DDRMAX: Dance Dance Revolution 6thMIX
Encyclopedia
DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution 6thMix is the 6th game in the Dance Dance Revolution
Dance Dance Revolution
Dance Dance Revolution, abbreviated DDR, and previously known as Dancing Stage in Europe and Australasia, is a music video game series produced by Konami. Introduced in Japan in 1998 as part of the Bemani series, and released in North America and Europe in 1999, Dance Dance Revolution is the...

 series of music video game
Music video game
A music video game, also commonly known as a music game, is a video game where the gameplay is meaningfully and often almost entirely oriented around the player's interactions with a musical score or individual songs...

s. It was released in the arcades by Konami
Konami
is a Japanese leading developer and publisher of numerous popular and strong-selling toys, trading cards, anime, tokusatsu, slot machines, arcade cabinets and video games...

 on October 19, 2001. Although only officially released in Japan
Japan
Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...

, units exist worldwide. 6thMix contains a total of 42 songs, 36 of which are new to Dance Dance Revolution. It was the first in the series to feature Freeze Arrows. In the proto version of this game, it has some songs from DDR 1st-5th Mix.

The interface used is a recoloring and smoothing of the song wheel interface first introduced in Dance Dance Revolution 5thMix
Dance Dance Revolution 5thMix
Dance Dance Revolution 5thMIX, or DDR 5th Mix, is the 5th game in the Dance Dance Revolution series of music video games. It was released to the arcades by Konami on March 27, 2001. Although only officially released in Japan, units exist worldwide. DDR 5th Mix contains a total of 124 songs, nine of...

, with the addition of changeable sort settings and a longer time limit.

6thMix was intended to be the Next Generation of Dance Dance Revolution. As such, there are many changes. First, the difficulty levels were renamed. Basic' was renamed 'Light', 'Trick' was named 'Standard', and 'Maniac' was named 'Heavy'. They are also given Japanese difficulty names in conjunction: 楽 (raku), 踊 (you), and 激 (geki), respectively. Their color codes—orange, fuchsia and green, respectively—remain the same. Also, all songs from previous versions have been scrapped (the prototype version has few previous songs), intending the game to start from scratch. Most of them do return on future releases, however.

Gameplay

Core gameplay remained mostly the same on 6thMix, with the addition of Freeze Arrows and a new scoring system:

Freeze Arrows appear as green arrows with a long extension. If they are held for the entire length successfully, a O.K. is scored. If it is not held down for the entire length, a N.G. (no good) is scored. Freezes affect the life bar. Scores are calculated with 2 distinct scoring systems, the long-score system used to determine rankings, and an independent dance point system now used to determine the grade.

All songs have a long-score ceiling of 50 million points, and a bonus score is tacked onto it based on the difficulty of the song and other factors. Rankings are given for the highest long-score accumulations a round. If a player plays more than three songs, then it only counts the last three played. If a song is played repeatedly among the three songs used for ranking, then the repeated songs carry no bonus score.

The dance-point system uses raw step values to determine the grade. A 'perfect' step adds two points, a 'great' step adds one point, a 'good' step is worth nothing, a 'boo' step takes away four points, and a 'miss' step takes away eight points. An 'O.K.' freeze adds six points, and an 'N.G.' freeze is worth nothing. The dance points are also tied to the life bar. As always, if a player takes too many bad steps and depletes the life bar, they will fail, and the game will end immediately. If the first song is in Light mode, then the game will allow a player to fail that song and continue, but will fail the player out if they fail a second song. In two-player games, if one player fails, they can continue dancing, but it ceases to accumulate dance points for the failed player, accumulates score points at only 10 points per step, and automatically gives the failed player an 'E' for the song.

The grade is dependent on the number of dance points accumulated: 100% dance points is 'AAA', at least 93% is 'AA', at least 80% is 'A', at least 65% is 'B', at least 45% is 'C' and anything below 45% is a 'D'. If a net dance-point total of zero is obtained without depleting the life bar and, thus, failing, an 'E' is awarded. The final grade for the entire game is an average of the grades from the last three songs and not derived from the actual dance points scored.

Interface & graphics

Dancing characters have been removed in 6thMix. Instead, the arrows scroll over clips of full motion video
Full motion video
Full motion video based games are video games that rely upon pre-recorded TV-quality movie or animation rather than sprites, vectors, or 3D models to display action in the game. In the early 1990s a diverse set of games utilized this format...

