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May 30, 2008

Disney Music Block Party Tour. Finally.

The Disney Music Block Party Tour took for. freakin'. ever. to get their site up and running. I mean, news of the tour has been floating around for at least a couple months now, and it became almost amusing to see the "Full Site Launches May [insert date here]" change every couple days, but midday today they finally came through on their promise.

Dan Zanes, They Might Be Giants, Barenaked Ladies, Imagination Movers, and Choo Choo Soul is a pretty sweet lineup, though they won't all be appearing at each concert. $36 a person is a bit steep, though kids under the age of 3 are free, and some of the other activities (the PLAYSKOOL play areas, NAMM-sponsored areas with musical instruments for the kiddos) look nice. (I'm a little dubious about having a tent with nothing but Playhouse Disney TV -- just stay at home if you're gonna do that -- but, hey, don't tell me that place won't be packed after the kids have been there an hour or two.)

No, They Might Be Giants and Barenaked Ladies will not be playing at the same show. Value for money, the last show in the Nassau Coliseum is your best bet. As for you Canadians, the good news is that you get a show. The bad news? The Toronto show gets one less act than everyone else.

Aaaand, of course Phoenix (not to mention the entire country west of the Mississippi) doesn't get a single show.

Full details (dates, locations, hours) after the jump.

Fri 7/25 - Sun 7/27 Tom's River, NJ Tom's River North High School: Choo Choo Soul, Dan Zanes and Friends, Ralph's World, They Might Be Giants (doors 2p, shows 3p)

Tue 7/29 - Wed 7/30 Columbia, MD Merriweather Post Pavilion: Choo Choo Soul, Dan Zanes and Friends, Ralph's World, They Might Be Giants, Hosted by Raven~Symoné (doors 2:30p, shows 3:30p)

Fri 8/1 - Sun 8/3 Philadelphia, PA Fairmount Park: Choo Choo Soul, Dan Zanes and Friends, Imagination Movers, Ralph's World, Hosted by Raven~Symoné (doors F/Sa 2p, shows 3p; doors Su 1p, shows 2p)

Tue 8/5 - Wed 8/6 East Hartford, CT Rentschler Field: Choo Choo Soul, Dan Zanes and Friends, Imagination Movers, Ralph's World (doors 2:30p, shows 3:30p)

Fri 8/8 - Sun 8/10 Bridgeview, IL Toyota Park: Choo Choo Soul, Dan Zanes and Friends, Imagination Movers, Ralph's World, Hosted by Raven~Symoné (doors F 3p, shows 4p; doors Sa/Su 2p, shows 3p)

Tue 8/12 - Wed 8/13 Columbus, OH Crew Stadium: Choo Choo Soul, Dan Zanes and Friends, Imagination Movers, Ralph's World, Hosted by Raven~Symoné (doors 2:30p, shows 3:30p)

Fri 8/15 - Sun 8/17 Toronto, ON Downsview Park: Choo Choo Soul, Imagination Movers, Ralph's World, Hosted by Raven~Symoné (doors 2p, shows 3p)

Tue 8/19 - Wed 8/20 Rochester, MI Meadow Brook Music Festival: Choo Choo Soul, Dan Zanes and Friends, Imagination Movers, Ralph's World (doors 2:30p, shows 3:30p)

Fri 8/22 - Sun 8/24 Uniondale, NY Nassau Coliseum Parking Lot: Barenaked Ladies, Choo Choo Soul, Dan Zanes and Friends, Imagination Movers, Ralph's World, Hosted by Raven~Symoné (doors 2p, shows 3p)

May 29, 2008

Review: Don't Forget the Donut! - Wayne Potash

DontForgetTheDonut.jpgA number of months ago, someone e-mailed me and suggested I check out the kids music of Boston-area musician Wayne Potash. She said that he was (and I'm quoting here), "completely lacking in hip-ness... His band is called 'The Music Fun Band' which is one of the stupidest names I’ve ever heard of, and Wayne looks like a hippie freak wearing a fish hat.

However, if you can get past that, he’s an amazing musician for little kids."

Well, those of you who have read me for any length of time know that those are exactly the kinds of things I can get past. (I don't think I ever had a fish hat, but did have a bag that looked like a trout, so there you go.)

And if you can get past those things (and the not-terribly-inspiring album cover, too), his 2005 album Don't Forget the Donut! might just be up your alley. From goofy little songs like "Stunt Car" and "Wiggly Tooth" to breezy reworkings of classics like "When the Red Red Robin Comes Bob Bob Bobbin' Along" and "The Frim Fram Sauce," Potash has a relaxed attitude that serves the music well. He's not trying to remake children's music, he's just having some fun.

