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September 29, 2006

Fever For The Kids

But in a good way.

News from MTV that Luscious Jackson -- best known for their 1996 album Fever In Fever Out -- will release a kids' album in the not-too-distant future. Frontwoman Jill Cunniff told MTV.com that they're seeking a label for the album. (Hello, Little Monster Records, are you listening?) In addition, they'll be performing "family concerts where parents can come with their kids, because a lot of our fans have kids now."

Now if only the Beastie Boys would do a kids' album.

(Thanks to Bill and the Pokey Pup for the heads-up.)

September 28, 2006

Maybe Gavrilo Principe Has Something Against Kids' Music

They've posted Franz Ferdinand's song "Jackie Jackson" at the Colours Are Brighter Myspace page, but after constant buffering, all I get is about 30 seconds of Franz Ferdinand-y goodness about a greedy boy eating too much cake before an abrupt cutoff. Your mileage may vary, and hopefully it's better than mine.

The Belle and Sebastian-compiled benefit album is set to be released in the UK on Oct. 16th.

How I Got Here: You're the One - Paul Simon (Eric Herman)

Longtime friend of the site Eric Herman released his third kids' album, Snow Day!, earlier this year. His new blog, Cool Tunes for Kids, is filled with thoughtful posts on other kids' music artists, famous and not, and what Herman finds worthwhile in their music. I thought he'd be a great artist to lead off this "How I Got Here" series (for more details, go here). Without further ado, then, here's Eric on Paul Simon's You're the One.

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Paul Simon may be best known for his “and Garfunkel” years and his enormously successful Graceland album. But for me, his best album is 2000's You're the One. Being a big fan of Graceland, I picked up You're the One on a whim, thinking “ah, it's probably pretty good”. And on my first listen, that was the exact reaction I had. There was nothing necessarily innovative like Graceland's fusion of world music and pop, nor were there any standout hits like “You Can Call Me Al” or “Diamonds...” But it was intriguing enough, musically, and had some pretty interesting tunes, so I kept listening... and listening... and listening.

More than any other album I've heard, You're the One has layers that reveal themselves upon repeated listens. The words of a song like “Look at That” work both literally and metaphorically, and the music is both immediately engaging and also densely arranged with some cleverly involved percussion. The album is full of brilliantly poetic lyrics like these from the title track: “Nature gives us shapeless shapes/Clouds and waves and flame/But human expectation/Is that love remains the same”. There is also ample wit and humor evident on songs like “Old” and “Darling Lorraine”, and sometimes even delicate humor within songs that are otherwise serious. Tracks like “The Teacher”, “Love” and “Quiet” are deeply moving and a nice contrast to more energized songs like “Hurricane Eye”, “Look at That” and “You're the One”. And yet, the upbeat songs may be just as likely to generate goose bumps with the power of their sentiment.

You're the One makes me want to laugh, cry, love, learn, pray, mourn, sing and rejoice for the mysterious wonder that is life. I doubt anyone would hear my music (especially my kids' music) and think, “Oh, it sounds like Paul Simon”, but this album has been an enormous influence on me as an artist striving to color my world as vibrantly as possible.

September 27, 2006

How I Got Here: An Introduction

In thinking about ways to:
a) add more content to the site, and
b) avoid doing a lot of the work actually creating that content,

I realized that one thing that really interested me about kids and family musicians was what albums influenced them. So I've set up this occasional series for artists to talk about a particular album that influenced their kids' music work. It doesn't have to be a kids' album, it doesn't have to be an album they even liked -- all it needs to be is an album that had some impact on them as a kids' musician (even if they heard it long before they ever became a "kids' musician," whatever that is).

Hope you enjoy these.

September 26, 2006

Review: Open Season Soundtrack - Paul Westerberg

OpenSeasonOST.jpgPaul Westerberg's place in the rock canon is safe, thanks to the his work in the 1980s with the Minneapolis band The Replacements. If you had placed a bet back then that he'd eventually score an animated movie replete with a bunny rabbit, chances are you'd received pretty good odds. But here we are in 2006, children's music is all the rage, and Paul Westerberg has scored an animated movie replete with a bunny rabbit -- Open Season, whose Original Soundtrack is being released today.

Setting the improbability aside, is it any good? It's a hard question to answer, because you're inevitably judging the album against Westerberg's previous work, much of which was recorded long before you were even thinking about parenthood. In any case, it's a mixed bag. Westerberg, who crafted a great soundtrack cut for the movie Singles ("Dyslexic Heart"), has another great song here in "Meet Me in the Meadow," a gorgeous pop tune with a soaring string-accompanied chorus, the sense of hope very reminiscent of Replacements' themes. It's definitely one of my favorite kids' music tracks of the year.

"Love You in the Fall," the lead single, sounds most like an actual Replacements song, and is a decent song to boot. "Right To Arm Bears" is a bit of silliness obviously crafted for a particular bit in the movie and shows off Westerberg's wordplay, as does "Any Better Than This" includes the amusing turn of phrase "knight in shining armchair."

Where I think the soundtrack fails, at least for kids, is the slower songs. "I Belong" and "Whisper Me Luck" move too slowly to grab most kids' attention (at least without a visual accompaniment), and I'm not sure the kids are going to respond to the lyrical concerns. In the context of the movie, they may be perfect, but as a set of standalone tracks, they bring the soundtrack to a halt.

There are four tracks not performed by Westerberg. Pete Yorn covers "I Belong" and he, too, doesn't make it particularly compelling. Sacramento's Deathray (including members from Cake) cover Westerberg's "Wild As I Wanna Be" and have a fun, poppy original, "I Wanna Lose Control." And the Talking Heads, whose place in the rock canon may be even more safe than Westerberg, contribute "Wild Wild Life," a song whose existence will continue long after the apocalypse happens and cockroaches roam the earth. Needless to say, I'd've rather heard another Westerberg track than that recycled cut.

I'm gonna peg the soundtrack as most appropriate for ages 6 and up. I mean, there's nothing inappropriate about the album -- I just don't think 3-year-olds will care much. Listen to four tracks at the soundtrack's Myspace page.

The Open Season soundtrack is a good Paul Westerberg album, with probably more good songs than a lot of his recent work. Whether you or your kids will listen to it in the long run probably depends more, however, on whether you (or your kids) care about what Westerberg and his bandmates recorded 20 years ago.

September 24, 2006

Review: When I Get Little - Dog on Fleas

WhenIGetLittle.jpgHow to describe New York-based Dog On Fleas? Hmmmm... The band itself has used the phrase "Brigitte Bardot will serve you from John Cage's hat" to help describe the Dog on Fleas "recipe." It's a not inaccurate description of the band's attitude, but doesn't really give you any indication of what they sound like. So that's where I'll give it a shot.

On their 2006 release When I Get Little, their fourth album, Dog on Fleas play blues, country, jazz, folk, and zydeco -- among other styles -- with a loose feel reminiscent of Dan Zanes, Elizabeth Mitchell, and Woody Guthrie. The five-member band are a talented group of musicians, but the resulting sound on the album is not overproduced, giving it room to breathe and sway. They come at songs from odd angles and most of those angles work. "Come On Down" has a loping New Orleans jazz feel and sounds very much like it could have been recorded strolling down a New Orleans street. "Green Grass of Summer" is a sweet retro-sounding folk-pop tune that would've sounded great on AM radio 35 years ago. (Heck, it would sound great on AM radio today.) And "Big Black Snake" is an instant folk classic that's remiscent of Woody Guthrie songs given a Billy Bragg/Wilco "Mermaid Avenue" treatment, except instead of Bragg's raggedy voice we get the clear voice of Debbie Lan.

Thirteen of the fifteen tracks on the 42-minute album are originals (most written by member Dean Jones) and none of them are traditional kids' songs. They're definitely in the traditional of family folk, and even songs about more kid-centric topics are given a twist -- the Cajun stylings and French lyrics for a song about French toast ("Mon Pain Perdu"), for example. The low-key feeling of peace and goodwill throughout the album is helped in no small part by the lyrical components on songs such as "Peace Will Come" and the ska-inflected "What's Behind the Wall." By no means are the messages of peace hammered home, but they're definitely there.