, hence the game does not render any polygons. The screen refreshes at a full speed of 60 frames per second. In addition, the arrows themselves have been tweaked too, now having a rounded edge on their outer tip rather than the V-shaped cut used in all previous games.

6thMix retains the Song Wheel interface introduced in 5thMix, but adds an easier method to enter modifiers. In previous versions, modifiers like "Sudden" or "Shuffle" required a combination of dance steps. Beginning in 6thMix, a player only needs to hold the yellow Start button when they select a song to bring up a full menu of available modifiers, including the ability to speed up or slow down the scrolling of arrows, and a final chance to select the song difficulty they wish to play.

Groove Radar

The "foot rating" system used in previous versions to identify a song's difficulty has been replaced in DDRMAX by the Groove Radar. The Groove Radar is a graphical representation of the difficulty of a song which debuted on DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution 6thMix which exclusively used the system to represent difficulty instead of foot ratings, the only version to do this. Due to this, the only songs that have no known foot ratings are "Follow Me" and "Flash in the Night", because both songs have yet to appear on a different mix.

The radar uses 5 categories to represent the difficulty:
  • Stream - the overall density of the steps in the song.
  • Voltage - the measure of the peak density of the steps (the highest density of arrows that ever appear on the screen at once).
  • Air - the amount of jump steps within the song
  • Freeze - the number of freezes (requiring the player to hold a note after it has been pressed initially) in the song.
  • Chaos - the number of steps in the song that don't occur on quarter notes.


The Groove Radar displays up to two graphs, one for each player, depending on the difficulty they select.

Modifiers

A new options menu accessed by holding down the start button when selecting a song debuted on 6thMix, and is retained on future mixes.

Some of the available modifiers include Speed mods, which change the arrow speed. Boost, which causes the arrows to accelerate as they near the step zone, Appearance, which changes the appearance of the arrows. Turn mods modify the stepchart itself, Other affects the difficulty of the steps, Scroll changes the scroll direction of the arrows, and Freeze Arrows can also be turned off.

Extra Stage

New to 6thMix is the "Extra Stage", where players are rewarded for meeting conditions set by the game. If a AA is scored on the final stage on Heavy mode, a message inviting the player to "Try Extra Stage" is shown instead of the Cleared graphic. For the Extra Stage, the song wheel is locked on "MAX 300", and the song is played with several forced modifiers, including 1.5x speed and Reverse. The song is also played in Pressure mode, where the dance gauge starts filled, and can only go down.

If the player scores a AA or higher on the Extra Stage the game again rewards them with "One More Extra Stage". This time, the song wheel is locked to "CANDY☆", an easier song but with more difficult Modifiers. The exact same modifiers are used, but the song is played in Sudden Death mode, where any step judgment which breaks a combo immediately ends the game. If the player clears the song with a full combo (which is the only way to do so in Sudden Death mode), a special credits movie is shown. When this second Boss Song is passed for the first time it too will be unlocked for normal play, also displayed on the Song Wheel in red.

Link data

Some machines have the ports to insert PlayStation memory cards. Such memory cards have to be PlayStation (not PS2) memory cards with Link Data from the home version of DDR 5th Mix (the home version of 6thMix cannot create arcade-compatible Link Data). 5thMix can create two different kinds of arcade link data; the Link Data file for 6thMix is known as "New Version" Link Data and is forward-compatible with 7thMix arcade machines as well. Link Data serves two primary purposes: Score-saving and Internet Ranking. The user can save his or her scores from arcade performances, and whenever the game is played in the future, the arcade game will load the scores for each user and show them on the song-selection screen to show the player's best performances. These scores can also be viewed at home with 5thMix. 6thMix also provides Internet Ranking codes based on the user's performance in a given set of songs. As with all of Konami's Internet Ranking events, the website for the game would allow users to enter in a generated password which contains their initials and scores for that session, and the website would display the rankings for those who have submitted codes. Link Data saves these passwords so that they may be entered much more conveniently.

The arcade game can exchange custom stepchart data with 6thMix, as well as any earlier version that has songs that are in 6thMix, though this requires special steps to be taken in 6thMix to write a PlayStation-formatted save file, which must then be copied to the PlayStation memory card by the user.