Not that the music isn't well-played. Potash mixes some jazz (the classic tracks above) with some bluegrass ("Hot Corn, Cold Corn", "Cindy") along with some poppier originals like the groovy "Lobster Dance." His duet with Suzanne Clark on "Down in the Valley" is -- dare I say it? -- better than Dan Zanes. I liked Potash most in his quieter, folkier moments, such as on "Street Sweeper," as opposed to the more '70s guitar-oriented stuff at the end of the album (it's about 8-10 minutes too long), but it's all done without pretension. (Proof of that is the ended-by-laughter version of "Haul Away Joe.")

Kids ages 3 through 7 will enjoy these songs the most. You can hear samples of all the tracks at the 48-minute album's CDBaby page. Yes, the album is 3 years old at this point, but he's also working on a new CD.

Wayne Potash isn't trying to set the kids music world on fire, he's just covering some good traditional and classic songs and writing decent original music. Don't Forget the Donut! might not become your family's most favorite album, but I can see it lasting in the CD player long after other CDs have worn out their welcome. As my original e-mail tipster said, "he doesn’t rock, exactly. He’s extremely uncool. And yet, he’s pretty amazing, either despite those things or perhaps because of them." I think those of you out there know if that applies to your family. Recommended.

May 28, 2008

Puppies, Clocks, and Ducks: New Music from Robbert Bobbert (Robert Schneider)

It's been awhile since I've talked about Robbert Bobbert and the Bubble Machine, but that doesn't mean I'm not looking forward to the debut kids' CD from Apples in Stereo head honcho Robert Schneider. According to Little Monster Records, the Robbert Bobbert CD will drop in "fall 2008."

But we're into instant gratification here, so I'm here to show you how to instantly, er, gratify yourself. First, the quality -- you can listen to another album track at Little Monster's home page. "I Am A Clock" is a sing-songy sing-along ("Ding! Dong! Ding! Dong!") with some fun electronic squiggles thrown in for good measure. There's not much to the song, but those "Ding! Dong!"s are kinda catchy.

And for those of you who are a little more into quantity than quality...

Amberly over at Ages 3 and Up! introduced Schneider when he played a kids' set at WRFL's FreeKY Fest in late April. I think the songs lose something without the studio wizardry, because "I Am A Clock" (the second song in the first clip below) isn't nearly as fun live, solo, and acoustic as on the version above. (Also: Schneider's between-song banter -- totally manic.) But there are songs about puppies, clocks, and gravity here...

... and ducks and friends here.

I liked the last song best, but I'm looking forward to hearing the finished product.

May 27, 2008

Interview: Frances England

FrancesWithUke.jpg.jpgSan Francisco's Frances England was a Zooglobble first -- the first-ever artist interview on this site. Since that time, England's debut Fascinating Creatures continued to win universal acclaim and England herself added a second child to her family. Two years later, her even-stronger follow-up Family Tree (review) seems certain to attract even more acclaim.

England recently answered some questions about what she's been doing the past couple years, how life has changed for her, and how it hasn't. Read on for Frances' trick to overcoming stage nervousness, the inspiration for "Animal Friends," and her plans for live shows.

Zooglobble: When we last talked 2 years ago, Fascinating Creatures was just beginning to get noticed in the world at large. Can you pinpoint a certain moment at which you said to yourself, "Oh, my, something really big is going on here"?
Frances England: Well, in the wide world of music I don’t know how big this all really is but definitely for me, what happened with Fascinating Creatures was shocking - probably because I had no expectations. Not too long after I began selling the CD online, I remember getting these emails saying that random people in Hong Kong were buying it, then it was Australia, and New Zealand and all these far away places.

And it was just really weird to think about how far this little homespun CD had gone, especially considering where it all got started – in our bathroom. (I wrote all of the songs for FC while my first son, Liam, was taking baths). I was also really blown away to be named the sole winner of the 2007 Oppenheim Award. As a mom, I’ve used that very recognizable seal of theirs to scout out quality products for years, so I was really honored by that.

How did life change for you as a result of Fascinating Creatures' success?

I guess the biggest change that occurred for me was that this record forced me out of my comfort zone in terms of performing and putting myself out there. I’ve always been a behind-the-scenes girl and have never relished being front and center. But suddenly, I was getting invited to come play at all of these great places and for the first year I just said, “Thanks, but no thanks.” I had just had my second son, Rowan, so I was really busy with the kids, but the truth was I was also incredibly nervous about getting up and singing for people.

But I had two big revelations that helped me get over that. First, I realized that I wanted my kids to see me overcome something I was afraid of. My son Liam knew how much I loved singing and playing guitar and definitely picked up on the fact that it was shyness and nerves that was keeping me from singing out for other people. So I thought, how am I ever going to encourage him to stretch himself to do something unknown or scary if I’m not modeling that myself.