As with the best family folk albums, the music is appropriate for all ages, but kids ages 3 through 9 will probably appreciate it the most -- they'll be the ones most willing to dance along, too. Listen to samples here.

So how would I describe Dog on Fleas and When I Get Little? How about simply as "good and fun music for listeners of any age." Fans of Dan Zanes' music should especially check out this album, but unless you require your music pitch-corrected to within an inch of its life, you'll find it a vibrant and joyous experience. Highly recommended.

September 22, 2006

Review: Bright Spaces 2 - Various Artists (Dan Zanes)

BrightSpaces2.jpgThere are two basic approaches to putting together a genre-specific compilation of music, approaches which for brevity's and wit's sake, I call Putumayo vs. Rough Guides. The former approach may not necessarily be an exhaustive look at a genre, but it sure results in a pleasant thirty-to-sixty-minute mix of music to someone unfamiliar with the genre. The latter approach is as much history lesson as mixtape and while you might not listen to it often, unless your expertise is such that you might have been asked to compile one of these yourself, you're bound to find something new and something really fabulous.

Bright Spaces 2 is Dan Zanes' Rough Guide to Family Folk Music.

Zanes compiled this 2006 collection, released last week, on behalf of the Bright Horizons Foundation. The Foundation sponsors the "Bright Spaces" program, which puts playrooms in shelters for children in crisis situations. He calls this collection a "musical scrapbook," and like many a scrapbook, it's a collection of snapshots (in this case, songs) that have significance to Zanes. His scrapbook might not be your scrapbook, but he's certainly taken a lot of pictures of family folk music.

Zanes pulls from artists young and old, famous and not. And unless your collection of family folk music is, oh, a thousand albums full, many of the tracks are likely to be new to you. Boston's Session Americana turns in a fabulously languid version of "Merzidotes," which is followed by "L'cha Dodi," a 16th century Jewish tune recorded by Craig Taubman. The Deighton Family, a real "family band" for whom Zanes has had many a good word, leads off the album with a happy "When You're Smilin'." And Zanes re-records his hit "Jump Up" with New York band Astrograss, putting a more muscular bluegrassy accompaniment to his tune -- I wouldn't buy the album just for that version, but it's good in its own right and different than the original. There are probably few tunes you already have in your collection -- Elizabeth Mitchell's version of "Little Sack of Sugar" and the Garcia/Grisman rendition of "Hopalong Peter" are the two most likely. If there's any downside to the collection is that it lacks some of the musical diversity that makes Zanes' own albums such adventures to listen to. The songs here fit more in the folk music mold, and if that's not your bag, you may be underwhelmed.

As an album of family folk music, it's really appropriate for all ages, though the tiniest ones may not be too interested. Call it ages 2 through 10. You can purchase the album at Amazon as well as on this page. You can hear the Astrograss/Dan Zanes track here.

In calling this the "Rough Guide to Family Folk Music," I've probably understated the mixtape qualities of Bright Spaces 2. There are good and excellent tracks collected here, and, if you have any affinity for Zanes' music-making, will without a doubt send you spinning off in at least one new direction you've not gone before. Recommended.

September 21, 2006

Review: Hot Air Balloon - Vanessa Trien

HotAirBalloon.jpgBoston-based folk-pop artist Vanessa Trien's debut kids' album, Hot Air Balloon (2006), is one of those albums for which your opinion depends upon your tolerance of earnestness in kids' music. There are plenty of adults dipping their toes into the ocean of kids' music for whom everything sounds like the old Simpsons group "Hooray For Everything" -- relentlessly peppy. And for those adults, their appreciation of this album may take awhile. Part of the reason for this is that Trien, who's also recorded for adults, has loaded the peppiest songs at the front of the CD. Sometimes the songs strike a nice balance -- the gorgeous leadoff pop ballad "Hello World," the bluegrass of "Good Morning!" And sometimes they veer over the line (or my line, at least), such as on the semi-rapped "Backward Alphabet Craze" or the cutesy reggae "Bluenanas and Bananaberries."

But all of a sudden, on track 8, "Wyona Wide," Trien strings together four songs that seem to come from an entirely different album. It's as if the first seven tracks were for the four-year-olds (and 3 of them were indeed written for a Montessori school at which Trien taught) and the last four were written for seven-year-olds. They're a little less peppy, and include the strong bluegrass tune "End of the Line" (probably my favorite cut on the album, and the least kid-centric) and the sun-dappled pop tune "Island in the Sun."

One constant, however, is the solid musicianship on the album -- it sounds fabulous. The 37-minute album is best for kids ages 3 through 8. You can listen to samples from the album here.

Those of you who have an earnestness intolerance should stay away from the CD. But if you're looking for a folkier Milkshake, or for solidly-arranged and played folk-pop kids music, Hot Air Balloon is worth a spin.

September 20, 2006

Weird Al: Patron Saint of Nerdy Kids' Music

Elizabeth Mitchell's You Are My Flower may have been the first (good) kids' album I ever bought, but "Weird Al" Yankovic's second full-length album, 1984's Grammy Award-winning In 3-D was the first album I ever bought, period. The album was funny. But for a nerdy kid like me, it also introduced me to a bunch of music it would have taken me years to find otherwise. (Man, I gotta go back and find a copy of that...)

More than 20 years later, Al's latest album, "Straight Outta Lynwood," his twelfth of original material, is being released next week. You can read a good interview with Al here (thanks to Stereogum for the link). I particularly liked this portion of the interview:

RS: R. Kelly’s “Trapped in the Closet” is almost a Weird Al song in itself. How did you come up with “Trapped in the Drive-Thru”?
WA: I knew I couldn’t make my R. Kelly parody any more ridiculous or convoluted than the original, but I believed that I could make it more stupid. Because that’s where I really shine...
Anyone who listens to XMKiDS will tell you that Yankovic's popularity hasn't really waned with kids -- his "The Saga Begins" (mixing the two cultural touchstones of Don McLean's "American Pie" and Star Wars Ep. 1) is still in constant rotation. In other words, just as with They Might Be Giants fans who have been following them for 20 years, Yankovic has somehow managed to stay relevant with those fans' kids, if maybe not so much with the original fans.

But go ahead -- watch the video "White and Nerdy" -- and tell me it doesn't at least make you chuckle. (And, for some of us, hit just a leeeetle too close to home.)

September 17, 2006

Review: The Bottle Let Me Down: Songs for Bumpy Wagon Rides - Various Artists

BottleLetMeDown.jpgChicago's Bloodshot Records is known for for their insurgent country, or some other name for music that sounds like country but sounds nothing like Nashville. With their 2002 compilation The Bottle Let Me Down: Songs for Bumpy Wagon Rides, Bloodshot could easily have staked their claim to "insurgent kids music." (Or, even more marbly-mouthed, "y'all-kid-ternative.")

With a broad range of "adult" artists (from Alejandro Escovedo to Freakwater to Nora O'Connor and Steve Frisbie -- partner in Frisbie with Justin Roberts accomplice Liam Davis) and a collection of both kids' classics and originals, it's hard to summarize the 26-track, 63-minute album. But the one word that keeps coming back to me as I think of the CD is fun. On many kids' albums from "adult" artists, you get the feeling that the musicians are deigning to play this "kids' music," and it shows in a song that, well, isn't much fun to listen to. Not here -- the musicians are having fun playing these funds, and it shows. The Waco Brothers' spirited take on the folk classic, "The Fox," and the Asylum Street Spankers' punked-up bluegrass version of "I Am My Own Grandpa" shows no signs of "well, let's make a track for the kiddies." They're making tracks that any music fan would appreciate, kids not excluded. The Cornell Hurd Band's original "Don't Wipe Your Face On Your Shirt," is an amusing plea for respectability most parents will relate to, while Escovedo's live version of his "Sad & Dreamy (The Big 1-0)" (with the chorus of "I'm the big 1-0 / Candy just doesn't taste as sweet anymore") will ring bells with the tween set.