Home versions

The home version of DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution 6thMix was released in Japan on May 16, 2002, for the Sony PlayStation 2
PlayStation 2
The PlayStation 2 is a sixth-generation video game console manufactured by Sony as part of the PlayStation series. Its development was announced in March 1999 and it was first released on March 4, 2000, in Japan...

 video game console
Video game console
A video game console is an interactive entertainment computer or customized computer system that produces a video display signal which can be used with a display device to display a video game...

. It featured all 42 songs from the arcade version as well as two additional console-exclusive songs "Kind Lady" and "So In Love". 6thMix's hidden songs can be unlocked automatically, without additional play, by accessing its save data on home versions of DDRMAX2 Dance Dance Revolution 7thMix or Dance Dance Revolution Extreme
Dance Dance Revolution Extreme
Dance Dance Revolution Extreme is a music video game by Konami and is the eighth release in the main Dance Dance Revolution series. It was released on December 25, 2002 for Japanese arcades and on October 9, 2003 for the Japanese PlayStation 2...

.

DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution, with the mix number omitted, is the home version released in North America
North America
North America is a continent wholly within the Northern Hemisphere and almost wholly within the Western Hemisphere. It is also considered a northern subcontinent of the Americas...

 for the PlayStation 2
PlayStation 2
The PlayStation 2 is a sixth-generation video game console manufactured by Sony as part of the PlayStation series. Its development was announced in March 1999 and it was first released on March 4, 2000, in Japan...

 video game console
Video game console
A video game console is an interactive entertainment computer or customized computer system that produces a video display signal which can be used with a display device to display a video game...

. The North American
North American
North American generally refers to an entity, people, group, or attribute of North America, especially of the United States and Canada together.-Culture:*North American English, a collective term used to describe American English and Canadian English...

 version is considerably different from the Japan
Japan
Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...

ese version. It displays song difficulties using the traditional foot-rating system and the Groove Radar in tandem.

Music

No. Song Artist
1 "Lovin' You (Rob Searle Club Mix)" Vinyl Baby
2 "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" Cosmic Gate
3 "Highs Off U (Scorccio XY Mix)" 4 Reeel
4 "True... (Radio Edit)" 小坂りゆ (Kosaka Riyu)
5 "www.Blonde Girl (Momo Mix)" Jenny Rom
6 "Ordinary World" Aurora featuring Naimee Coleman
7 "Bye Bye Baby Balloon" Joga
Joga
Joga is an Italian Europop act produced by Nick Ferrando with Nathalie Aarts featured on vocals. Aarts had released four singles commercially in Europe: Dam Dariram, Bye Bye Baby Balloon, No Nobody's Love, and White Christmas. Joga is claimed to be quite popular among listeners of Toshiba-EMI's...

8 "On the Jazz" Jonny Dynamite!
9 "Cow Girl" Bambee
10 "Ghosts (Vincent De Moor Remix)" Tenth Planet
11 "Miracle" St.Jannaro
12 "Firefly" Be For U
13 "Witch Doctor (Giant Toons Version)" Cartoons
14 "Dive (More Deep & Deeper Style)" Be For U
15 "Groove" Sho-T feat. Brenda
16 "Do It Right" Sota feat. Ebony Fay
17 "Share My Love" Julie Frost
Julie Frost
Julie Frost is an internationally known award winning American songwriter, singer, guitar player and music producer. She is the first American songwriter to win the Eurovision Song Contest, as co-writer of the song "Satellite", which won the contest in 2010 for Germany...

18 "Do You Remember Me" Jenny
19 "Look to the Sky" System S.F. feat. Anna
20 "Telephone Operator (Club Mix)" Shelley Peter
21 "Justify My Love" Tess
22 "The Centre of the Heart (Stonebridge Clubmix)" Roxette
23 "夜空ノムコウ" (Yozora no Muko) Eurobeat Lovers
24 "I'm in the Mood for Dancing" Sharon
25 "Nori Nori Nori" Judy Crystal
26 "Let's Groove" Tips & Tricks vs Wisdome
27 "Twilight Zone (R-C Extended Club Mix)" 2 Unlimited
2 Unlimited
2 Unlimited is a Dutch Eurodance/Hi-NRG act formed in 1991. The project was the brainchild of Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde, and was fronted by a Dutch duo, rapper Ray Slijngaard and singer Anita Doth. During five years of enormous worldwide popularity, the act scored 16 chart...

