Keep Me in Mind (Mike Spiteri Song)

"Keep Me In Mind" was the Maltese entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1995, performed in English by Mike Spiteri.

The song is a ballad, inspired somewhat by the soul music tradition, in which Spiteri addresses himself to a former lover. He sings that the two of them are "drifting apart", but pleads with her to "keep me in mind" and call him if she ever feels lonely.

The song was performed twenty-second on the night (following Israel's Liora with "Amen" and preceding Greece's Elina Konstantopoulou with "Pia Prosefhi"). At the close of voting, it had received 76 points, placing 10th in a field of 23.

It was succeeded as Maltese representative at the 1996 Contest by Miriam Christine with "In A Woman's Heart".


Eurovision Song Contest 1995
Countries
Final
  • Poland
  • Ireland
  • Germany
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Norway
  • Russia
  • Iceland
  • Austria
  • Spain
  • Turkey
  • Croatia
  • France
  • Hungary
  • Belgium
  • United Kingdom
  • Portugal
  • Cyprus
  • Sweden
  • Denmark
  • Slovenia
  • Israel
  • Malta
  • Greece
Artists
Final
  • Justyna
  • Eddie Friel
  • Stone & Stone
  • Davorin Popović
  • Secret Garden
  • Philipp Kirkorov
  • Bo Halldórsson
  • Stella Jones
  • Anabel Conde
  • Arzu Ece
  • Magazin & Lidija
  • Nathalie Santamaria
  • Csaba Szigeti
  • Frédéric Etherlinck
  • Love City Groove
  • Tó Cruz
  • Alexandros Panayi
  • Jan Johansen
  • Aud Wilken
  • Darja Švajger
  • Liora
  • Mike Spiteri
  • Elina Konstantopoulou
Songs
Final
  • "Sama"
  • "Dreamin'"
  • "Verliebt in Dich"
  • "Dvadeset prvi vijek"
  • "Nocturne"
  • "Kolibelnaya dlya vulkana"
  • "Núna"
  • "Die Welt dreht sich verkehrt"
  • "Vuelve conmigo"
  • "Sev"
  • "Nostalgija"
  • "Il me donne rendez-vous"
  • "Új név a régi ház falán"
  • "La voix est libre"
  • "Love City Groove"
  • "Baunilha e chocolate"
  • "Sti Fotia"
  • "Se på mig"
  • "Fra Mols til Skagen"
  • "Prisluhni mi"
  • "Amen"
  • "Keep Me In Mind"
  • "Pia Prosefhi"

Famous quotes containing the word mind:

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    Emma Goldman (1869–1940)