Like you would expect from an album produced by an "insurgent country" record label, many of the tracks are not sanitized. Carolyn Mark's fun retelling of "The Three Billy Goats Gruff" doesn't sand off the rough edges of the story, for example, and Devil in a Woodpile's swampy cover of Mississippi John Hurd's "Funky Butt," is just what you might expect from the song title. And while most tracks stay safely on the parental side of appropriateness, Robbie Fulks' "Godfrey" (about an sickly, unemployed magician) and Freakwater's inneuendo-filled "Little Red Riding Hood" are probably way on that other side. The parents themselves will probably like those songs while thinking repeatedly, "Should I fast-forward? I should probably fast-forward. Right? Tell me I'm right."

Some of the tracks are appropriate for kids as young as three, though the album is appropriate for kids who are as old as 10 as well. You can hear samples at any major online retailer.

In the end, this is a solid album with no weak tracks. Your kids won't even know that they're being exposed to a great collection of bands and songs, they'll just love these energetic renditions. And so will you. It's probably the best compilation of adult-musicians-doing-kids-music out there; its status as a minor classic (or even a major one) is deserved. Highly recommended.

September 15, 2006

British Kids' Music Scene Not Much More Than Belle and Sebastian

While the old saw about the awfulness of British cuisine may no longer be valid, perhaps the new saw is the awfulness of British kids' music

Well, according to one Times of London writer, who bemoans the state of British kids' music, while lavishing very evasive praise on the new Belle and Sebastian-curated compilation Colours Are Brighter.

While I really don't like the goal of making sure he "can take pride in the songs [his] kids like," I love the idea of creating a "back-story" to certain non-kids' CDs to get them more interested in the albums. In addition to praising Elizabeth Mitchell fave Vashti Bunyan and giving a backhanded compliment to They Might Be Giants, he also puts The Sippy Cups on his Small Ages-esque mixtape for kids.

Oh, and dude, "Furry Happy Monsters" is right here.

I should also note that the Colours Are Brighter website is now offering a free "Go Go Ninja Dinosaur" mp3 along with a "Jackie Jackson" game (which proves to me how old I am, 'cause I failed miserably at it).

News: Stephin Merritt To Release Kids' Music CD, Tour

Someone who's both a reader and reviewee of this site pointed out this Pitchfork article from late yesterday which notes that Stephin Merritt (through his side project the Gothic Archies) will be releasing a CD to accompany the Lemony Snicket books. The Tragic Treasury: Songs from A Series of Unfortunate Events will be released Oct. 10 (not 13th as in the article) and include 13 tracks, one for each book in the series (previously released on the audiobooks), plus 2 new bonus tracks.

Merritt and Snicket (who looks suspiciously like author Daniel Handler) will be making musical appearances in bookstores across the country in October and November.

Merritt is a prolific artist (he's a man whose Magnetic Fields group once released a triple-CD album entitled 69 Love Songs -- the title described it perfectly), so I'm curious to see how he'll do with the discipline imposed by set texts.

Follow-up: Link to Nonesuch's album page, stream of 3 songs from the album.

More follow-up: Kelly at Big A little a has a link to an... odd Stephin Merritt - Lemony Snicket interview in the Guardian.

September 14, 2006

Review: The Sunny Side of the Street

SunnySideStreet.jpgI work with someone who has a goal of learning something new, however small, every day. In that spirit, what I learned from "Getting To Know You," the opening track on John Lithgow's third album for kids, The Sunny Side of the Street (2006), is that his last name is pronounced as rhyming with "Miss Go" rather than "Hoosegow," which is how I'd always heard it in my head. So that, however small, was what I learned upon first listen.

What I knew already going in, and what the album shows repeatedly, is that Lithgow is a fabulous performer. His theatrical background is perfect for these songs, written for vaudeville or musicals in the '20s and '30s. On the best tracks, such as "Baby!" or "Ya Gotta Have Pep," Lithgow lets loose with theatrical abandon (I love the "whampa..." Lithgow unleashes in the middle of what has heretofore been a very mellow duet with Maude Maggart on "Baby!"). Lithgow has a sweet duet with Sherie Rene Scott on the closing track "Lullabye In Ragtime." The tunes are a nice selection of familiar and less-well-known, and the frisky orchestration is stellar, making the songs sound, while not modern, not 80 years old, either.

Downsides? Well, the duet with Madeleine Peyroux on "On the Sunny Side of the Street" (which I had hopes for) never really gels. It's interrupted by a bunch of kids, which is akin to asking Monet to paint some pretty cathedrals and then having some 7-year-olds from Rouen come in to make some improvements to the canvas. The kids chorus is fine, and in some cases gives Lithgow somebody (or many somebodies) to play off of, but my favorite tracks are those where the kids don't appear. And while some of the less-well-known songs are a joy to discover ("I Always Say Hello To A Flower"), others are much less interesting ("I'm A Manatee.")

I'm gonna peg this album as being of greatest interest for kids 3 to 7, though obviously most of these songs were originally written for adults and people of all ages. You can hear samples of the 37-minute album at the usual online suspects and see Lithgow's antics in the video for "Ya Gotta Have Pep".

The album will not change the mind of anyone who doesn't care how bright the lights are on Broadway -- if you are a rockist, you will not like this. Lithgow has recorded some fabulous renditions of these tunes, however, and while it's probably not going to be your favorite album, it's definitely worth trying at least once. Think of it as learning something new, musically at least.

September 13, 2006

Listen To This: Ben Fairfield

"Listen To This" is my brand-new category for music that doesn't really fit a review format but deserves a mention. I'm going to inaugurate it with music from Ben Fairfield, an artist out of Hawaii who, he says on his website, was inspired by the NPR story that drew many of you here. (I am sure that it was Justin Roberts and Brady Rymer who inspired him, not me or Melissa Block.)

Fairfield's music is acoustic guitar-accompanied folk-pop covering such kid-friendly topics as dogs, penguins, and homework. Lyrically, he's got an environmental/ecological bent, so if your kids interested in that, these tunes are perfect. He's not above silliness (his conversion of Shel Silverstein's "The Homework Machine" into song) or sweetness ("Goodnight"), though. (The friendliness of the first track, "Hello," may, however, puzzle some kids who've had Stranger Danger drilled into their heads.) The combination is somewhat a combination of Johnny Bregar and Jack Johnson. (Those are just the two artists whose musical and lyrical concerns struck me as familiar here.)

As a collection of songs, it doesn't work quite as well because of the relative same-ness of approaches, but the individual tracks are pretty strong. Try listening to "Hello," "It's Men That Try To Run the Universe," and "Goodnight" for a representative sample.

And drop him a line and tell him to get the CD pressed and to start working on the next batch of songs pronto.

September 12, 2006

Review: My Best Day - Trout Fishing In America

MyBestDay.jpgYou don't see too many kids' music acts with a live album. Trout Fishing In America has, with the release of My Best Day (2006) today, two. That fact speaks to Trout's longevity (30 years as a duo and 7 family recordings in addition to other recordings for adults) and their popularity as a live act.

My Best Day is a Greatest Hits collection to an extent. Long-time favorites such as the calypso-styled "My Hair Had a Party Last Night" mingle with new favorites such as "Alien In My Nose" (an absolutely disgusting track -- your 7-year-olds will love it). While those songs (and others) show off Ezra Idlet's and Keith Grimwood's sillier side, slightly straighter songs such as the sweet "Fill It Up" and "Alberta Postcard" fit more squarely in a folk-pop tradition that would sound great at any folk festival, kids-associated or not. The two new songs, "I've Got A Friend (and He Won't Be Quiet)" and "My Pants Fell Down," are pretty good additions to the Trout canon -- I particularly liked "My Pants Fell Down" (the title says it all, and, yes, your 7-year-olds will love it). Both the new songs (and "Alien" and the title track) were written in songwriting workshops with kids.

