Eurovision Song Context
A podcast where we bring in smart people. We talk about smart things, then veer into glitter, wind machines, and geopolitics. Experts. Insight. Eurovision chaos.
Displaying 3 items of Eurovision Song Context with the tag "songwriting".
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Episode 88: Eurovision 2026 Recap: Serviceable Songs & Potato Salad
May 18th, 2026 | 1 hr 20 mins
aidan, audience psychology, bangaranga, bulgaria eurovision, cultural analysis, delta goodrem, eurovision, eurovision 2026, eurovision fandom, eurovision podcast, eurovision recap, eurovision staging, greece eurovision, jury vote, look mum no computer, malta eurovision, moldova eurovision, music criticism, pop music, songwriting, switzerland eurovision, televote, veronica fusaro
In this Eurovision 2026 recap episode, Bradley and Sheldon unpack Bulgaria’s controversial victory and ask a bigger question: is Eurovision still really a song contest, or has it become a spectacle-first television event?
Drawing on Sheldon’s background in music and songwriting, the conversation explores why some technically stronger songs struggled while louder, more visually aggressive entries dominated the scoreboard. Along the way, they debate craftsmanship versus staging, authenticity versus trend-chasing, and whether modern Eurovision audiences are rewarding songs or simply rewarding moments.
The episode moves beyond rankings into broader discussions about:
why “serviceable” pop songs often outperform more sophisticated compositions
how artists build audience connection on live television
whether Eurovision entries should culturally represent their countries
the role of televoting, attention spans, TikTok-era performance styles, and spectacle
why some songs endure emotionally while others feel disposableBradley and Sheldon also discuss standout entries from Malta, Greece, Moldova, Switzerland, the UK, and Bulgaria, along with the emotional and cross-generational appeal that continues to keep Eurovision alive more than 70 years after it began.
Part music criticism, part cultural analysis, and part post-Eurovision therapy session, this episode asks what audiences actually want from Eurovision and whether the contest’s future lies in craftsmanship, chaos, or somewhere in between.
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Episode 75: (Part 2) Eurovision: When Life Drops a Plot Twist
November 12th, 2025 | 1 hr 13 mins
alienation, breast reconstruction, brotherhood of man, cancer journey, candid conversation, cesár sampson, comfort songs, creativity, cultural identity, dark humor, eurovision, eurovision analysis, eurovision podcast, eurovision songs, feeling displaced, identity, keiino, konstrakta, left-handedness, loïc nottet, marginalization, mastectomy, michael schulte, music and emotion, music critique, resilience, s10, salvador sobral, songwriting
In this episode we talk with Sheldon about his Journeys I–III essays, identity, alienation, and what it means to belong. We move into a conversation about cancer, resilience, and the books we’re both reading right now — Let Them and Open When. Then we build a Eurovision-powered playlist designed for life’s hardest emotional moments.
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Episode 76: (Part 1) Eurovision: When Life Drops a Plot Twist
November 12th, 2025 | 1 hr 26 mins
alienation, breast reconstruction, brotherhood of man, cancer journey, candid conversation, cesár sampson, comfort songs, creativity, cultural identity, dark humor, eurovision, eurovision analysis, eurovision podcast, eurovision songs, feeling displaced, identity, keiino, konstrakta, left-handedness, loïc nottet, marginalization, mastectomy, michael schulte, music and emotion, music critique, resilience, s10, salvador sobral, songwriting
In this episode we talk with Sheldon about his Journeys I–III essays, identity, alienation, and what it means to belong. We move into a conversation about cancer, resilience, and the books we’re both reading right now — Let Them and Open When. Then we build a Eurovision-powered playlist designed for life’s hardest emotional moments.