28 "そばかす" (Sobakasu) Tiggy
Tiggy
Tiggy is a Danish Bubblegum Dance/Eurodance artist whose music is energetic, bouncy and sugar-coated. She is perhaps best known for her remix of the Sandy Fox song "Freckles" in DDRMAX: Dance Dance Revolution 6thMIX, originally the English version of the song "Sobakasu" by Judy and Mary from the...

29 "Flash in the Night" Flashman
30 "My Sweet Darlin'" Wildside
31 "Let the Beat Hit Em' (Classic R&B Style)" Stone Bros.
32 "So Deep (Perfect Sphere Remix)" Silvertear
33 "Exotic Ethnic" Reveng
34 "Follow Me" Lady Baby
35 "Fantasy" Melissa
36 "Midnight Blaze" U1 Jewel Style
37 "Healing Vision (Angelic Mix)" 2MB
38 "Groove 2001" Sho-T feat. Brenda
39 "Orion.78 (Civilization Mix)" 2MB
40
"Candy✩" Luv Unlimited
41
"Max 300" Ω (Omega)
42
"True...(Trance Sunrise Mix)" 小坂りゆ (Kosaka Riyu)

The Japanese PlayStation 2 release of DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution 6thMix includes the arcade soundtrack in its entirety plus two additional unlockable tracks.

No. Song Artist
1 "Lovin' You (Rob Searle Club Mix)" Vinyl Baby
2 "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" Cosmic Gate
Cosmic Gate
Cosmic Gate is a German trance duo made up of Claus Terhoeven and Stefan Bossems . Both from Krefeld in Germany. On October 28, 2009, DJ Magazine announced the results of their annual Top 100 DJ Poll, with Ultra Records artist Cosmic Gate placed #19, 43 spots above the group's ranking the year...

3 "Highs Off U (Scorccio XY Mix)" 4 Reeel
4 "True... (Radio Edit)" 小坂りゆ (Kosaka Riyu)
5 "www.Blonde Girl (Momo Mix)" Jenny Rom
6 "Ordinary World" Aurora featuring Naimee Coleman
7 "Bye Bye Baby Balloon" Joga
Joga
Joga is an Italian Europop act produced by Nick Ferrando with Nathalie Aarts featured on vocals. Aarts had released four singles commercially in Europe: Dam Dariram, Bye Bye Baby Balloon, No Nobody's Love, and White Christmas. Joga is claimed to be quite popular among listeners of Toshiba-EMI's...

8 "On the Jazz" Jonny Dynamite!
9 "Cow Girl" Bambee
10 "Ghosts (Vincent De Moor Remix)" Tenth Planet
11 "Miracle" St.Jannaro
12 "Firefly" Be For U
13 "Witch Doctor (Giant Toons Version)" Cartoons
14 "Dive (More Deep & Deeper Style)" Be For U
15 "Groove" Sho-T feat. Brenda
16 "Do It Right" Sota feat. Ebony Fay
17 "Share My Love" Julie Frost
18 "Do You Remember Me" Jenny
19 "Look to the Sky" System S.F. feat. Anna
20 "Telephone Operator (Club Mix)" Shelley Peter
21 "Justify My Love" Tess
22 "The Centre of the Heart (Stonebridge Clubmix)" Roxette
23 "夜空ノムコウ" (Yozora no Muko) Eurobeat Lovers
24 "I'm in the Mood for Dancing" Sharon
25 "Nori Nori Nori" Judy Crystal
26 "Let's Groove" Tips & Tricks vs Wisdome
27 "Twilight Zone (R-C Extended Club Mix)" 2 Unlimited
2 Unlimited
2 Unlimited is a Dutch Eurodance/Hi-NRG act formed in 1991. The project was the brainchild of Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde, and was fronted by a Dutch duo, rapper Ray Slijngaard and singer Anita Doth. During five years of enormous worldwide popularity, the act scored 16 chart...

