How Eurovision 2025 promises the comeback of a little-known musical trick
Get ready, Eurovision fans: this year's contest promises a return to the musically complex and satisfying sounds of the past. As 37 countries prepare to take the stage in Basel, Switzerland, for the grand final on Saturday, a resurgence of key changes and unusual time signatures is set to delight viewers.
While spectacle, national pride, and eccentricity remain at Eurovision's core, the 2025 contest marks a revival of musical elements rarely seen in recent years.
The key change, a hallmark of Eurovision from the 1950s to the 1990s, experienced a decline in the early 2000s, disappearing entirely in 2023 and appearing only once in 2024.
This year, however, it features in five songs, including the Swedish favourite, "Bara Bada Bastu," as well as entries from Iceland, Israel, Ukraine, and host nation Switzerland.
Beyond key changes, the 2025 contest also sees a return to more diverse time signatures. While early Eurovision entries frequently experimented with rhythms and structures, including 3/4 and 5/4 time, the standard 4/4 beat has dominated since the 1970s.
Last year's final saw every song in 4/4, the sixth such occurrence since 2000. This year promises a welcome shift away from this rhythmic uniformity.
This year the contest boasts a more varied mix of rhythms, however.
Israel's song is a fast-paced waltz in 6/8 time (two groups of three beats per bar); the Czech Republic's song is also in 6/8 time, but switches to a disco-style four beats per bar during its middle section; and Ukraine's entry has four beats per bar, but each beat is actually a group of three quavers, meaning it is in 12/8 time.
Georgia's song is the most complex of all, with a verse that has five beats per bar, a chorus that has three beats per bar, and a free-flowing middle section with no beats at all, where Mariam Shengelia sings phrases at her own pace.
While experiments with time signatures represent one of the more complex musical characteristics of the contest, one of its simplest are the lyrics 'la la la': a phrase cemented in Eurovision folklore when Spain won in 1968 with a song titled precisely that: La La La.
In both of the following years, 1969 and 1970, 25% of finalists included 'la la la' in their lyrics.
The popularity of the phrase waned slightly in the 1970s, but 'la la la' was still turning up in 17% of songs in the final as late as 1982.
Since then, the 'la' has more or less vanished and has been absent in almost every final since 2000.
But this year it makes a rare appearance, decorating the chorus of the Netherlands' entry C'est La Vie.
Luxembourg has not quite embraced this tradition in full, offering instead a few bursts of 'na na na', while Ireland has gone for 'ba da dum bum'.
The UK is represented at this year's contest by the trio Remember Monday: the first time since 1999 the country has sent an all-female group to the contest.
Their song What the Hell Just Happened? does not contain any key changes or unusual time signatures, but it does manage to both speed up and slow down during its three minutes.
In any other year, these changes in tempo might have helped Remember Monday stand out from the other entries.
But by a curious coincidence, three other countries – Austria, Finland and Switzerland – have all deployed a similar gimmick and entered songs that speed up part-way through.
The UK has also chosen to ignore the current fashion for songs in a minor key and instead is one of six countries whose entry is in a major key, up from two countries last year.
Songs in minor keys were scarce in the early years of Eurovision.
There were none at all in the contests in 1957-59 or in 1964, though 1961 saw the first minor-key winner (Nous Les Amoureux by Jean-Claude Pascal for Luxembourg).
The proportion of songs in a minor key topped a quarter for the first time in 1965 but did not pass a third until 1979, and it took until 2002 to pass 50%.
Since 2005, more than half of the songs in the final have been in a minor key save for one year (2013), with the proportion passing three-quarters in 2023.
Neither of the two countries that entered major-key songs in 2024 made it through the semi-finals, meaning last year was the first time every song in the grand final was in a minor key.
The world will be spared a repeat of this gloomy scenario in 2025, however.
Five countries automatically qualify for the grand final each year thanks to the size of their financial contribution to the contest's organiser, the European Broadcasting Union – and one of these is the UK, meaning Remember Monday's major-key song will definitely be in the final on Saturday.

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