Keller Williams Takes the Airwaves

Kids.jpgAs previously noted and long anticipated, Keller Williams' first album for families, Kids, gets its release October 26, but it's gonna get a big push out the door at the very beginning of the month, with seven of the album's tracks getting world premieres all across the kid-ternets. Including this corner. I'll be offering "Hula Hoop to Da Loop" for your streaming pleasure. As you might suspect from the name, those of you who dig Williams' ability with the looping technology will dig it bunches. And I think the rest of you will, too. Details on the rest of the schedule below. Thursday, Sept. 30: “Keep It on the Paper” Gooney Bird Kids (GBK Radio) Friday, Oct. 1: “My Neighbor is Happy Again” – Sirius/XM’s The Absolutely Mindy Show Friday, Oct. 1: “Hula Hoop to Da Loop” – Zooglobble Friday, Oct. 1: “Grandma’s Feather Bed” Pied Piper Radio Saturday, Oct. 2: “Mama Tooted” – Spare the Rock, Spoil the Child (part of a guest DJ set) Saturday, Oct. 2: “Because I Said So” - Saturday Morning Cereal Bowl Saturday, Oct. 2: “Lucy Lawcy” Ages 3 & Up!

Monday Morning Smile: "White Knuckles" - OK Go

I can't think of another band whose music I merely enjoy whose videos I consume so eagerly. While it's not quite as brilliant as their video for "This Too Shall Pass", this video for "White Knuckles" is fun with animals and safe for the kiddos. What's that, Lassie? You say you want to choreograph Timmy's next music video? OK Go - "White Knuckles" [YouTube]

Itty-Bitty Review: Wake Up, Clarinet! - Oran Etkin

WakeUpClarinet.jpgGive New York's Oran Etkin credit for this -- his early childhood music education program, Timbalooloo, sounds little like other music program for youngsters. A combination of jazz, world music, with interaction thrown into the mix, it's not necessarily better than other such programs -- I'll leave that for the pedagogic experts -- but it draws deep from wells that are lightly touched. The first album from the Timbalooloo program is Wake Up, Clarinet!, and after listening to the CD (and watching the 10 minutes of bonus video), I have a decent idea of the program's strength. Its core is classic jazz, played artfully by Etkin himself. As you'd expect from a jazz album, there's a lot of playful give-and-take between Etkin and the other performers, particularly vocalist Charenee Wade. There's also a lot of interactivity expected of the listeners, asking questions, giving the instruments characters through how the musicians play their instruments. (It's a touch of "Peter and the Wolf," I suppose.) If there's a downside, it's that the album's pretty short -- just 22 minutes long, including one song ("High Low") given two interpretations. After the first few times, I gladly would trade some of that and the introductions for ten minutes more of the band jamming on 3 or 4 different tracks. The album is most appropriate for kids ages 2 through 6. You can buy the album here, listen to the album here and watch the bonus video here. If Wake Up, Clarinet!'s brevity helps keep it from reaching the heights of all-time classic jazz-for-kids disks, it's still pretty good. I think Etkin's got the chops to be doing this for some time, and if he does, I fully expect his albums to reach that essential jazz for kids level -- maybe even essential, period. Recommended.

Share: Coloring Book from Key Wilde & Mr. Clarke

RiseAndShine.jpgGiven that Key Wilde is not just part of the great Key Wilde & Mr. Clarke but an illustrator, you'd think that if he decided to make a coloring book, it'd be kinda cool. And so, following the lead of Justin Roberts and John Upchurch and Mark Greenberg (not to mention Charity and the JAMband and the Deedle Deedle Dees), Wilde's got a coloring book of his own. Download the coloring book and give your kids their own opportunity to add even more medals to Sylvester's chest. Or just scribble randomly.

Itty-Bitty Review: The Best Candy in the Whole World and Other Stories - Bill Harley

BestCandyInTheWholeWorld.jpgNot quite sure how I've managed to write this website and not review a disk from Bill Harley. Well, that ends now. Harley's latest disk The Best Candy in the Whole World and Other Stories, out this week, is a disk of four stories (with a song mixed in for good measure). It features Harley's typical sense of impish humor, vocal stylings, and, most of all, humanity. In a couple different stories, Harley uses the phrase, "his/her heart went out to her/him," a lovely phrase that underscores Harley's approach to telling stories. When he's getting at the heart (pun intended) of familial or larger rivalries, Harley always sees the person underneath. There may be heroes and there may be villains in his stories, but they're almost never entirely so. All of which makes the collection sound a little dull, which it's not. The stories (some original, some borrowed) are funny and imaginative. You can see the ending of the title track coming perhaps a minute or two before the actual ending, which is both neatly wrapped up and open-ended. You think you see the ending of the "Jack and the Singing Leaves," about ten minutes into the 25-minute story, but then Harley acknowledges what you're thinking (in the context of the story) and then takes it in a somewhat different direction. The stories will be most enjoyed by kids ages 4 through 9. You can hear samples here. Bill Harley's albums of stories are usually good an hour's worth of silent attention broken by the occasional giggle or guffaw, and The Best Candy in the Whole World is no exception. Recommended. Disclosure: I received a copy of the album for possible review from Harley's PR folks.

Please Release Me: September 2010 Edition

What, updating last month's list of upcoming releases so soon? The Squeegees: Meet the Squeegees (Sept. 21, Target exclusive) Buck Howdy: American Dreams (Sept. 21) The Boogers: Title TBA (fall) Jeremy Zmuda: Use Your Words (Sept. 28) Laurie Berkner: Let’s Hear it for The Laurie Berkner Band! DVD (Sept. 28) Elizabeth Mitchell: Sunny Day (Oct. 5) Jim Cosgrove: Swimming in Noodles (Oct. 5) Maria Muldaur: Barnyard Dance: Jug Band Music for Kids (Oct. 12) Flannery Brothers: The New Explorers Club (Oct. 19) Keller Williams: Kids (Oct. 26) Caspar Babypants: This Is Fun! (Nov. 2) Buckwheat Zydeco: Buckwheat Zydeco's Bayou Boogie (Nov. 2) Frances England: Mind of My Own (Nov. 9) The Baby Grands: The Baby Grands II (Nov. 16) Lunch Money: Original Friend (Nov. 23) Meredith LeVande: Monkey Monkey Music: The Videos with Meredith LeVande (DVD, Dec. 1) DidiPop: DidiPop Goes to Hawaii (Dec. 14) Jamie Broza: I Want a Dog (Jan. 2011) Mama Doni: Shabbat Shaboom (Jan. 2011) Gustafer Yellowgold: Gustafer Yellowgold's Infinity Sock (Feb. 22, 2011) David Weinstone: All I Want (2011) Others working on albums with potential 2010 releases? Ella Jenkins, Big Don