- Source: Turn It Up
- Source: Turn It Up!
Film and television
Turn It Up (film), a 2000 drama/musical movie
Turn It Up!, an American television game show
Turn It Up! (Australian TV series), a 1990s Australian music television show
Music
= Albums
=Turn It Up (Pixie Lott album), or the title song (see below)
Turn It Up (Rare Essence album)
Turn It Up (Shannon Noll album)
Turn It Up (Josh Thompson album), or the title song
Turn It Up (Treacherous Three album), or the title song
Turn It Up! The Very Best of Busta Rhymes, or the title song (see below)
Turn It Up, by IG Culture (recording as NSM)
Austin & Ally: Turn It Up, 2013
= Songs
="Turn It Up" (Brandy song)
"Turn It Up" (Chamillionaire song)
"Turn It Up" (The Feeling song)
"Turn It Up" (Johntá Austin song)
"Turn It Up" (Paris Hilton song)
"Turn It Up" (Peter Andre song)
"Turn It Up" (Pixie Lott song)
"Turn It Up" (Sean Paul song)
"Turn It Up" (Texas Hippie Coalition song)
"Turn It Up" (T.O.P song)
"Turn It Up" (Ultra Naté song)
"Turn It Up" (Wanessa Camargo song)
"Turn It Up (R.O.N.N. & CeCe Peniston song)", a song by Ron Carroll and CeCe Peniston, originally titled "In Love with a DJ"
"Turn It Up", by A from How Ace Are Buildings
"Turn It Up", by Alan Parsons from Try Anything Once
"Turn It Up", by Alesha Dixon from Fired Up
"Turn It Up", by The Bamboos
"Turn It Up", by Blur from Modern Life Is Rubbish
"Turn It Up", by Bomfunk MC's from Reverse Psychology
"Turn It Up", by Busta Rhymes from When Disaster Strikes, remixed as "Turn It Up (Remix)/Fire It Up"
"Turn It Up", by Ciara from Basic Instinct
"Turn It Up", by Grum
"Turn It Up", by Kyle
"Turn It Up", by Masta Ace Incorporated from Sittin' on Chrome
"Turn It Up", by Mishon Ratliff
"Turn It Up", by PinkPantheress
"Turn It Up", by Ricki-Lee Coulter from Ricki-Lee
"Turn It Up", by Robots in Disguise from Get RID!
"Turn It Up!", by Sonic Syndicate from We Rule the Night
"Turn It Up", by Stereos from Stereos
"Turn It Up", by Technotronic
"Turn It Up", by Ted Nugent from Free-for-All
Turn It Up! is a musical game show that aired on MTV from June 30 to December 7, 1990. It was the second game show to be produced and broadcast on the network after Remote Control, produced by Albie Hecht, Alan Goodman, and Fred Seibert, of Chauncey Street Productions in New York City.
The series was hosted by Jordan Brady with Stuffy Shmitt as co-host and announcer.
Gameplay
The show, co-hosted by comedian Jordan Brady and musician Stuffy Shmitt, features contestants competing to answer trivia questions about music.
= Rounds 1 and 2
=In each round, four categories each with three point values (10, 20 & 30 points) were displayed on a video wall. The player in control selected a category, then host Brady asked a question. The first player to ring-in had a chance to answer. A correct answer added the chosen points to the score, and chose another category, but an incorrect answer gave the opponents a chance to answer.
Round one was played with normal music questions, while round two was played with audio/video clips using the video wall.
Regular categories in round 2 include:
Total Recall: Contestants are shown thirty seconds of a music video. After the clip was played, the players were asked questions about the video.
Sing This: Contestants must sing the next verse after a music video stopped.
Say What?: Contestants have to repeat the lyrics the singer sang in the music video.
Talk Radio: An audio clip of an interview was played (the video featured a VU meter). Contestants must identify the artist.
Spare Parts: A portion of a photograph of an artist was shown and Brady reads a clue about the artist.
Pick a Player: A member of the band asks a question about musicians who play the same instrument as he/she does.
Scratch 'N Lick: DJ Jazzy Joyce scratches a song on her turntable, the contestant must identify the name of the song.
During the round, a horn playing the Charge fanfare would sound, indicating one minute of gameplay remained for the round. The round ended when all 12 questions were asked or if time ran out (the band would play the theme song, signaling the round's end).
The two high-scorers at the end of round two went on to play the final round, "Add-A-Track."
= Add-A-Track (Final round)
=In the final round, the two surviving players listened to four songs for two minutes (30 seconds per song). On each song, only one musical instrument played the song, with a new one added every five seconds. The player rang in once he/she thought they could identify the song. If correct, that player earned the points plus a prize; if wrong, the opposing player got a chance to answer.
Each song had a different point value:
1st song - 25 points
2nd song - 50 points
3rd song - 75 points
4th song - 100 points
The scores from the previous two rounds were not carried over until after the round was over, at which point the scores from the Add-A-Track round were added to the scores from the other two rounds. The player with a most points won the game and a prize. In addition, if a player had correctly identified all four songs in the Add-A-Track round, he/she won a grand prize.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Live It Up (album Lee DeWyze)
- Pixie Lott
- T.O.P
- Nick Kamen
- Kim Kardashian
- TWICE WORLD TOUR 'TWICELIGHTS'
- First Love (album Lee Hi)
- Who's That Girl (album)
- Liga Negara UEFA
- Up All Night
- Turn It Up (film)
- Turn It Up
- Turn It Up (Remix) / Fire It Up
- Turn It Up!
- Turn It Up Faggot
- Turn Up the Sun!
- Jam (Turn It Up)
- Center Stage: Turn It Up
- Up to eleven
- Turn Up Charlie
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