Having said all that, the banter and interaction that would be lots of fun if you were actually at the concert gets to be a bit repetitive if you're listening to the CD. "Simon Says" gets tiresome; the jokes, amusing on first or second hearing, are no longer funny the fifth or sixth time around. Perhaps the upcoming DVD of the concert (recorded in Febrary 2006) will make you feel more like you're at the concert (and, therefore, not so weary of the between-song stuff).

Kids ages 5 through 10 will most appreciate the album. You can listen to Trout's music by going here and clicking on "Launch Trout Radio" or going to the usual online suspects to hear clips from the new CD.

If you're a Trout fan, you'll enjoy this CD (unless of course they left off your favorite track). If you're not a Trout fan, you won't enjoy this CD -- there's nothing to convert you. If you're not sure about Trout, this is a decent place to start as it does pick tracks from throughout their family music career. My Best Day is, for better and occasionally worse, a good representation of a Trout Fishing in America concert.

Gustafer Yellowgold, Real Estate Agent

One takes publicity in the New York Times wherever one can. Morgan Taylor, the man behind Gustafer Yellowgold, and his wife Rachel Loshak, appeared in the "Habitats" section of the Times on Sunday. It's a nice little profile of the couple. (Thanks to Bill for the link.)

It also contains an interesting tibit of info -- "They are also negotiating a contract with the V2 label’s new children’s imprint, Little Monster."

Good on them.

September 11, 2006

Songs For Singing and Playing Together

I had a birthday in the not-too-distant past but did not have a soiree with, you know, beer and chips and the like. That will occur this weekend, when friends will come over and celebrate. I had been thinking initially about having a karaoke party, but thought that might require a bit too much courage of many celebrants. It also required renting a karaoke machine, which requires both money and time.

Instead, I decided to have a party of singing and playing music together. While I don't think the Dan Zanes interview itself directly inspired the idea -- I'd been pondering it even before that -- his general emphasis through the years on making music in communities did.

The only problem is, I'm at a bit of a loss for good songs to play in groups. So I'm asking you, dear readers, for suggestions of good songs for singing and playing together. We have a piano (and friends are bringing keyboards) and I have a basic ability to plunk out chords while sightseeing. Beyond that, I'm not quite sure of the music-making skills of all my friends -- except for our friends with the Phoenix Bach Choir, who, yes, can sing.

Beyond that, no restrictions other than kids are going to be invited as well, so while drinking songs and murder ballads aren't necessarily off-limits, it'd be nice to have something of greater interest for the kiddos, too.

What songs have you enjoyed singing together? What songs are easy for people to pick up? And any suggestions in general? Respond in the comments...

September 09, 2006

Review in Brief: Snowdance - Erin Lee & Marci

Snowdance.jpgIt is possible to be impressed by an album, but not have it move you. Such was the case for me with Snowdance (2006), the second album from New York-based duo Erin Lee & Marci. The duo, with a background in children's musical theatre, have crafted an album of 12 songs, one for each month of the year.

As a whole, the album fits together well -- the opening track "This Year" makes a lot of references to the songs to follow and the songs for each month make sense. The snow-day-wishing of track 2 "Snowdance" has a pleasant wintry, jangly beat. The forced "September March" acutely highlights the feelings of dread and uncertainty heading into the new school year. There are some interesting stories here.

But although the folk-pop melodies and their playing aren't bad, there isn't a single cut that begs repeated hearings. Part of that may have been the voices of Erin Lee & Marci, which for me, were... how should I say this?... not my cup of tea. They were a little too Broadway for me, not enough pop or folk. Or perhaps they weren't enough Broadway for me -- this was an album of stories, some of them good -- maybe they should have dropped any attempt to sing in a standard pop manner, and brought in additional singers to fill out the "cast," so to speak.

With its focus on the tribulations and joys of growing up for elementary students, the 48-minute album will be of most interest to kids ages 6 through 10. You can hear samples at the album's CDBaby page.

It's possible to admire what Erin Lee & Marci were shooting for with Snowdance and appreciate the structure of the album and the songs within. But it doesn't mean your family will want to listen to it repeatedly.

September 08, 2006

Review: Peggy's Pie Parlor - Ralph's World

PeggysPieParlor.jpgWhen I've contemplated how I would put together the inevitable Ralph's World musical -- what, you haven't? -- I've tended towarded organizing the songs somewhat chronologically. This leaves me with no other choice than to start with the bang-up song "Cavemen!," off Ralph Covert's fourth Ralph's World album, Peggy's Pie Parlor (2003). The song, a mock Broadway revue number, keeps me in stitches (what other kids' song would refer to Modigliani?), while the chorus, "Cavemen! We are Cavemen!," is pitched perfectly at the 1st graders out there.

The presence of a Broadway number on the CD isn't out-of-place, because more than any other Ralph's World album, Peggy's Pie Parlor is willing to reach way back into the 20th century for musical styles -- the vigorous polka of the title track, the zippity ragtime of Walt Kelly's manic "Go Go Pogo," the I-had-to-double-check-it-was-a-Covert-original "I Never See Maggie Alone," which could've easily been written 80 years ago. (Covert also does his best to make "Yon Yonson" sound appealing for its 2-minute run time, but runs out about halfway through.)

Having said that, my favorite tracks are the more modern-sounding tracks. "All I Wanna Do Is Play" is a sweet slice of Hammond organ-spiced garage rock, while the pop-rock leadoff track "The Mighty Worm," has a simple yet ear-wormy melody and chorus ("Everybody does what they do best / the best"). And "Tango Dancing Bear" concludes with a Dave Mathews Band-esque waltz coda.

Kids age 4 through 8 will appreciate the 37-minute album the most. You can hear samples here or at other online merchants.

I've come to consider Peggy's Pie Parlor as a transitional Ralph's World CD, moving from the least essential CD in his collection (Happy Lemons) to his two most recent and cohesive albums, where his songwriting for elementary school kids really took off, marrying a kid-centric perspective with great melodic hooks. Although Peggy's Pie Parlor doesn't quite reach the heights of the two later CDs, everybody should find at least a few songs they and their kids will enjoy. Recommended.

September 07, 2006

Review: See You on the Moon! - Various Artists

SeeYouOnTheMoon.jpgYou know what's refreshing about See You on the Moon!: Songs for Kids of All Ages, the 2006 compilation from Canada's Paper Bag Records label? It's a compilation album of kids' music from adult rock artists that isn't for charity. Bless 'em -- every other compilation of this type seems to be a fundraiser for one worthy group or another, but this one? Pure commerce!

Why should you care? Well, for one thing, rather than wondering whether or not the cause behind an album is worth your $15, you can just wonder whether or not the music itself is worth your $15. In this case, it's a mixed bag. The best track by far is Great Lake Swimmers' title track, a winning mid-tempo indie-rocker all about different careers kids can aspire to -- carpenter or singer, for example. It combines a fabulous hook with clear, direct lyrics and occasional fun stuff for the kids to latch on to (the tap-tap-tap of a hammer during the sung phrase "tap-tap-tap"). It's sunny, but not overwhelming, a song for kids of all ages (truth in advertising in this regard, anyway).

Unfortunately no other song hits the heights of the title track, though there are a few worth listening to -- I particularly liked the Apostle of Hustle featuring The Husky's' "24 Robbers," which marries kids' playground chanting to drum and sound loops (think a kids' track from Beck). And Detective Kalita's "Baby Brother," is, unlike most of the tracks, very clear vocally and sweet (almost too much so). Sufjan Stevens' Christmas carol "The Friendly Beasts," off one of his homemade Christmas EPs (which'll be released in late 2006), has a pleasant basement recording studio feel, but sounds somewhat out of place amidst the other tracks.

The tracks that don't work are the ones that don't provide things kids can latch onto -- clear lyrics, accessible subject matter, or catchy melodies. Alan Sparhawk's "Be Nice to People with Lice" comes off more mean than a plea for tolerance, while Hot Chip's "I Can't Wake Up" will put most listeners to sleep. And the other big artist, Broken Social Scene, turns in a very hazy and very dull "Puff the Magic Dragon." Whether or not the artists thought about how to communicate their songs to a younger audience than they normally play for, the results don't always reflect it.

