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Revision as of 03:30, 1 November 2016

"Better the Devil You Know"
Song
B-side"Not What I Call Love"
United Kingdom "Better the Devil You Know"
Eurovision Song Contest 1993 entry
Country
Artist(s)
Sonia Evans
As
Sonia
Language
English
Composer(s)
"Red" (Brian Teasdale) and Dean Collinson
Lyricist(s)
Red and Collinson
Conductor
Finals performance
Final result
2nd
Final points
164
Entry chronology
◄ "One Step Out of Time" (1992)
"We Will Be Free (Lonely Symphony)" (1994) ►

Template:Distinguish2

"Better the Devil You Know" is a pop song written by Brian Teasdale and Dean Collinson for English singer Sonia. The single was released in April 1993 as the second and final single from Sonia's third album, Better the Devil You Know. The song was the United Kingdom's entry at the Eurovision Song Contest 1993.

Song information

For A Song for Europe 1993, the BBC asked the heads of each of the Eurovision Network member broadcasters for their opinion regarding who should represent the United Kingdom from a shortlist the BBC had prepared. A plurality chose 22-year-old recording artist Sonia, who already had a #1 hit to her credit. She then sang eight different songs at the national final. For the second year running, a nationwide telephone vote was held to pick one song to send to the Eurovision finals, held this year at Millstreet, County Cork, Ireland. "Better the Devil You Know", the fifth song performed, won with over 156,000 supporters, twice as many as the second-place entry.

At Millstreet, the song was performed nineteenth on the night, after Bosnia and Herzegovina's Fazla with "Sva bol svijeta", and before the Netherlands' Ruth Jacott with "Vrede". At the end of judging that evening, "Better the Devil You Know" took the second-place slot with 164 points. Belgium, Iceland, Austria and Israel gave the UK 12 points that evening. This was the fourth time the UK had ranked second in the voting since 1988.

The song was a retro rock 'n' roll offering with a 1950s flair. Sonia tells the story about how in love she is with her boyfriend, wishing he won't hurt her, for her love is true. She lets it known that she would "sell her heart and soul" to get his unconditional love in return, rationalising that it's better that one deal with "the devil you know" (him with his faults) instead of "the devil you don't" (another potential boyfriend).

Commenting on the song, Collinson stated that he'd written the song years before in an attempt to recreate "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go" by Wham!. The song was played as part of a "Eurovision special" on Top of the Pops 2. As the show's narrator, DJ Steve Wright commented during the song's introduction, "This is a good song, but Sonia is a bit too eager to please, so therefore didn't give it the required 'I don't care too much about Eurovision' attitude," implying that was her downfall. For her part, immediately after the winner was known, Sonia accepted defeat in a humble manner, smiled, and shook winner Niamh Kavanagh's hand.[1]

After Eurovision, the song peaked at #15 on the UK Singles Chart, and was in the chart for 7 weeks.[2] The B-side was a song called "Not What I Call Love", co-written by Sonia and also on her third album.

Formats and track listings

Cassette single

  1. "Better The Devil You Know" - 2:36
  2. "Not What I Call Love" - 4:08

CD single

  1. "Better the Devil You Know" - 2:36
  2. "Better the Devil You Know" (Extended Mix) - 4:20
  3. "Not What I Call Love" - 4:08

7" single

  1. "Better the Devil You Know" - 2:36
  2. "Not What I Call Love" - 4:08

12" single

  1. "Better the Devil You Know" (Extended Mix) - 4:20
  2. "Not What I Call Love" - 4:08

Chart performance

Chart (1993) Peak
position
UK Singles Chart[3] 15
Irish Singles Chart[4] 26
German Singles Chart[5] 59

References

  1. ^ Eurovision 1993 winning votes on YouTube
  2. ^ "Better the Devil You Know". chartstats.com. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  3. ^ Official UK Charts - Sonia
  4. ^ Irish charts - searchable database Archived 2010-01-05 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ German chart details
Preceded by United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest
1993
Succeeded by