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The big band in support was that of Peter Knight and his Orchestra. [1] The contestants had to guess the title of a song after hearing only a small sample. The winner of the most cash must try to name as many £5 tunes as possible within 40 seconds. The show also featured a jackpot tune which reached at least £600 on one occasion.
Name That Tune returned in 1984 to syndication, again using the $100,000 prize in its branding. Hosted by Jim Lange, this revival was the first syndicated edition of Name That Tune not to air on a weekly basis from the start; instead, the show aired as a daily series with some changes to the format, including the tournament structure. It did ...
Face the Music featured band members who also appeared on another show by Sandy Frank Productions, Name That Tune. The band members included pianist Michel Rubini, drummer Evan Diner, guitarists Tommy Tedesco and brothers Tom and John Morell, sax player Fred Selden, bass player Lyle Ritz, and trombonists Lew McCreary and Gil Falco. Tommy Oliver ...
Fox’s reboot of “Name That Tune” premieres Wednesday, bringing the classic game show with a very simple premise — it’s right there in the title — back to broadcast television. But as ...
Name That Tune has finally named a premiere date for Season 2. Fox’s Jane Krakowski-hosted competition show will return with new episodes on Tuesday, March 29 (9/8c), TVLine has learned. And ...
Help is only a few cell phone punches away, if you don't mind spending a buck to solve your dilemma. 411-Song has been around for several years, with a slick Name that tune with new cell phone service
Harry Salter (1899 – March 5, 1984) [1] was an American music director and an orchestra conductor for radio and television programs. One of Salter's radio orchestras in the late 1920s had as members Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, Artie Shaw, Gene Krupa and Jack Teagarden.
Name That Tune Stop the Music is a prime time radio game show that aired on ABC Radio on Sundays, from March 21, 1948 [ 1 ] to August 10, 1952. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Stop the Music crossed over to ABC television on Thursdays, beginning on May 5, 1949 [ 4 ] through April 24, 1952, and again for a half-hour from September 7, 1954, to June 14, 1956.