For the most part, this is an album that kids ages 4 to 7 might enjoy. You can hear samples wherever the album's sold online OR you can go to Paper Bag's newly redesigned website and stream every one of their albums (I don't like to deep-link too much, so just go here and pick out this album. Or another one. Magneta Lane, maybe. Be adventurous.)

See You on the Moon! is an uneven album, filled with some great tracks and some considerably less-than-great. While you may enjoy the diversity of indie-rock tracks and bands on the disk, your kids are likely to pick out just a few tracks and ask you to skip the rest.

September 06, 2006

But Wait, There’s More... ScribbleMonster at Kidzapalooza, part 2

Last month, Chicago-area kids' musicianScribbleJim was kind enough to report on his (and the rest of the ScribbleGang's) experiences playing at Kidzapalooza. After I posted the report, however, he said that the rest of the story, "must be told."

And indeed it must. Vacation and the launch of the new site put a little time between the installments, but it's worth the wait. Be sure to jump past the fold to get to the picture that tells, well, if not a thousand words, well in excess of 600 or 700.

Many thanks to Jim for taking the time to write this up. Be on the lookout for the upcoming Kevin Kammeraad's new album A Curious Glimpse of Michigan, with lots of ScribbleMonster-y goodness, due out in October.

*****

On Sunday, the Kidzapalooza stage has one surprise after another. The first act is The School of Rock All-Stars – a group of about fifteen kids between the ages of 12 and 18 performing classic rock tunes. These kids are unbelievable. Quite possibly the most talent I see all weekend. There’s a really nice crowd on hand and they are loving these kids. The response is so great, they invite the kids back to perform the final set on the Kidzapalooza stage that afternoon. Want to talk about the potential of kids? Want to get your young musicians inspired? Holy cow! I’ve got to go back to school.

Perry Farrell & Peter DiStefano draw a huge crowd and you can tell they are both sincerely excited about Kidzapalooza and doing something for the kids. Tor Hyams reminds the crowd (which is primarily adults) that this stage is for the kids and requests that everyone make way so those with kids can get to the front. His request is met with applause and friendly compliance. Peter DiStefano brings a handful of kids on stage with him, one at a time, to help him play the guitar. He does the string work while the kids strum and they all sound great. It’s a simple little thing, but it brings so much joy to these kids and their families (and Peter).

PattiAndRatso.JPGThe backstage area is completely different during this all-star run. There are tons of cameras, press, security, handlers and guests. Patti Smith, yep, that Patti Smith, is on hand as a special surprise guest. She plays a couple of songs and then is part of the day’s most surreal moment when she is interviewed backstage by Ratso, the rodent hand-puppet co-host of Chic-A-Go-Go. Matt Costa also stops by to play a few tunes as do The Terrible Twos. Shortly after they finish their set, I catch The Terrible Twos’ alter-ego, The New Amsterdams, playing on the next stage over. Both are pretty great.

When I tell my sister that I met and shared a cart ride with GQ of The Q Brothers, she’s star-struck. It ends up that The Q Brothers are part of the group responsible for “The Bomb-itty of Errors,” a hip-hop take on Shakespeare’s “Comedy of Errors” that my sister dubbed “The most amazing thing I’ve ever seen on stage.” That’s a lot to live up to. The Q Brothers’ performance is friendly and relaxed (much like the brothers themselves) and I suddenly feel as if I’m at a family reunion picnic. I’m struggling with how to describe the mood. It’s kind of like those impromptu performances that would take place in the Petrie’s living room on The Dick Van Dyke Show. Weird analogy, I know. But it’s the best I can come up with. They’re clearly enjoying themselves and the feeling is infectious.

ScribbleBrian and I catch a cart and arrive in time to see the last few songs by Chicago’s very own Assassins. They have a nice crowd and sound great. ScribbleBrian hasn’t purchased his Lollapalooza gear yet, so we make a stop at the merchandise tent. Wah-wah-whahhhh. So sorry, but you’re too late. The place is cleaned out. There were, like, 50 official items to chose from at the start. Now they’re down to two tees (only available in XL) and a beach towel. Let’s tell ScribbleBrian what he didn’t get. There were four men’s and four women’s tees that had the 2006 Lollapalooza logo on the front and all the bands that played listed on the back. ScribbleMonster is in the center of the bottom row. That’s so cool. I bought me a couple of those; one long-sleeve and one short. I consider being nice and offering one up to ScribbleBrian, but quickly decide that would be a bad idea. I mean, what lesson would he learn from that? It’s really for his own good.

We hop a cart back to the artist lounge area and meet up with ScribbleBrett. The VIP treatment this weekend has been pretty cool, but I’ve got to say that the golf cart shuttle is the best perk. At least a few times this weekend it allowed us to split our time between sets when two bands we wanted to see were playing at the same time on opposite ends of the park. Not to mention the wear and tear it saved on my shoes. Hey, I’m a starving artist and shoes are expensive.

I’m amused and find it kind of charming that ScribbleBrian purchased a silver Sharpie marker which he carried around in his guitar case this weekend specifically in case he ran into Flea. The only kink in his plan is that he would have to carry his bass around with him all weekend. Well, that and he would actually have to run into Flea. Don’t look now, but isn’t that Flea standing right next to you, ScribbleBrian? D’oh! “Hey Flea, how you doing?” “Good.” Wah-wah-whahhhh. Poor ScribbleBrian. Too bad you left the bass at home today (and Sharpie).

ScribbleBrett and ScribbleBrian are excited about seeing the Queens of the Stone Age and Red Hot Chili Peppers tonight. I’m just tired. And it’s getting really crowded in here. I head for home shortly into the Queens’ set. The report from ScribbleMonster’s rhythm section is the Chili Peppers’ show is fantastic. What an awesome weekend. Everyone has been so good to us and Lollapalooza put on a great event. If you didn’t get here this year, I highly recommend you put it on your calendar for next year.

As a parent, I understand why there may be some apprehension about bringing your kids along, but here’s some stuff you may not have known about Kidzapalooza:

Kids under 10 get in FREE when they’re accompanied by a ticketed adult. Got kids? Nieces? Nephews? Bring them along! The very family-friendly Kidzapalooza area is open from 11:00 to 4:30 and has the nicest piece of the park. There’s plenty of grass and shade with great views of Lake Michigan. The talent on the kids’ stage is top-notch and there’s a ton of really cool FREE hands-on activities (more on those later). This area alone is worth the price of admission. And feel free to stray into other areas of the festival. The crowd was great, the park is beautiful, there’s no reason not to.

One day ticket holders are not allowed re-entry – unless they have a kid. So you ask yourself, “What am I going to do with the kids when I meet up with my drinking buddy Rocko later?” Take them home. Have someone come to meet you and pick them up. Dad and the kids can go back to the hotel while mom gets her grove on. Make Friday your day and Saturday family day. The possibilities are endless. No one else is allowed back in once they leave. Your kids make you a VIP.

Did I tell you about the FREE stuff for the kids? Not only do the little ones get in FREE, there are FREE tattoos, face-painting and t-shirts from Small Paul, coloring books, CDs, and punk hair-styling by the Michael Anthony Salon. A few lucky kids even walked away with Gibson guitars!

And there’s a TON of FREE hands-on activities. KidTribe was out with the hula-hoops all weekend long. Their interaction with the kids and all the bright color and activity really added to the whole character and vibe of the Kidzapalooza area. The Guitar Center Rock and Roll Petting Zoo is the coolest idea. There are real-deal guitars, a drum kit, keyboard, microphones and amplifiers set up for the kids to play around with. The kid jam sessions were a sight to be seen. Peter DiStefano was giving a guitar clinic in the Zoo on Saturday. What an awesome opportunity for your kids to interact and get pointers from an honest to goodness rock star. One of our ScribbleKids who already plays guitar enjoyed playing around in the Petting Zoo with a bass so much, he took his savings and birthday money, bought a bass guitar the next day, and has been playing it all week. How cool is that? There were dance lessons and performances by the Brickheadz. John Yost & Remo were on hand with tons of percussion and leading family drum circle sessions. In addition to performing, The Q Brothers spent their weekend teaching kids how to scratch, mix and rhyme and then helping them make their own CDs at the Inferno Mobile Recording Studio. Again, how cool is that? Your kids are getting pointers and creating with professional musicians and producers, and taking their original works home – for FREE!

