My Number One

2005 song by Helena Paparizou
and My Number One B-side
  • "I Don't Want You Here Anymore" (Anapandites Kliseis)
  • "Ok"
Released24 March 2005Recorded2005StudioVoxGenre
  • Greek pop
  • Greek folk music (Pontic)
  • Greek folk dance
Length2:58Label
  • Sony BMG Greece
  • Columbia
Composer(s)
  • Manolis Psaltakis[a]
  • Christos Dantis
Lyricist(s)
  • Christos Dantis
  • Natalia Germanou
Producer(s)Christos DantisHelena Paparizou singles chronology
"Anapandites Kliseis"
(2003)
"My Number One"
(2005)
"The Light in Our Soul"
(2005)
Music video"My Number One" on YouTubeAlternative cover
US cover for My Number One
Eurovision Song Contest 2005 entryCountryArtist(s)Language
English
Composer(s)
  • Manolis Psaltakis
  • Christos Dantis
Lyricist(s)
  • Christos Dantis
  • Natalia Germanou
Finals performanceFinal result
1st
Final points
230
Entry chronology◄ "Shake It" (2004)"Everything" (2006) ►Official performance video"My Number One" (Final) on YouTube

"My Number One" is a song recorded by Greek-Swedish singer Helena Paparizou with music composed by Manolis Psaltakis[a] and Christos Dantis, lyrics written by Dantis and Natalia Germanou, and produced by Dantis. It represented Greece in the Eurovision Song Contest 2005, held in Kyiv, resulting in the country's only ever victory in the contest.

Background

Composition

"My Number One" was composed by Manolis Psaltakis and Christos Dantis, with lyrics by Dantis and Natalia Germanou, and was produced by Dantis. The composition had initially been credited only to Dantis, however, a 2013 lawsuit by musician Manolis Psaltakis resulted in the credit being assigned also to him.[1]

The song is notable for casting elements of traditional Greek music in a contemporary dance music setting: its arrangement includes bouzoukis and a solo featuring a Cretan lyra.[2][3] The song's lyrics describe the singer's appreciation for her lover who is lauded as her "number one" and "the only treasure [she]'ll ever have".[4]

National selection

The Hellenic Broadcasting Corporation (ERT) internally selected Helena Paparizou as its performer for the 50th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. ERT then selected four songs –"My Number One", "OK", "Let's Get Wild", and "The Light in Our Soul"– to be performed by her in a televised national final aired on 2 March 2005. Shortly before the national final, it was revealed that "The Light in Our Soul" had been already released by Big Alice, thus it was disqualified, leaving out only three songs. "My Number One" gained a combined 66.47% from televoting and jury votes winning the competition and becoming the Greek entry for Eurovision. The chorus of the song had already become a chant for AEK Athens supporters.

Release and promotion

Paparizou released "My Number One" as a single, with the release of a Swedish album which contained the song following, and a Greek re-released of her first album Protereotita featuring the song and the other songs in the running for the national final. It sold over 90,000 copies in Greece and was certified double platinum.

Shortly after the song was picked, its music video was shot in just one day at the Thessaloniki Science Center and Technology Museum in Thessaloniki. She went on a European promotional tour visiting over twenty countries on her tour, and singing on various television shows, as well as giving many interviews. This method proved popular, and was used by many countries in 2006, including Greece.

Eurovison

On 21 May 2005, the grand final for the Eurovision Song Contest was held at the Palace of Sports in Kyiv hosted by the National Television Company of Ukraine (NTU), and broadcast live throughout the continent. As Greece had finished third at the previous contest, the song had been pre-qualified for the final. Paparizou performed "My Number One" nineteenth on the evening, following Croatia's "Vukovi umiru sami" by Boris Novković and LADO and preceding Russia's "Nobody Hurt No One" by Natalia Podolskaya.[5] During her performance, she did a stage show of the song, choreographed by Fokas Evangelinos.[6] Some of the memorable visuals from the show include her dancing a traditional Greek Pontian dance, the four dancers making the shape on the number 1 of the floor –showed from aerial camera– and her playing an imaginary lyra while her dancers pick her up.

At the close of voting, it had received 230 points, finishing at the head of a twenty-four-strong field, winning the contest.[7] "My Number One" held two Eurovision records: it was the first song scored an average of only 6.05 points per jury, the lowest average for a winning song at the time;[b] and it had the most sets of 12 points given out to one country until then, tying with United Kingdom's 1997 entry "Love Shine a Light".[c]

Aftermath

After its win Eurovision, a mass party started on the streets of Athens. People went out onto the streets with Greek flags, and started singing "My Number One", as well as honking car horns. This was similar to when Greece won Euro 2004, the 2005 Eurobasket title and when Greece won the silver medal in the 2006 FIBA World Championship. When Paparizou arrived back to Greece from Kyiv, mass crowds met her at the Athens International Airport, where she held up a Greek flag and the trophy.

