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Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest

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Moldova in the
Eurovision Song Contest
Eurovision Song Contest
Moldova
Participating broadcasterTeleradio-Moldova [en] (TRM)
Participation summary
First appearance2005
Highest placement3rd: 2017
External links
Moldova's page at Eurovision.tv Edit this at Wikidata

Moldova has participated in the Eurovision Song Contest since its debut in 2005. Teleradio-Moldova [en] (TRM) is the Moldovan broadcaster.

Participation overview

[change | change source]
Table key
2 Second place
3 Third place
Last place
X Entry selected but did not compete
Upcoming event
Year Artist Song Language Final Points Semi Points
2005 Zdob și Zdub "Boonika bate doba" English, Romanian 6 148 2 207
2006 Arsenium feat. Natalia Gordienko and Connect-R "Loca" English 20 22 Top 11 in 2005 final[a]
2007 Natalia Barbu "Fight" English 10 109 10 91
2008 Geta Burlacu "A Century of Love" English Failed to qualify 12 36
2009 Nelly Ciobanu "Hora din Moldova" Romanian, English 14 69 5 106
2010 SunStroke Project and Olia Tira "Run Away" English 22 27 10 52
2011 Zdob și Zdub "So Lucky" English 12 97 10 54
2012 Pasha Parfeni "Lăutar" English 11 81 5 100
2013 Aliona Moon "O mie" Romanian 11 71 4 95
2014 Cristina Scarlat "Wild Soul" English Failed to qualify 16 ◁ 13
2015 Eduard Romanyuta "I Want Your Love" English 11 41
2016 Lidia Isac "Falling Stars" English 17 33
2017 SunStroke Project "Hey Mamma" English 3 374 2 291
2018 DoReDoS "My Lucky Day" English 10 209 3 235
2019 Anna Odobescu "Stay" English Failed to qualify 12 85
2020 Natalia Gordienko "Prison" English Contest cancelled[b] X
2021 Natalia Gordienko "Sugar" English 13 115 7 179
2022 Zdob și Zdub and Advahov Brothers "Trenulețul" Romanian 7 253 8 154
2023 Pasha Parfeni "Soarele și luna" Romanian 18 96 5 109
2024 Natalia Barbu "In the Middle" English Failed to qualify 13 20
2026 Satoshi "Viva, Moldova!" Romanian
  1. According to the then-Eurovision rules, the top ten non-Big Four countries from the previous year along with the Big Four automatically qualified for the Grand Final without having to compete in semi-finals. For example, if Germany and France placed inside the top ten, the 11th and 12th spots were advanced to next year's Grand Final along with all countries ranked in the top ten.
  2. The 2020 contest was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1][2]

References

[change | change source]
  1. "Eurovision Song Contest 2020 cancelled". European Broadcasting Union. 18 March 2020.
  2. "Eurovision Song Contest 2020 cancelled over coronavirus". BBC News. 18 March 2020.