Participants will compete at the German national ESC final
Lina Friedrich
January 6, 2017
On February 9, a television audience will decide who will represent Germany at the Eurovision Song Contest on May 13 in Kyiv.
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ESC: Germany's five candidates for the Eurovision Song Contest in Kyiv
Just who will represent Germany at the upcoming song contest on May 13 will be decided on February 9. Five co-contenders will face the television audience on "Eurovision Song Contest - Our Song for 2017."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/NDR/I. Pertramer
The five candidates for the German ESC national final
In a three-hour live transmission on German public broadcasting on February 9, five young talents will vie for the privilige of representing Germany at the Eurovision Song Contest, held this year in Ukraine. They are: Wilhelm "Sadi" Richter, Isabella "Levina" Lueen, Helene Nissen, Axel Maximilian Feige, and Felicia Lu Kürbiss.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/NDR/I. Pertramer
Wilhelm "Sadi" Richter
19-year-old Sadi lives in Dortmund and studies composition at the Folkwang University of Arts in Essen. His voice spans a four-octave range, and he uses it on jazz and soul numbers. The young singer from the Ruhr District is no newcomer to show business: at the tender age of 15, he appeared as Sylvie Meis's vocal trainer on the broadcast "Shooting Stars."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/NDR/I. Pertramer
Isabella "Levina" Lueen
Coming from Bonn, Levina began classical voice studies at age nine. From there, she went to London to study vocal performance and composition, once earning the distinction of "Best Vocal Performer." She has always dreamed of a career as a singer, and commuting between London and Berlin, she currently appears with her band in bars.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/NDR/I. Pertramer
Helene Nissen
20 years old, Helene Nissen comes from the northern German town of Schleswig. Still at school, she plays guitar and sings for every occasion. Helene regularly performs in public together with her brother Kjell. Her great loves are Johnny Cash as well as soul music and the blues. One of her favorite artists is the British singer-songwriter Gabrielle Aplin, with whom she dreams of singing in duet.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/NDR/I. Pertramer
Axel Maximilian Feige
At 28, Axel Feige is the oldest of this year's contenders for a ticket to the ESC in Kyiv. Playing piano, bassoon, guitar and bass, Axel feels at home in nearly every music genre: blues, soul, jazz, funk, R'n'B, pop and rock are all in his repertory. Having once earned his living as a street musician, the Hamburg resident now plays in the bands "Absolem Max" and "Diazpora."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/NDR/I. Pertramer
Felicia Lu Kürbiss
Felicia Lu Kürbiss comes from the Berchtesgardener Land region of the German Alps. She'll try to woo the television voting audience with electropop. The 21-year-old had musical training in school in the areas of pop music and vocal coaching. Felicia also has TV experience, making it to the finale of the casting show "Rising Star" in 2014. She's had her own YouTube channel since 2015.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/NDR/I. Pertramer
The jury for the ESC German national finale 2017
Florian Silbereisen, Lena Meyer-Landrut and Tim Bendzko are the troika presiding over Germany's choice for the ESC. All three are successful in the German music business. The Schlager expert, the former ESC winner and the singer-songwriter will comment on what is going on onstage and advise the audience in determining who will stand up for Germany in Kyiv. The three cannot vote, however.
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Will it be Axel Maximilian Feige, Felicia Lu Kürbiss, Helene Nissen, Isabella "Levina" Lueen or Wilhelm "Sadi" Richter? After a three-hour live transmission on the German public broadcasting network ARD, the nation will know who will represent it in Ukraine at the upcoming Eurovision Song Contest.
The decision over "Our Song for 2017" will be made via televoting. In an effort to find a candidate with international appeal, voting will also be open to a Europe-wide audience via an app.
The voting audience will have the guidance of a jury of experienced and successful performers: Lena Meyer-Landrut, Tim Bendzko and Florian Silbereisen. At the 2010 Eurovision Song Contest in Oslo, Meyer-Landrut took top honors with the song "Satellite." Bendzko has been a well-known singer-songwriter ever since his 2011 debut single "Nur noch kurz die Welt retten." Silbereisen has been at home in the worlds of Schlager and German folk music since childhood. The three do not have voting rights, however.
With host Barbara Schöneberger, the show will be broadcast at 8:15 p.m. on ARD on February 9.