28 "そばかす" (Sobakasu) Tiggy
Tiggy
Tiggy is a Danish Bubblegum Dance/Eurodance artist whose music is energetic, bouncy and sugar-coated. She is perhaps best known for her remix of the Sandy Fox song "Freckles" in DDRMAX: Dance Dance Revolution 6thMIX, originally the English version of the song "Sobakasu" by Judy and Mary from the...

29 "Flash in the Night" Flashman
30 "My Sweet Darlin'" Wildside
31 "Let the Beat Hit Em' (Classic R&B Style)" Stone Bros.
32 "So Deep (Perfect Sphere Remix)" Silvertear
33 "Exotic Ethnic" Reveng
34 "Follow Me" Lady Baby
35 "Fantasy" Melissa
36 "Midnight Blaze" U1 Jewel Style
37 "Healing Vision (Angelic Mix)" 2MB
38 "Groove 2001" Sho-T feat. Brenda
39 "Orion.78 (Civilization Mix)" 2MB
40
"Candy✩" Luv Unlimited
41
"Max 300" Ω (Omega)
42
"True...(Trance Sunrise Mix)" 小坂りゆ (Kosaka Riyu)
43
"Kind Lady" Okuyatos
44
"So In Love" Caramel.S


Bye Bye Baby Balloon

"Bye Bye Baby Balloon" is a Dancemania
Dancemania
Dancemania is a series of remix compilation albums by i-DANCE. The series deals primarily with dance music, especially eurodance. Despite its tracks have been made by various musicians from all over the world mainly from the European continent, the albums have been released exclusively in Japan.The...

 licensed song by Joga
Joga
Joga is an Italian Europop act produced by Nick Ferrando with Nathalie Aarts featured on vocals. Aarts had released four singles commercially in Europe: Dam Dariram, Bye Bye Baby Balloon, No Nobody's Love, and White Christmas. Joga is claimed to be quite popular among listeners of Toshiba-EMI's...

 from Dancemania 20. Its most recent appearance was in Dance Dance Revolution Ultramix 3
Dance Dance Revolution ULTRAMIX 3
Dance Dance Revolution ULTRAMIX 3 is the tenth home version of Dance Dance Revolution released in the United States. It was released by Konami on November 15, 2005, for the Microsoft Xbox video game console. About 70 songs are available in total in this version...

. Joga was previously featured on Dance Dance Revolution with "Dam Dariram" which first appeared in the arcade release of Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMix
Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMIX
Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMix, or 3rdMix, is the 3rd game in the Dance Dance Revolution series of music video games. It was released in the arcades by Konami on October 30, 1999. Although only officially released in Japan, units exist worldwide...

.

Candy✩

"Candy✩" is a Konami Original song by Luv Unlimited. Its most recent appearance was in the arcade release of Dance Dance Revolution X
Dance Dance Revolution X
Dance Dance Revolution X, abbreviated DDR X or simply X, is a music video game, and a part of the Dance Dance Revolution series. DDR X was originally announced by Konami on May 15, 2008 for the North American PlayStation 2. The arcade version was announced on July 7, 2008, July 9, 2008 in Europe,...

. The song is part of the original soundtrack album for DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution 6thMix and also features "Candy✩ (K.O.G G3 Mix)", on the nonstop megamix disc. It was later remixed as "Candy♥" in the arcade release of DDRMAX2 Dance Dance Revolution 7thMix and "Candy (UFO Mix)" in Dance Dance Revolution Hottest Party
Dance Dance Revolution Hottest Party
Dance Dance Revolution Hottest Party, known as Dancing Stage Hottest Party in the European and Oceanic regions, is a video game released by Konami in and to several countries for the Wii console. Konami took the game beyond the traditional setup of Dance Dance Revolution by incorporating the Wii...

.

Cow Girl

"Cow Girl" is a Dancemania licensed song by Bambee from Dancemania Happy Paradise 2. Its most recent appearance was in the arcade release of Dance Dance Revolution Extreme
Dance Dance Revolution Extreme
Dance Dance Revolution Extreme is a music video game by Konami and is the eighth release in the main Dance Dance Revolution series. It was released on December 25, 2002 for Japanese arcades and on October 9, 2003 for the Japanese PlayStation 2...

. Bambee was previously featured on Dance Dance Revolution with "Bumble Bee" which first appeared in Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMix Plus.

