Several countries start their second rehearsals in Vienna. As we still donât have access to the rehearsals, we will do something else. Per entry, we highlight one subject and give you some more information. That can be something about the artist, the song, the lyrics or even something completely different.  Australia â Delta Goodrem, âEclipseâ Running order: 11 | Rehearsal: 9 May, 10:30â10:55 CEST Delta Goodremâs breakthrough came at the perfect intersection of television and music. After signing a record deal at fifteen, the Australian singer was cast as shy schoolgirl Nina Tucker in Neighbours in 2002. The role gave her music a national platform: âBorn to Tryâ, performed within the series, introduced audiences to her piano-led pop sound and quickly became her first Australian number one. In March 2003, Goodrem released her debut album Innocent Eyes, a polished collection of emotional ballads and radio-friendly pop songs. The album turned her from promising newcomer into one of Australiaâs defining pop stars of the decade. It debuted at number one on the ARIA Albums Chart and remained there for 29 weeks, an Australian-artist record. With five number-one singles, including âLost Without Youâ, âNot Me, Not Iâ and âPredictableâ, Innocent Eyes became a major landmark debut and established Goodrem as a powerful vocalist and songwriter internationally.  Ukraine â LelĂ©ka, âRidnymâ Running order: 12 | Rehearsal: 9 May, 11:05â11:30 CEST When Ukraineâs Eurovision 2026 act is called LELĂKA, it can seem slightly confusing: the name refers both to singer Viktoria LelĂ©ka and to the band she founded in Berlin in 2016. The group is her own long-running Ukrainian-German folk-jazz project. Built around Viktoriaâs distinctive voice, LELĂKA combines Ukrainian traditional melodies with contemporary jazz, improvisation and warm acoustic arrangements. The quartetâs line-up includes Viktoria LelĂ©ka on vocals, Povel Widestrand on piano, Thomas Kolarczyk on double bass and Jakob Hegner on drums. Long before Eurovision, the band had already made a name for itself on the European jazz scene. They won the Creole Global Music Contest in Berlin and the European Young Jazz Talent Award in Burghausen. Releases such as Tuman, Sonce u Serci and Rizdvo show the groupâs musical identity: rooted in Ukrainian culture, but shaped in Berlinâs vibrant international jazz world today.  Albania â Alis, âNĂąnâ Running order: 13 | Rehearsal: 9 May, 11:40â12:05 CEST Festivali i KĂ«ngĂ«s is often introduced as Albaniaâs national final. Its story began however long before Albania joined the contest. The first edition was held in Tirana in December 1962. That makes it one of Europeâs longest-running song festivals. Created by Albanian public broadcaster Radio Televizioni Shqiptar, the festival became a central stage for Albanian light music, composers, orchestras and vocalists. During the communist period it also reflected the countryâs cultural restrictions. The songs and performances were closely controlled. Yet the festival survived, year after year, and many of Albaniaâs best-known singers built their reputations there. Since 2004, the winner or selected act from Festivali i KĂ«ngĂ«s has represented Albania at the Eurovision Song Contest.Anjeza Shahini was the first one. That Eurovision link gave FiK a new international audience, but at its heart it remains much more than a selection show. It is Albanian music history and national cultural tradition.  Malta â AIDAN, âBellaâ Running order: 14 | Rehearsal: 9 May, 12:20â12:45 CEST With Aidanâs Eurovision entry âBellaâ, the Maltese language returns to the contest for the first time since Claudette Paceâs âDesireâ in 2000. Maltese, or Malti, is a small island language with a remarkably rich history. It is Maltaâs national language and, together with English, one of the countryâs two official languages. Linguistically, it is especially unusual. Maltese is a Semitic language, developed from medieval Arabic, but shaped over centuries by Sicily, Italy and later Britain. As a result, its sound world feels both Mediterranean and distinctly its own. Words of Arabic origin sit naturally beside vocabulary influenced by Italian, Sicilian and English, while the language is written in the Latin alphabet. Since Malta joined the European Union, Maltese has also been an official EU language. At Eurovision, hearing Maltese again is therefore more than a musical detail: it is a proud reminder of Maltaâs layered cultural identity and history today.  Norway â JONAS LOVV, âYa Ya Yaâ Running order: 15 | Rehearsal: 9 May, 12:55â13:20 CEST In Eurovision, repetitions can become statistics. Norwayâs Jonas Lovv turns âYaâ into an unofficial record: in âYA YA YAâ he sings the word 72 times, matching Finlandâs Pave Maijanen, who packed âYammaâ 72 times into âYamma, yammaâ. Maijanen represented Finland in Malmö in 1992 with a cheerful, nostalgic song about the old valve radio. The lyrics imagine a tiny box containing âa hundred musiciansâ, while memories of Sinatra and John Lennon on the radio become seeds of happiness. Musically, âYamma, yammaâ is built around its nonsense-like hook, a playful syllable that does more than fill space: it gives the song its identity. The entry did not convince the juries and finished 23rd and last with four points. Still, three decades later, its repeated refrain has found a new claim to fame: a shared Eurovision record with Jonas Lovvâs chant in the contestâs ever-growing book of memorable lyrical curiosities and oddities. đźđč Italy â Sal Da Vinci, âPer sempre siâ Running order: – | Rehearsal: 9 May, 13:30â13:55 CEST Festival di Sanremo is much more than Italyâs Eurovision selection. The contest was first held in 1951 in the Casino Theatre of Sanremo. It was created as a festival for new Italian songs and quickly became a national institution. Its format was so influential that it helped inspire the creation of the Eurovision Song Contest in 1956. Over the decades, Sanremo has introduced classics, launched careers and reflected changing Italian tastes. Since Italyâs Eurovision return, the link between the two contests has become increasingly important. Today, the winner of the Campioni section is given the first choice to represent Italy at Eurovision, usually with the Sanremo-winning song. If the winner declines, RAI can choose another act from the festival. That rule