Do you love music? Do you love your kids? No pressure, but…

September 05, 2006

Interview: Dan Zanes

It is not hyperbole to suggest that Dan Zanes is the godfather of the 21st century family music scene. If there's an article talking about the scene, he's sure to be quoted, and he's been kind in his praise for other kids' music artists, Elizabeth Mitchell and Justin Roberts, to name just two. With five kids' music CDs (the latest being Catch That Train!) and a DVD, plus videos on Playhouse Disney, Zanes has steadily built a devoted following among kids and their associated adults (our family included).

Zanes was kind enough to spend some time talking with me last week about a broad range of family music (or, as he's also termed it, "age-desegregated music") topics. Our conversation touched on, among other things, his upcoming tour of Australia, why new parents are great audiences, and the benefit CD he's recently put together. Read on, and enjoy.

*********

Zooglobble: Did you have a good summer? You've got a really busy fall coming up, so I hope you got some vacation in.

Dan Zanes: I did, yeah. Every summer we go up to Nova Scotia for a week with my mother and brother-in-law (Donald Saaf). We always do a gospel show up there and end up playing songs from the next CD. A lot comes out of it, so it's nice being completely removed from civilization.

It must be nice, to not have to deal with the computer and the phone all the time.

Yeah, even if I wanted to, I wouldn't be able to, I'm so far removed from things. The lack of communication is very healthy.

It's good to have time off.

Yeah, I sort of hate it, but I'm really grateful for it. It's really nice to have family time. It's sort of amazing how the years pass by.

I know -- my daughter started kindergarten couple week ago, and I'm thinking, "She's starting kindergarten? She can't be starting kindergarten!"

[Laughs] Wasn't she born last month?

[Laughs] I understand.

My daughter's starting seventh grade now, and I can clearly remember seventh grade. It seems like every year it gets faster and faster... the compression of time... That was some of the advice I got. You know how everyone offers advice when you have a baby? The one thing that was really meaningful was people saying to remember to enjoy every day.

I try to remember that, even when the kids are frustrating me. "You're gonna miss this when they're ten years older."

That's really true. That brings its own joy and satisfaction. I guess fall brings these thoughts into our heads... I can't really remember what fall's like in Arizona.

Fall is a season of relief from the unremitting heat so we like fall because we're glad to see the three-digit temperatures go away. It's a nice time -- everybody comes out of hiberation. We go into hibernation, we just do it six months shifted from most of the rest of the country...

Is your whole family going to Australia with you [for the Melbourne International Arts Festival]?

Yeah, my wife and daughter are going for the first half of that trip -- that's going to be great. We're at a point now where my daughter is actually getting her artist's visa and; that was one way we were able to go. The Festival's paying for her plane ticket and she'll come join us. Her life's dream is not to play music for a living or anything even close to that but she really enjoys the social aspect, which is the most important aspect of it. She's able to play the ukelele... so we can all play together.

That sounds like it's going to be a lot of fun, playing there for a week.

The whole trip ends up being close to two weeks, really. It's amazing that we're doing it -- it's a really prestigious arts festival. It's a big deal to be a North American family musician getting to travel overseas. It's very rare for any of us to be able to break out of North America, so I'm hoping this is the beginning of a lot more international travel.

Somebody in Australia sent me a link to a band they had just signed -- it was their first kids and family band. My sense is that although Australia might have a strong folk song tradition, they don't necessarily have a strong tradition of people making music more exclusively for kids. It'll be interesting for you to go over there as a band who's been doing this for a decade now -- it'll be fun for them as well as fun for you.

It feels as though there's a lot of excitement about our arrival. I've been reading some underground press about us for a couple years now... I have to say, it's one of the most exciting things we've done. We're playing at Carnegie Hall this fall. Between Carnegie Hall and going to Australia, I'm really filled with gratitude for how well everything's been going, coupled with the wild excitement of travelling. It's been nice to have the summer off from travelling, but I'm reminded of how much I miss it. I love the hotel rooms, love meeting the fans, love hanging out with my band under any circumstances.

Based on the DVD -- my sense is that the band is pretty close. You may all have your separate careers, but the interaction on stage looks like a lot of fun.

It's great. There's been some changes [on the tour] for all good reasons. That's the thing about having great people come into the band who have their own careers. Cynthia Hopkins, for example, I can't believe she was with us for as long as she was... I'm sure she'll keep coming to make records. And Barbara [Brousal], who plays guitar, is pregnant, is expecting, she might even be having a baby now. She won't be with us for the first few months in the fall.

But the most important thing is when people come to the shows they walk away thinking, "That looked like fun, I can do that, too." That, for me, is the most important thing beyond technical ability or anything else because hanging out with people and playing music -- eventually it's gonna sound good to my ear unless they're just barely able to play. It doesn't take much... you can make a cool sound with other people quite quickly.

For me, it's always gotta be people that are fun. The 23 hours off-stage are just as important. We'll go out into the lobby after shows and meet people -- that's another opportunity to help people get interested in playing instruments or thinking about songs. The people in the band have to be able to convey that message -- "It can be anyone -- don't leave it to the professionals."

One of the things I've always been interested in with you and your music is that sense of "everybody should just play music -- don't worry about whether or not you're good or bad, just get together and play music." Was that something that you did a lot when you were growing up? Because between you and your brother, your family ended up a little more musical than most, not from a career perspective, but just generally.

You know, we didn't have a particularly musical household beyond recorded music. My mother didn't play, my father didn't play, but my mother's always been very creative and my father was an English teacher so I think there was a lot put into that idea of creating something with your own hands.

But it was only later really, once I got interested in folk music, once I started learning a little bit more about it, and started to see it was inclusive; it can take so many forms... My stepfather used to do Shakespeare in the barn, every year they would put on a play and it was just real community theater. He would milk the cows and then clean up for the rehearsal. It was all ages, it was inclusive, community fun. That's what I like about it, the communal nature of it.

It's almost political, isn't it? Because I would suggest that the message coming down from the top is not one of community or cohesion here in America. It's really a very divisive climate that we're living in and so the idea of getting together with your friends and neighbors and singing songs or making music, making your entertainment that's free -- you don't have to buy anything to sing songs with other people -- it does bring us together and gives us a hope for the future and it restores our spirits.

For me, it always gives me a sense of what life can be, and the possibilities that we have all around us. I think to do that always makes me realize there's so much more available to us, that we can do so much better for each other, and for our country, and for our planet. You know that if people are getting together and questioning the way the things are going, that's not going to be good for George W. Bush or anybody around him, so there's a political aspect to it, if you're singing "Froggy Went A Courtin'" or whatever you're singing. It does make us all feel like life's possibilities are great, wild, vivid, and varied, and we're not experiencing them now.

And I think the same thing with this whole question of immigration... It's just the best thing that could be happening to America, the culture that's coming to us now from around the world, coming up from the south, it's incredible. I was travelling through Iowa last year, and I was going to small towns -- I'd go in for a few days and play as much music as possible, everywhere from libraries, schools, nursing homes, coffee shops, it was a program through the university in Iowa City -- and I was going to some towns that had a recent Mexican population of between 30% and 40%, all within the last fifteen years, so basically an explosion. It was so exciting, but people didn't all take it that way. But culturally what was coming in was incredible and the communities that chose to celebrate that and embrace it were by far the healthiest, happiest, most vibrant communities. For me, music is a great way to open the door. If I'm in touch with my heritage through music, I've got a way of telling my story to a person from another background. If they're in touch with their culture, then they've got something to share with me. Music is just so easy and underneath it all it's fun, it's really fun.