"My Number One" was one of fourteen songs chosen by Eurovision fans and a European Broadcasting Union (EBU) reference group, from among the 992 songs that had ever participated in the contest, to participate in the fiftieth anniversary competition Congratulations: 50 Years of the Eurovision Song Contest held on 22 October 2005 in Copenhagen.[8] Paparizou performed the song in the competition, where it was named as one of the five greatest Eurovision entries of all time, earning the 4th place.[9]

As the winning broadcaster, the EBU gave ERT the responsibility to host the 2006 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. The semi-final held on 18 May 2006, opened with a medley of former Eurovision songs performed by different Greek gods, with all the cast finishing with "My Number One". The grand final held on 20 May 2006, opened with a ballet dance, after which Paparizou was introduced as the reigning winner and she performed the song. She also performed "Mambo!" at the interval act and presented the trophy to the winners.[10]

In early 2006, it was announced that "My Number One" and "Mambo!" would be remixed and released in the United States by Moda Records. On 22 August, a maxi CD single was released to record stores, featuring ten remixes, and the original song;[11] the mixes were also released as digital downloads on 4 June.[12] The music video of "My Number One" premiered in the United States in 2006. There were two separate videos. One is the original video, that was also shown in Europe. The second is a re-edited version of the same video, to the beat of the Josh Harris Remix from the CD Single.

On 22 May 2021, the interval act "Rock the Roof" in the Eurovision Song Contest 2021 grand final featured a revamped version of "My Number One" performed by Paparizou.[13] On 9 May 2024, she performed the song as part of a sing-along interval act in the second semi-final of the 2024 contest held in Malmö, Sweden.[d][15]

Track listings

  • International edition
  1. "My Number One"–2:58
  2. "I Don't Want You Here Anymore"–4:09
  • German edition
  1. "My Number One"–2:58
  2. "I Don't Want You Here Anymore"–4:09
  3. "O.K."–2:58
  4. "My Number One" (Music video)
  • Swedish edition
  1. "My Number One"–2:58
  2. "My Number One" (Instrumental)–2:58
  • US edition
  1. "Josh Harris Radio Mix"–3:38
  2. "Norty Cotto's My Radio Lover Mix"–3:29
  3. "Original Radio"–2:55
  4. "Georgie's #1 Radio Anthem Mix"–3:18
  5. "Mike Cruz Radio Mix"–4:03
  6. "Chris "The Greek" Panaghi Radio Mix"–3:35
  7. "Valentino's Radio Epic Mix"–3:02
  8. "Josh Harris Vocal Club Mix"–6:53
  9. "Norty Cotto's My Clubber Lover Mix"–6:57
  10. "Georgie's #1 Anthem Mix"–7:00
  11. "Mike Cruz Vox Mix"–9:44

Credits and personnel

Credits adapted from liner notes.[16]

Locations
  • Recorded at Vox Studios (Athens, Greece)
Personnel

Commercial performance

After the Eurovision victory, the video for the song was released in several countries throughout Europe. It went to #1 in both Greece and Paparizou's native Sweden for 4 weeks and was certified gold in both countries. The song was played constantly in Greece all through the summer. The success of the single is credited to the popular remix from Chris "The Greek" Panaghi which Sony (Greece) commissioned for the remix.

The song peaked on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart at number 8 and number 25 on the Billboard Hot Dance Singles Sales. In September 2006, the Georgie’s #1 Radio Anthem Mix was added to popular American retailer Abercrombie & Fitch's store playlist nationwide.[17]

Charts

Chart (2005) Peak
position
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[18] 44
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[19] 10
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Wallonia)[20] 36
CIS (TopHit)[21] 19
Eurochart Hot 100 Singles 17
Germany (Official German Charts)[22] 37
Greece (IFPI Greece)[23] 1
Hungary (Single Top 40)[24] 9
Netherlands (Single Top 100)[25] 24
Romania (UPFR) 4
Russia Airplay (TopHit)[26] 25
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[27] 1
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[28] 15
Turkey (Turkish Singles Chart)[29] 33
Charts (2006) Peak
position
US Dance Club Songs (Billboard)[30] 8
US Billboard Hot Dance Singles Sales 25

Year-end charts

Chart (2005) Position
Belgium (Ultratop Flanders)[31] 53
CIS (Tophit)[32] 75
Russia Airplay (TopHit)[33] 66
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[34] 9

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Sweden (GLF)[35] Gold 10,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Country Date Label Format
Greece 24 March 2005 Sony BMG
Sweden 4 May 2005[36] Bonnier Amigo CD single, digital download
Finland
Denmark 30 May 2005[36]
Norway
Germany Sony BMG
Austria
Netherlands 6 June 2005[36] CD single
Belgium
Portugal 7 June 2005[36]
Italy 1 July 2005[36] CD Single, digital download
United States 4 June 2006[12] Moda Digital download
22 August 2006[11] CD single

