 Judith Stapf Violin - No semi-final
2016 Raul Maria Dignola Horn -
2018 Mira Foron Violin - -
2022 Philipp Schupelius Cello[3] 2 No semi-final
2024 Fabian Johannes Egger Flute[4] 3

Hostings

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WDR production team in 2014 with that year's presenter Heinrich and German representative, violinist Judith Stapf.
Year Location Venues Presenter(s)
2002 Berlin Konzerthaus Julia Fischer
2014 Cologne Pre-round: Funkhaus Wallrafplatz [de]
Final: Cologne Cathedral
Sabine Heinrich[5]
2016[6] Cologne Cathedral Daniel Hope and Tamina Kallert [de]

See also

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Notes and references

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ As West Germany before the reunification of Germany.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Country profile: Germany". youngmusicians.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
  2. ^ "9. Eurovisions Grand Prix Für Junge Musiker 1998". Retrieved August 18, 2024.
  3. ^ Brown, Alistair (2022-06-13). "🇫🇷 Nine Countries Competing In Eurovision Young Musicians". Eurovoix. Retrieved 2022-06-13.
  4. ^ Granger, Anthony (2023-11-29). "🇩🇪 Germany: Eurovision Young Musicians 2024 Participation Confirmed". Eurovoix. Retrieved 2023-11-29.
  5. ^ "Meet our Presenter… Sabine Heinrich". youngmusicians.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
  6. ^ "WDR and Cologne chosen to host 2016 competition". Youngmusicians.tv. 9 December 2014. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
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