It sometimes seems that communal singing and music playing are a fading art, meaning, aside maybe from church, where you do a lot of singing together, there aren't necessarily a lot of outlets for people to come together, let loose their voices, and sing together. I would agree, it's probably hard to stay angry or distrustful of someone if you're singing with them.

I completely agree with that. I've been to bluegrass festivals where politically I couldn't have been more different from the people I was hanging around with, and yet, without really knowing that much about each other, we would all get together and play songs. It transcended everything and it really brought our common humanity to the forefront. That's a very, very valuable experience right now with these "red" and "blue" states, to have this experience of everybody being together.

Are there particular, concrete steps that you would suggest to a family or a community if they're looking to do more singing together or playing music together -- are there things that you've seen in your community or what you've done where you thought, "wow, that was easy and it really got everyone singing together or willing to play music," even if all they were doing is banging on a drum?

Yeah, this is my new theory. The first step is always gonna be hard, no matter what. Unless you've grown up doing this, and you've had exprience with little groups of people getting them to sing, it's always gonna be hard, always gonna feel awkward and a little weird, and it might not even sound great at first.

But even me, where I'm doing this constantly... I was at my office a few weeks ago and we were about to have a regular meeting for my label and there were four of us in there and someone had to be on the phone, so I got out my ukelele, which the woman who runs my label had asked me to bring one and keep it in the office, and said, "All right, from now on we're going to start every meeting with a song." I felt kind weird about it, and these are people I know really well and I love them all, but I said, "all right, we're gonna do 'Pay Me My Money Down', all you need to know is that every other line is 'pay me my money down.'" And one guy really didn't feel comfortable singing but he grabbed his box of Altoids and he was playing shaker and everybody else sang. You could feel it was kinda awkward for all of us, but we did it and it felt great and now I would never hesitate to do it again -- we broke the ice.

As long as you know that it might feel a little funny at first, the main thing is that everybody throw themselves into it in any way they can and that they shed their inhibitions. That's easier said than done, but the reason I love being in the world of new parents is because they're really doing that every day. They're doing things they've never done before every day, they're in semi-embarrassing situations...

They're being pushed out of their comfort zone.

Yeah, constantly. So they're already there in a lot of ways, and they'll dance around like lunatics at the drop of a hat. Whereas before they had kids... certainly I was a lot more uptight. So that message of "c'mon, just go ahead and do it," is easier to get across to parents and families, so I really feel like I'm hanging out with the right crowd. It's the doing of it, it's the learning of some songs. There's no need to learn an instrument. It's just basically memorizing some lyrics enough that you can get through a song. Start with one. Start with one song that you can teach other people to sing, or start with one song that you can comfortably sing for other people, and that's a tradition in itself. But I like those ones that everyone can join in on.

And "call and response," that's a great form. I always tell people, find some songs you like on any recording and learn 'em, it's really not that hard to do, and if you're really stuck, go to a Pete Seeger record -- he's walking everybody through it anyway. So many of those records are live records where he's teaching the audience. Anything you would ever need to know about singing with other people you can certainly find in a Pete Seeger record.

On the Catch That Train! CD, it sounded like there was a much greater focus on this idea of community and musicmaking -- all your CDs have some of that, but especially on Catch That Train! there did seem to be a much greater emphasis on that. Was that something you were consciously thinking of when you were selecting songs and recording songs?

Yeah, it really was. I thought your review... was everything I would want somebody to think about it as they heard it but would be afraid to bring it up on my own... you just want to let people come to their own conclusions. I was thinking about social music. I was gonna call it "Social Music," but then I thought that would be box office poison for three-year-olds.

But that's what I've been thinking about more and more, and I feel like that's what I have to offer, this idea that it's something we can do together and that it's fun. It's very distressing to feel that we're all here at this party here in America and there's people here who still don't feel like they're invited or welcome and it drives me crazy. And I think that it starts on a local level and it goes out from there. Music is just so inviting -- all of life's possibilities seem to be somewhere in this idea that we can get together and play music together. I was hitting it as hard as I could.

That's why I love that song "The Welcome Table," and I wouldn't have found it except that the other ideas I'd come up with for the Blind Boys [of Alabama] they'd already done -- they'd been recording since 1939 and they'd practically done every gospel song known to English-speaking man. Then when I found "The Welcome Table," I was pretty excited 'cause they hadn't done it and it seemed so timely. And it seemed to fit in with the idea of social music.

If it's not fun, then the message, regardless of how strongly I feel about it, is not gonna fly. Things have to be fun, feel like fun, pull you into that. You know, I have the greatest time making these records -- we laugh a lot, hang out in my house, the Blind Boys are in my house, the Kronos Quartet is in my house... We eat a lot of food and tell a lot of jokes...

And then maybe record a song...

Yeah, once everybody's had enough to eat.

My sense is that when you started out (on Rocket Ship Beach, for example) you were asking friends, "Do you wanna come and sing a song with me," and they said, "sure." Do you find that people are now calling you and saying, "I love what you're doing and my three-year-old daughter loves all your CDs and the next time you're recording something I'd love to be able to come down and sing with you or play with you?"

I wish it was all that easy. It does get easier every time. The people I tend to go for are always really busy. Something like the Blind Boys, for example, worked out pretty well because they asked my brother, who works at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame -- they found out that he and I were brothers. They were thinking of doing a family record, so they wanted to talk to me about it and as I was speaking to their management, I asked when they were coming to New York next in the not-so-distant future. I was able to figure out something really fast to get them right before they started their tour, and it was because they wanted to talk about the albums. That never would've happened if I hadn't gotten to a certain point with my CDs. So it's definitely easier to get people over here and I think now people now understand what it's going to sound like.

For me, I wanted the idea that Sandra Bernhard, Bob Weir, Angelique Kidjo came over to your house for dinner and decided to sing afterward -- that's the sound we're always going for with my help, in a casual but artful way. Y'know, that's not the way Deborah Harry sounds on her records, that's not the way Nick Cave sounds on his records, so it is a chance for people to be heard in a slightly different manner. I think everybody appreciates that. I'm just such a fan of all these people -- every single guest on my CDs is somebody that I'm completely in love with, so for me it's been really, really special -- I've always felt people threw themselves into it in such a great way.

Lou Reed is a really good example. You know, I thought I had a grip on his music and how he sang. He's not the most warm and friendly person when you first meet him -- I think almost anybody would say that about him. When he started singing "What A Wonderful World" [from Night Time!] and I didn't know him at all, and I got really nervous -- "he's just winging it." But by the second time around I realized, "He's a jazz singer!," and I didn't even know that. He was coming at it in such a sophisticated way... so far inside the song that he was able to go at it in another way that was beyond my comprehension. To see that unfold in front of you is really an amazing experience.

I just found out about the Bright Spaces compilation -- did you pick these recordings because they were recordings you grew to really enjoy after the birth of your daughter and you were a parent, did you pick them because you liked the songs and you were introduced to songs you now play a whole bunch through these recordings -- roughly, how did you choose them?

You know, it seemed like such a simple idea when they first ran it by me. They've been wonderful folks to be involved with -- they've helped sponsor our tours. Bright Horizons is the for-profit and Bright Spaces is the not-for-profit. I've been to those places and it's so good to see kids from homeless shelters or transitional housing actually have for the first place a place they can go and play. So it was easy to agree to throw myself into it but I thought it would be so much easier to actually do it than it was because of all the things you mentioned -- the recording, the performer, the song -- I wanted to make sure it was all three so that you could turn the CD player off, pick a handful of songs, and do 'em yourself. That's always the goal, to turn the CD player off -- it's a means to another end and that end is that you take the tunes and make them your own. But recorded music can be really inspiring.