Legacy

Cover versions

  • In 2006, the heavy metal band Dream Evil recorded a tongue-in-cheek cover of the song for their album United.
  • In 2024, Thanasis Alevras [el] and Jérôme Kaluta [el] performed a duet cover with accompaniment by the ERT Symphony Orchestra.[37]

In other media

  • In 2008, a part of this song was sampled for "Thara Thara Onthara" of Kannada-language film Bindaas.
  • In 2009, "My Number One" made its way to the PlayStation 3 karaoke game Singstar as downloadable content. It was previously released in the Swedish version of the game, but it is the first time it has become accessible to players from all over Europe.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c By a 2013 Greek court decision.[1]
  2. ^ This record was previously held by Yugoslavia in 1989 with the song "Rock Me", and was later broken by Azerbaijan in 2011 with "Running Scared" by Ell & Nikki.
  3. ^ "My Number One" received 12 points ten times, tying it with the United Kingdom's 1997 entry "Love Shine a Light" by Katrina and the Waves for the record –televoting was only in place for five countries at the time–. This record was later broken by "Fairytale", the winning song in 2009, which scored 12 points from sixteen countries, and is currently held by the 2022 winner, "Stefania", which received twenty-eight sets of 12 points from televoting and five from juries.
  4. ^ In a medley with "Everyway That I Can" by Sertab Erener and "Take Me to Your Heaven" by Charlotte Perrelli.[14]

References

  1. ^ a b Vatmanidis, Theo (13 September 2013). "Greek court judgement against credited composer of 'My Number One'". EuroVisionary. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  2. ^ "My number one - Helena Paparizou". 24 November 2009.
  3. ^ Ivan Raykoff, Robert Deam Tobin A song for Europe: popular music and politics in the Eurovision song contest Ashgate Publishing Ltd Aldershot UK (2007) p.143
  4. ^ "2005 Greece - lyrics". The Diggiloo Thrush. Retrieved 2006-08-14.
  5. ^ "Eurovision Song Contest 2005 - Final". Eurovision Song Contest. 21 May 2005. NTU / EBU.
  6. ^ Edwards, Pollyanna (26 March 2021). "Helena Paparizou to perform revamped version of 'My Number One' in Rotterdam". eurovoxx.tv. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  7. ^ "Official Eurovision Song Contest 2005 final scoreboard". Eurovision Song Contest.
  8. ^ Bakker, Sietse (16 June 2005). "The 14 songs for Copenhagen". ESCtoday.
  9. ^ Adam, Karla (24 October 2005). "Abba's 'Waterloo' is voted best song of 50 Eurovision years". The Independent. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  10. ^ "Eurovision Song Contest 2006". Eurovision Song Contest. 20 May 2006. ERT / EBU.
  11. ^ a b Staff (2006-08-22). "My Number One [SINGLE]". Amazon. Retrieved 2009-09-07.
  12. ^ a b Staff (2006-06-04). "My Number One (Dance Mixes)". iTunes. Retrieved 2009-09-07.
  13. ^ "Interval Act - Rock The Roof". Eurovision Song Contest.
  14. ^ "Sing-Along Greatest Hits" on YouTube at the Eurovision Song Contest 2024 second semifinal
  15. ^ "Eurovision Song Contest 2024 second semifinal". Eurovision Song Contest. 9 May 2024. SVT / EBU.
  16. ^ "My Number One" (liner notes). Helena Paparizou. Athens, Greece: Sony Music Entertainment (Greece). 2005. COL 675891 1, Barcode 5 099767 589212.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  17. ^ "Abercrombie & Fitch Store Music: 2006 Playlist By Month: September". EverythingAmbercrombie. 2008-08-04. Archived from the original on 2011-07-10. Retrieved 2009-01-14.
  18. ^ "Helena Paparizou – My Number One" (in German). Ö3 Austria Top 40. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  19. ^ "Helena Paparizou – My Number One" (in Dutch). Ultratop 50. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  20. ^ "Helena Paparizou – My Number One" (in French). Ultratop 50. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  21. ^ Helena Paparizou — My Number One. TopHit. Retrieved 2021-10-06.
  22. ^ "Helena Paparizou – My Number One" (in German). GfK Entertainment charts. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  23. ^ "Top 50 Singles Chart". IFPI Greece. 2005-07-30. Archived from the original on August 26, 2005. Retrieved 2011-08-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  24. ^ "Archívum – Slágerlisták – MAHASZ" (in Hungarian). Single (track) Top 40 lista. Magyar Hanglemezkiadók Szövetsége. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  25. ^ "Helena Paparizou – My Number One" (in Dutch). Single Top 100. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  26. ^ "Top Radio Hits Russia Weekly Chart: Sep 15, 2005". TopHit. Retrieved 24 April 2024.
  27. ^ "Helena Paparizou – My Number One". Singles Top 100. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  28. ^ "Helena Paparizou – My Number One". Swiss Singles Chart. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  29. ^ "Digital Singles Charts - Turkey". Number One Top 20. Archived from the original on 3 June 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2005.
  30. ^ "Helena Paparizou Chart History (Dance Club Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  31. ^ "Jaaroverzichten 2005". Ultratop. Retrieved 2020-05-16.
  32. ^ "Лучшие песни и музыка за 2005 год" (in Russian). Tophit. Archived from the original on 2021-10-06. Retrieved 2021-10-06.
  33. ^ "Top Radio Hits Russia Annual Chart: 2005". TopHit. Archived from the original on 21 April 2024. Retrieved 24 April 2024.
  34. ^ "Årslista Singlar – År 2005" (in Swedish). Sverigetopplistan. Retrieved 2020-05-16.
  35. ^ "Guld- och Platinacertifikat − År 2005" (PDF) (in Swedish). IFPI Sweden. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-17.
  36. ^ a b c d e ""My Number One" all over Europe!". Archived from the original on 2011-09-29.(in Greek) MAD TV. Retrieved on July 25, 2005.
  37. ^ "«Eurovision σε είδον» – Οι εκπλήξεις αρχίζουν από σήμερα! | Βίντεο" ["Eurovision se eidon" – The surprises start today! | Video]. Eurovision.ert.gr (in Greek). ERT. 6 March 2024. Retrieved 7 March 2024.

