Without purposeful staging, this could have an uphill battle standing out, but it is by no means a bad song in any way. Tamara’s voice shines like the sun - and yet, when I’m thinking of all the songs, I can’t ever seem to remember the words to this one, and I don’t know why. This is the kind of positive message that women and girls need to hear these days. Josh: Line after line, Tamara delivers meaningful words and heartfelt emotions (especially with lines such as “Shine your light, go and break the rules”). You can see there is time invested in it. Tamara boasts a strong vocal delivery and the track has some nice production. An incredible message to support a movement that should have started long ago. “Proud” perfectly walks the thin line between being considered an actual female empowerment ballad and just tokenism. After trying the big pop production for two years and failing miserably, they took a step back and thought of a new strategy. As a studio cut, it is my favourite ballad of 2019, tackling very important subject matter.īernardo: North Macedonia should be proud of their entry. Staging will make or break this - they’ve failed in that regard recently but a simple ballad is hard to mess up, or so I hope. It’s a quality entry with subtle yet clever Balkan flourishes. I wasn’t expecting something as amazingly trashy as “Let Me Love You” and I’m glad she’s come with a credible ballad which showcases her vocals. Antranig: Tamara Todevska is the reason I fell in love with Eurovision back in 2008.
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