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Ein bißchen Frieden

Germany "Ein bißchen Frieden"
Nicole - Ein bißchen Frieden.jpg
Eurovision Song Contest 1982 entry
Country
Artist(s)
Nicole Hohloch
As
Language
Composer(s)
Lyricist(s)
Conductor
Finals performance
Final result
1st
Final points
161
Appearance chronology
◄ "Johnny Blue" (1981)   
"Rücksicht" (1983) ►

"Ein bißchen Frieden" ("A Little Peace" in English) is a song in German, written by prolific German Eurovision-writing duo Ralph Siegel (music) and Bernd Meinunger (lyrics) for the Eurovision Song Contest 1982, held in Harrogate, England. It was performed by 17-year-old German high-school student Nicole, resulting in Germany's first win at the Eurovision Song Contest by a record margin of 161 points, setting a new record for the largest winning margin that lasted until the Eurovision Song Contest 1997.

"Ein bißchen Frieden" was the eighteenth and final song performed during the 1982 Eurovision Song Contest. At the close of voting, it had received 161 points, placing first in a field of 18.

The performance was unlike most other Eurovision entrants in that Nicole performed while seated on a stool, playing a white acoustic guitar and accompanied by a backing group which included a harpist. The gentle ballad describes a wish for world peace, with the lyrics sung in first person, and also describes the beauty of the natural world.

After winning the contest, Nicole performed the reprise in four different languages: German, English, French and Dutch,. She decided on the spur of the moment to do this, to the bewilderment of her backing group. She later released recordings in five additional languages across Europe: Danish, Italian, Russian, and a German-English-Dutch combination and a German-English-Italian combination. It topped the charts in many countries, selling more than three million copies, and the English version was the last Eurovision winner to top the charts in the United Kingdom. The English version also holds the honour of becoming the 500th British Number One, though it was felt by some in the UK that the song's success, along with the poor showing of the UK entry "One Step Further" by Bardo, represented a protest against the Falklands War.


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