Denmark was represented by the band
Brixx, with the song "Video-video", at the
1982 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 24 April in
Harrogate,
England. "Video-video" was chosen as the Danish entry at the
Dansk Melodi Grand Prix on 13 March. The previous year's Danish entrant
Tommy Seebach failed in his bid to represent Denmark for a third time.
Before Eurovision
Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 1982
The
Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 1982 was held at the
DR TV studios in
Copenhagen, hosted by Jørgen Mylius. 12 songs took part with the winner being decided by voting from five regional juries.[1]
On the night of the final Brixx performed 13th in the running order, following
Spain and preceding
Yugoslavia. Denmark was one of very few countries to provide a contemporary-sounding entry in a contest dominated by 1970s-style Eurovision songs, but this proved not to be what the juries were looking for in that year. At the close of voting "Video, Video" had received only 5 points, placing Denmark 17th of the 18 entries, ahead only of the nul-points entry from
Finland.[2] The Danish jury awarded its 12 points to contest winners
Germany.[3]
Denmark was represented by the band
Brixx, with the song "Video-video", at the
1982 Eurovision Song Contest, which took place on 24 April in
Harrogate,
England. "Video-video" was chosen as the Danish entry at the
Dansk Melodi Grand Prix on 13 March. The previous year's Danish entrant
Tommy Seebach failed in his bid to represent Denmark for a third time.
Before Eurovision
Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 1982
The
Dansk Melodi Grand Prix 1982 was held at the
DR TV studios in
Copenhagen, hosted by Jørgen Mylius. 12 songs took part with the winner being decided by voting from five regional juries.[1]
On the night of the final Brixx performed 13th in the running order, following
Spain and preceding
Yugoslavia. Denmark was one of very few countries to provide a contemporary-sounding entry in a contest dominated by 1970s-style Eurovision songs, but this proved not to be what the juries were looking for in that year. At the close of voting "Video, Video" had received only 5 points, placing Denmark 17th of the 18 entries, ahead only of the nul-points entry from
Finland.[2] The Danish jury awarded its 12 points to contest winners
Germany.[3]