External links

  • "My Number One" at Discogs (list of releases)
  • Chart History in Billboard
Preceded by Eurovision Song Contest winners
2005
Succeeded by
  • v
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Albums
Extended plays
  • Mambo! (2005)
  • Fos (2007)
Compilation albums
  • Greatest Hits & More (2011)
Video releases
  • Number One (2005)
  • MAD Secret Concerts (2006)
Singles
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  • "All the Time"
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  • "Angel"
  • "Boonika bate doba"
  • "Brujería"
  • "Call Me"
  • "Chacun pense à soi"
  • "Cool Vibes"
  • "Ela Ela (Come Baby)"
  • "Forogj, világ!"
  • "HaSheket SheNish'ar"
  • "In My Dreams"
  • "Las Vegas"
  • "Let Me Try"
  • "Make My Day"
  • "My Number One"
  • "Nobody Hurt No One"
  • "Razom nas bahato"
  • "Rimi Rimi Ley"
  • "Run & Hide"
  • "Talking to You"
  • "Tomorrow I Go"
  • "Touch My Fire"
  • "Vukovi umiru sami"
  • "The War Is Not Over"
  • "Zauvijek moja"
Semi-final
  • "Amar"
  • "Czarna dziewczyna"
  • "Le Grand soir"
  • "If I Had Your Love"
  • "Let's Get Loud"
  • "Little by Little"
  • "Lorraine"
  • "Love Me Tonight"
  • "Love?"
  • "La mirada interior"
  • "My Impossible Dream"
  • "Stop"
  • "Tout de moi"
  • "Why?"
  • "Y así"
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  • "Quand tout s'enfuit"
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  • "Alcohol Is Free"
  • "Aphrodisiac"
  • "Autostop"
  • "Better Love"
  • "Charlie Chaplin"
  • "Clown"
  • "Die for You"
  • "Die Together"
  • "Ellada, chora tou fotos"
  • "Emis forame to himona anixiatika"
  • "Everything"
  • "Feggari kalokerino"
  • "Horepse"
  • "Horis skopo"
  • "I anixi"
  • "Krasi, thalassa kai t' agori mou"
  • "Last Dance"
  • "Mathima solfege"
  • "Mia krifi evaisthisia"
  • "Miazoume"
  • "Mou les"
  • "My Number One"
  • "Never Let You Go"
  • "Olou tou kosmou i Elpida"
  • "One Last Breath"
  • "Oniro mou"
  • "Opa"
  • "Panagia mou, panagia mou"
  • "Pia prosefhi"
  • "Rise Up"
  • "S.A.G.A.P.O."
  • "Sarantapente kopelies"
  • "Secret Combination"
  • "Shake It"
  • "Sokrati"
  • "Stop"
  • "Supergirl"
  • "This Is Love"
  • "This Is Our Night"
  • "To diko sou asteri"
  • "To trehantiri (Diri Diri)"
  • "Utopian Land"
  • "Wagon-lit"
  • "Watch My Dance"
  • "What They Say"
  • "Yassou Maria"
  • "Zari"
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