It was important that David Jones -- he's put out a CD called Widdecombe Fair that probably more than anything got me thinking about how wild and broad family or all ages music could me. And the Jerry Garcia/David Grisman [Not For Kids Only], that was another one that really opened my mind. And the Deighton Family, of any group, that was the group that recorded with the spirit that I've always tried to capture on my CDs. So in a way I have an emotional connection to everybody on the whole CD, and it was kind of amazing to see people agree to let the songs be used, donate a track, otherwise it wouldn't have made any money. I felt great about the fact that everybody got on board, that everyone that I wanted was cool with it all.

So it was all three things on every single track -- the song, the performer, the recording itself. But those are the three -- David Jones, Jerry Garcia and David Grisman, and the Deighton Family -- that really meant a lot to me when I started doing family music and gave me such inspiration. And still do.

This was great.

Well you're doing a great job. It's really so cool to see that you're getting as much attention as you are. It's an exciting time right now, that we can start things in our houses, that we can start things in our houses that feel so personal and they can really go out to a lot of people.

And then for example, I've got a reader who really likes Justin Roberts and she's thinking, 'Why can't I get Justin to come out to my city and play a show?' So hopefully having some readers feel the same way -- why can't we do something like this -- that's exciting to me.

That was what was so great about this in the beginning. Because I've been in the music business for most of my adult life, and when I started playing rock it felt as though there wasn't a road map and once the road map became established a lot of the fun went out. For me, the real creativity comes at those times when there's no one saying, "You can't do it this way, you've got to do it that way." It's really the feeling that anything goes, you can follow your heart and your interests.

In family music, everybody's so generous with their time and their thoughts. You know, Tom Chapin took a call from me. I just called him out of the blue because I really dug him and he spent a lot of time with me on the phone and was really helpful and I thought, there's the spirit, right there. I've found that constantly. Hanging out with Justin in Chicago, having never met him, it was sort an instant bond, so that feeling of community, whether it's physical or otherwise, is alive and well with the family music crowd, so it's good to have you in it.

Thank you. I hope you get a chance to relax a little bit more before your fall because I went back and looked at the tour schedule and it was really long, so I hope you get another couple weeks of relaxation.

It's pretty unlikely, but I enjoy what I do, so that's the good news... Say "hi" to your daughter for me...

Thank you, Dan. You have a nice day.

You too.

September 04, 2006

Laboring To Finish This Post...

It's late, and thanks to a monsoon thunderstorm wreaking havoc with the internet connection, it's later than I wanted this to be, so I'll be brief...

First, I have two posts coming up early this week that I'm very excited about. One involves virtually no work on my part (no, that's not why I'm excited about it) and is a sequel of sorts to a prior post. The other involves quite a bit of work on my part and, well, I don't want to spoil it. Just don't miss it.

Second, I wanted to make sure I highlighted some stuff around the web I've been meaning to link to...
1. Reader Gwyneth has started a Kids in Atlanta website highlighting kids-related musical events in Atlanta. It's very thorough, and I think it's a great example of what people can do to make it easy for the public to find out about kids' musicians.
2. Reader Suzanne (I thiiiiink) Gwyneth also is now operating a "Live365" radio station entitled "Gooney Bird Radio" , playing some artists familiar to this website, along with the occasional foreign language and poetry.
3. Thanks to The Lovely Mrs. Davis, who mentioned this site to Christopher Noxon, author of Rejuvenile and its associated blog, and thanks to Noxon for noticing. (Go back to the old site, and you can find the reviews for Gwendolyn and the Good Time Gang and Captain Bogg and Salty, both of which draw mention in Noxon's book. They'll get posted here soon, too. Really.) You can read Mrs. Davis' review of the book here.

And finally, thanks to both Charity and the JAMband and Joe McDermott, who both linked here recently. McDermott, incidentally, just won the Children's section of the John Lennon Songwriting Contest for "Great Big World" (no, not the Hoodwinked version) and will have a new album coming out soon.

OK, and really finally, Milkshake and Rebecca Frezza videos for PBS Kids here.

There. That oughta hold ya. Come back soon, though, I promise it'll be worth it.

September 03, 2006

Review: Hoodwinked Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - Various Artists

HoodwinkedOST.jpgWhen did I know how seriously I'd started to take this whole "kids and family music" thing? When I spent $25 for an out-of-print kids' music CD -- to be specific, the Hoodwinked Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. Now normally I'd just chalk it up to the semi-obsessional nature of being a niche expert, but I'm used to hearing -- and reviewing -- albums that with print runs of just 1,000 copies. What in the name of the Pulp Fiction soundtrack is going on, then, when a soundtrack of a movie produced by the Weinstein Company goes out of print six months after its release?

Especially when it's as good as this one.

There are three songs on here which are in my top ten kids' songs of the year, two of them in my top ten songs of the year, period. And they're all completely different. "Great Big World," which I've raved about before, has a fantastic '60s-esque sound with a Phil Spector "Wall of Sound" production and crystal clear vocals from Anne Hathaway. "Bounce" is an old school rap whose lyrics sound pretty nonsensical (if albeit pleasing to the ear) until you see the movie, after which they make sense (the song rolls over the closing credits). And "Red is Blue" is a stunning ballad which works both within the movie, representing character Red's interior monologue, and outside of it. Listening to the song in the movie, I thought, they have Ben Folds down cold. And then in the closing credits, I noticed that Ben Folds sang the freakin' song! Though he didn't write it, he did add the piano hook -- it's definitely the best Ben Folds soundtrack song of 2006.

The rest of the songs cover most of the past 30 years sonically -- "Critters Have Feeling" could've been on the Cars' Heartbeat City, "The Real G" has a Limp Bizkit rock-rap sound (in a good way), "Glow" has a bit of an Elton John feel, and "Eva Deanna" is a very fine Pixies rip-off. Most of the credit for the awesomeness of the soundtrack has to go to co-director and songwriter Todd Edwards, who wrote 9 songs here. The rock tracks here have a very Pretty Woman soundtrack feel, where you know that some of the songs' interest will fade over time, but it's still a fine collection of songs.

Now the question remains, is this a good album to recommend for listening with kids? Well, yes and no. Yes, because there are so many good songs here. No, because I'm not sure the kids will necessarily connect to the songs (aside from the "hey, I remember that song in the movie!" effect, which may be enough). In addition, while there's nothing wrong with the score, its placement scattered throughout the disk may be more distracting than enlightening.

I'd peg the age-appropriateness of the album at ages 5 through 10. You can see music videos for three of the songs (including the catchy "Critters Have Feelings") at the movie's website. I'd also note that the album also includes song notes from Edwards and complete lyrics. So all you people searching the website for the lyrics, just buy the album! (And if you need to know where to get the CD at a reasonable (i.e., not $50) price, drop me a line.)

You don't need to have enjoyed the movie -- or even to have seen the movie -- to enjoy the Hoowinked soundtrack (though it'll add a little bit to your enjoyment). I definitely recommend this album, but it's not so much for your kids as it is for yourself. Your kids are likely to get tired of it long before you do.

September 02, 2006

A Tale of Two Cities

Last weekend, New York was, er, deluged with rain, putting Brady Rymer's Jamboree with his band, Elizabeth Mitchell, and Hayes Greenfield at risk. Luckily, it sounds like it was one fabulous time.

Meanwhile, Charity and the JAMband played at the Getty Center in front of about 800 people, Charity reports. Apparently it was sunny, though that's par for the course in L.A....

September 01, 2006

Please Release Me: September 2006 Edition

After a busy August calendar, things slow down a little bit in September:

Sept. 1: Mommy Says No! - Asylum Street Spankers (thanks, Bill, for the heads up)
Sept. 5: Snowdance - Erin Lee & Marci
Sept. 12: My Best Day (live album) - Trout Fishing in America
Sept. 12: Bright Spaces 2 - Various Artists (Dan Zanes-compiled benefit album)

And of course, there are always August releases I missed and October releases to look forward to.

Suggested For You...

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Kids' Music -- Sites

Kids' Music -- Radio Stations

Kids' Music -- Other Media

Kids' Music -- Consumption

Kids' Literature

Other Parental Stuff

Phoenix: All Music Is Local

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