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Shum (song)

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Shum

| cover = Go A - Shum.png

| alt = The official cover for "Shum"

| type = single

| artist = Go_A

| released = 22 January 2021

| genre =

| length = 3:58 (original version)
3:02 (radio edit)
2:53 (Eurovision version)

| label = Rocksoulana

| writer =

| prev_title = Solovey

| prev_year = 2020

| next_title = Kalyna

| next_year = 2022

| misc =

}}

"'Shum'" (, ) is a song by Ukrainian electro-folk band Go_A. It represented Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2021 in Rotterdam. It is the second song sung entirely in Ukrainian to represent the country at Eurovision (the first being "Solovey" also by Go_A in ), but the first to actually compete in Eurovision due to the cancellation of the 2020 contest.

"Shum" qualified for the 2021 Eurovision final, where it finished in fifth place with 364 points. They were the runner-ups of the public vote, behind eventual winner Italy, with 267 points, including a maximum of 12 points from five countries. The Eurovision version of the song took the lead in the global Spotify Viral 50 daily list on 24 May 2021, where it stayed until 1 June, and led the weekly list on the week of 27 May. It entered the 'Billboard' Global 200 on the week of 5 June, at position 158, becoming the first ever Ukrainian-language song to chart there. On the same week, it peaked at number 80 on the 'Billboard' Global Excl. U.S.

Background



The lyrics of this song is a variation of Ukrainian folk songs which were sung in the "Shum" folk ritual. The ritual involved a game and was performed in spring. According to some ethnographers, Shum refers to the god or personification of the forest. . [http://publications.lnu.edu.ua/journals/index.php/mythology/article/download/769/762 . , . : ].  ,  1  2012. Etymologically, the name of the ritual probably comes from Proto-Slavic words 'um' ("noise") or 'uma' ("forest").

Lead singer Pavlenko grew up in Northern Ukraine, and the song is inspired by the folklore of that region.

Music video



On 22 January 2021, Go_A presented a music video for the song on the band's YouTube channel. Less than three weeks later, it reached 1 million views. Pavlenko commented that the video was made with a phone camera and, despite the apparent pandemic theming, their intent was to just experiment and "shoot some funny video". For the Eurovision version, they shot a new music video in a forest near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.

Eurovision Song Contest



The song was selected to represent Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2021 on 4 February 2021, after Go_A was internally selected by the national broadcaster UA:PBC. The previous year, they had won Ukraine's televised national selection. The semi-finals of the 2021 contest featured the same line-up of countries as determined by the draw for the 2020 contest's semi-finals. Ukraine was placed into the first semi-final, held on 18 May 2021, and performed in the second half of the show.

Eurovision version

In March, a new version of the song was released with a new music video. The original song was too long and borrowed lyrics from existing traditional songs, which is not allowed under Eurovision rules. Pavlenko noted, that the band struggled to cut the original version of the song to three minutes. So, rather than shortening it, they decided to come up with a "sequel". Pavlenko explained that the original 'Shum' was not written with Eurovision in mind and was intended for their concert tour after the cancelled Eurovision 2020. The purpose of the original track was to recreate the folk ritual at live gigs with their audience.

The new version of the track was "adapted" for Eurovision and is based on 'vesnianka' folk songs. In Pavlenko's words, it was intended to have "more positive energy", since the original version of 'Shum', which is based on the folk ritual, is "a bit tense".

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



Release history



References



Category:2021 singles

Category:2021 songs

Category:Ukrainian-language songs

Category:Eurovision songs of 2021

Category:Eurovision songs of Ukraine

Category:Go A songs

Category:Ukrainian folk songs

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