Face the Music (U.S. game show)

Face the Music

Onstage logo of Face the Music
Developed by Buddy Piper
Presented by Ron Ely
Narrated by Dave Williams (January–September, 1980)
John Harlan (Season Two)
Art James (substitute, Season Two)
Country of origin United States
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Syndicated
Original run January 14, 1980 – September, 1981

Face the Music is an American television game show that aired in syndication from January 14, 1980 to September 1981. The program tested contestants' knowledge of popular music songs, and association of song titles with famous people, places and things.

Face the Music was hosted by Ron Ely and also featured the Tommy Oliver Orchestra, with vocalist Lisa Donovan, and was produced by Sandy Frank Productions. Dave Williams was the announcer from January to September 1980, and was replaced for the second season by John Harlan, with Art James occasionally filling in.

Gameplay

On each episode three new contestants compete for the right to face a returning champion in the end game. The first part of the game was played in three rounds.

Main game

Round 1

The contestants were shown six pictures, mostly faces of famous people, although places and even fictional characters were at times shown. The band played a song, and in order to score 10 points a contestant had to buzz-in, identify the song, and the famous face with which the song was associated. For example, a recognizing and naming the theme song to All in the Family, and associating it with a picture of actor Rob Reiner.

Contestants were not penalized for incorrectly guessing the famous face, but if the contestant did not first identify the correct song, the contestant was locked out of the next tune.

Round 2

In the second round, each song served as a clue to the identity of a subject. The subject category was given to the contestants (person, place, thing, fictional character, etc.), after which the band played the first song. A contestant buzzed-in and attempted to correctly name the song. Doing so gave the contestant the opportunity to name the subject to which the song applied. If the contestant was wrong or did not guess the subject, another song was played and the process repeated. As in round 1, if the contestant failed to identify the correct song, they would be locked out of the next tune. Up to four musical clues were played for each subject, and correctly identifying the subject earned the contestant 20 points.

For example, in the category of "fictional character", the songs "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction", "The Teddy Bears' Picnic", "Go Away Little Girl", and "Band of Gold" all pertained to Goldilocks from "The Story of the Three Bears".

Play continued for an unmentioned time limit. The two highest-scoring players after the end of the round advanced to the third round.

In the event of a tie for second place, a shortened version of the first round was played. Three pictures were shown to the tied contestants, after which a song played. The first contestant to name the song and identify the picture to which it applied advanced to round three. If all three contestants were tied, a second song was played to determine the second contestant who advanced.

Round 3

Round three was identical to round two; however, if a contestant did not correctly name the song title, the opponent was offered a chance to correctly name the title rather than a contestant being locked-out of the next tune. Contestants who correctly identified the subject received 30 points. Play continued for an unmentioned time limit, and the contestant in the lead at the end of the round advanced to the Championship Round. In the event both contestants were tied, a tiebreaker similar to the one used at the end of round two was played to determine a winner.

Championship round

In the championship round, the reigning champion and the surviving contestant competed to become the first to identify a famous person.

Six pictures of a celebrity were concealed onstage, ranging from childhood through maturity, and each was revealed one at a time with an accompanying musical clue. A contestant had to correctly name the tune and identify the celebrity pictured to win the game and return on the next episode.

For the first picture only, after providing a correct title to the tune, a contestant was given ten seconds to ponder their guess before verbally attempting to identify the celebrity. Contestants who correctly named the celebrity won a cash prize of $10,000 (originally a prize package during the first two weeks). If neither contestant correctly named the tune or identified the celebrity, play continued with a second tune and picture, and contestants won a $5,000 prize package for correctly identifying both. The process continued with additional tunes and pictures, each reducing the potential jackpot by $1,000. The sixth and final picture was in full color.

If neither contestant correctly identified both the tune and famous person after the sixth musical clue, a tiebreaker similar to the ones used in rounds two and three was played for the $1,000 prize package and to determine a champion.

Any champion who won five consecutive championship rounds received a new car as a bonus prize. A ten-day champion won a trip around the world, or in later episodes, a camping trailer.

In the first season, champions stayed on for up to ten games or until defeated. In the second season, champions stayed on until defeated, regardless of the number of wins.

Episode status

Face the Music still exists in its entirety and has been previously rerun on CBN (July 2, 1984 to September 27, 1985 and January 6 to August 29, 1986), USA Network (January 2 to September 8, 1989 and March 26 to September 14, 1990),[1][2][3][4] and The Family Channel (January 2 to September 29, 1995)[5][6]

Band members

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 played electric piano in addition to conducting the group.

External links

References

  1. The Intelligencer – January 2, 1989
  2. The Intelligencer – September 8, 1989
  3. The Intelligencer – March 26, 1990
  4. The Intelligencer – September 14, 1990
  5. The Intelligencer – January 2, 1995
  6. The Intelligencer – September 29, 1995