Dive (More Deep & Deeper Style)

"Dive (More Deep & Deeper Style)" is a Konami Original song by Be For U. Its most recent appearance is the arcade release of Dance Dance Revolution SuperNova 2
Dance Dance Revolution SuperNova 2
Dance Dance Revolution SuperNOVA 2 is an arcade game in the Dance Dance Revolution series of music video games. It was produced by Konami and released through Betson Enterprises. The game was released in Japan in August, 2007, while the North American version was released several months later. The...

A preview of this song was on the PlayStation release of Dance Dance Revolution 5thMix
Dance Dance Revolution 5thMix
Dance Dance Revolution 5thMIX, or DDR 5th Mix, is the 5th game in the Dance Dance Revolution series of music video games. It was released to the arcades by Konami on March 27, 2001. Although only officially released in Japan, units exist worldwide. DDR 5th Mix contains a total of 124 songs, nine of...

. It is a remix of "Dive" from the arcade release of Dance Dance Revolution 5thMix. The song is part of the original soundtrack album for DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution 6thMix. An English version of this song is featured on beatmania IIDX 6th Style
Beatmania IIDX 6th Style
Beatmania IIDX 6th Style is the 6th game in the beatmania IIDX series of music video games. It was released in arcades by Konami in 2001. The game features 40 new songs...

and is sung by Paula Terry.

Do It Right

"Do It Right" is a Konami Original song by Sota feat. Ebony Fay. Its most recent appearance is the arcade release of Dance Dance Revolution SuperNova 2. A preview of this song was on the PlayStation release of Dance Dance Revolution 5thMix. The song is part of the original soundtrack album for DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution 6thMix. It was later remixed as "Do It Right (Harmonized 2Step Mix)" in the North American PlayStation 2 release of DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution and "Do It Right (80's Electro Mix)" in the Japanese PlayStation 2 release of DDRMAX2 Dance Dance Revolution 7thMix.

Flash in the Night

"Flash in the Night" is a song by Flashman. It is one of two songs that have never repeated in DDR. As such, it does not have an official foot rating for any difficulty.

Follow Me

"Follow Me" is a song by Lady Baby. It is one of two songs that have never repeated in DDR. As such, it does not have an official foot rating for any difficulty.

Highs Off U (Scorccio XY Mix)

"Highs Off U (Scorccio XY Mix)" is a song by 4 Reeel. This song is notorious for being included in Dance Dance Revolution EXTREME, an E-rated game, yet allegedly having strong curse words. Also in EXTREME, the song received new graphics and a music video

Let the Beat Hit Em' (Classic R&B Style)

"Let the Beat Hit Em' (Classic R&B Style)" is a song by Stone Bros.

Max 300

"Max 300" is a song by Ω. Its name references to its bpm of 300, making it the fastest song in the game. It should also be noted that it is the hardest song in the game, as its Heavy/Maniac chart is rated as a 10 in the US version.

So Deep (Perfect Sphere Remix)

"So Deep (Perfect Sphere Remix)" is a song by Silvertear, an alias used by Jonas Steur
Jonas Steur
Jonas Steur is a Belgian Trance DJ and producer. He is known under several additional aliases, most notably Estuera, the name under which he released most of his music until 2005 when he began DJing and releasing music under his birth name Jonas Steur...

.

The Centre of the Heart (Stonebridge Clubmix)

"The Centre of the Heart (Stonebridge Clubmix)" is a song by Roxette.

Twilight Zone (R-C Extended Club Mix)

"Twilight Zone (R-C Extended Club Mix)
Twilight Zone (2 Unlimited song)
"Twilight Zone" is a 1992 single released by the Belgian-Dutch Eurodance group 2 Unlimited. It reached #2 in the UK and #5 on the U.S. Dance chart, thus becoming their biggest hit on that chart. The UK release of the single was the first 2 Unlimited single in that country to include the vocals by...

" is a song by 2 Unlimited
2 Unlimited
2 Unlimited is a Dutch Eurodance/Hi-NRG act formed in 1991. The project was the brainchild of Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde, and was fronted by a Dutch duo, rapper Ray Slijngaard and singer Anita Doth. During five years of enormous worldwide popularity, the act scored 16 chart...

.

Witch Doctor (Giant Toons Version)

"Witch Doctor (Giant Toons Version)" is a song by Cartoons.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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