Hamburg, 29 April 2024. Research by European study choice platform IJ shows that, this year, an unprecedented number of Eurovision contestants have received higher education abroad: Out of 55 performers representing 37 nations, a total of 8 went to university in foreign countries.
The Eurovision Song Contest stands as one of the world’s most anticipated and celebrated music events, reaching 162 million viewers in its previous edition in 2023. This year, the contest will be held at the Malmö Arena, Sweden, and will consist of two semi-finals on 7 and 9 May, and a final on 11 May 2024.
As the 2024 contest approaches, IJ research into the participants’ biographies shows that the majority of those who studied at university had chosen Music and related subjects. However, some of this year’s performers also have studied subjects as diverse as Law (Fahree from Azerbaijan), Anthropology (Marko Veisson from Estonia) or Communication Sciences (Iolanda from Portugal).
These are the 8 artists that pursued higher education in a different country:
All of this year’s internationally-educated Eurovision performers went to study abroad either in the United Kingdom or the USA. Two institutions even show up twice: the University of Westminster (London) and Berklee College of Music (USA).
“It’s inspiring that so many of this year’s Eurovision contestants were once international students. It also reflects that studying abroad has become an increasingly common choice among young people,” comments Gerrit Bruno Blöss, founder and CEO of IJ. “It’s not just the Erasmus programme that opens doors, it’s also the growing number of Bachelors and Masters in English.”
There is also one former international student among the Eurovision winners of past years: Salvador Sobral, who won the 2017 ESC for Portugal. He had gone on an Erasmus exchange to the Spanish island of Mallorca and attributes part of his choice of becoming a career musician to his study-abroad experience. (Read the 2018 IJ interview)
Among the benefits of studying abroad, many artists highlight the importance of cultural exchange to help them evolve their music style and creative development. As Portugal’s Iolanda puts it in her recent interview with IJ: “Being far from your comfort zone pushes you into discovering a lot about yourself.”
IJ is the gateway to universities in Europe. As the most-visited study choice platform for Greater Europe, it offers students details about more than 19,000 study programmes at more than 1,000 universities. Every year, the Hamburg-based company reaches more than 2.5 million prospective students from around the world. IJ closely cooperates with institutions of higher education as well as governmental organisations throughout Europe.
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