The other big revelation was at my first public performance, which was at Enzo Garcia’s breakfast sing along here in San Francisco. Enzo had invited me to play a couple of sets and before going up to sing I told him how nervous I was. He told me not to worry – the kids would love it all. When I told him it was the parents that made me nervous, he said, “The parents aren’t here to watch you - they are here to watch their children respond to the music,” which was true and so comforting to me. I think it made me realize that performing this kind of music is not about any one person, but about a community coming together to celebrate something really fun and joyful. What a relief!

How did life not change for you?
Well as I mentioned, we had our second son about the same time I released Fascinating Creatures, so really everything has changed because our family changed. But as is probably the case with the majority of your readers, our world is very child-centered and my schedule seems to revolve around drop-offs, pick-ups, playdates, and a never-ending stream of weekend birthday parties. None of that has changed…good times.

Two years ago, you said you were beginning to write songs for another album -- how did writing the songs for the new album differ from how you wrote the songs for the debut?
Well, I did write almost all of the songs on Family Tree about two years ago so everything about that process is really fuzzy (life with a newborn will do that to you). But in terms of how I write songs, I don’t really spend time coming up with a list of topics I want to write about. I generally just sit down with the guitar and a melody floating around my head and see what comes...

The inspiration for the title track is fairly obvious -- the birth of your second son Rowan. Did other tracks have a specific inspiration?
The song “Animal Friends” is about endangered animals and it was inspired by my son Liam’s passion for the ocean and sea life. One day we were watching a PBS special by Jean Michael Cousteau and Liam saw how sharks’ fins are removed to make shark fin soup. It’s so brutal and wasteful, and Liam was totally aghast that anyone would ever eat such a thing. A week or so later we were walking in our neighborhood and happened to pass by a Chinese restaurant that had shark fin soup listed on their menu. It was so shocking to him and he immediately wanted to run home and write a letter to the restaurant telling them how BAD this evil soup was.

Anyway, it was this urgency to right such an obvious wrong that was so inspiring to me. And I think Liam’s reaction is typical of most 4, 5, 6 year olds. At this age, kids have such an innate sense of right and wrong and justice, and I wanted to write a song that spoke to that and talked about what powerful players they are in changing the world for the better.

I asked last time, I'll ask this time -- what are your kids' favorite songs on the album?
Well, when he’s not listening to the Beatles or David Bowie or Justin Roberts, Liam is really into “Spring Has Sprung,” “Animal Friends,” and “Free to Be Me.” And Rowan, my 20 month old, seems to love “I Scream, You Scream,” probably because he can hear himself and a handful of other kids screaming at the end of the song. He’s also completely enamored with our drummer, Jeff Koch, so I think he’s biased towards the more rockin’ numbers...

How was the process of recording different this time around?
We started recording Family Tree at home, after we put the kids to bed (which usually meant sometime after 9 pm.). And then inevitably, Rowan would wake up around 11:30 ready to nurse. So I sound really sleepy in all of those recording – they are actually really funny to listen to now – the tempo is so much slower than the final versions.

After about 6 months of this, I stumbled upon a great little studio here in San Francisco called Snoppy Quop, and I began recording there with Tim Thurman (guitar) and Jeff Koch (drums) and a few other friends. We ended up doing about half the record at the studio, and half at home. A lot of people seemed to respond to the intimate homey feeling of Fascinating Creatures, so I wanted to hold on to that, but also wanted to tighten things up, especially on the more indie-rock songs, which was a lot easier to do in a studio.


You're playing live in Charlotte for the Tricycle Music Festival -- are you preparing anything special for that?
We are so excited about going to Charlotte. Tim and Jeff are coming too and we’re planning on playing songs from both Family Tree and Fascinating Creatures. Something we’ve started doing at live shows that the kids (and parents) have really responded to is adding a projector slideshow of photographs to accompany some of the songs, especially the slower ones. I wanted to add an interesting visual element to the live shows and because some of the images are synchronized to the lyrics, it really seems to help the kids connect to the meaning of the songs in a much deeper way. So we’ll be doing that in Charlotte too.

What else do you have planned (e.g., videos, tours, world domination)?
I have lots of ideas for a children’s book and maybe even some videos so we’ll see what happens. To be honest, right now I’m just having a lot of fun playing with Tim and Jeff and we are excited about the shows we’ve booked for the summer. I’ve always wanted to be in a band and I really couldn’t have found better people to play with -- Tim and Jeff are two of the nicest guys on earth and both of them are dads at my son’s preschool, where all of this got started.

May 26, 2008

Review in Brief: American Songs Vol. 2 - Josephine Cameron

AmericanSongsVol2.jpgIt's Memorial Day here in the United States, so I thought this review might be appropriate.

Maine's Josephine Cameron is not an artist that typically would get much coverage on a kids' music website. That's because even though Cameron spends some of her time teaching songwriting to kids, she doesn't spend her time recording songs for kids.

But just as her last album, Close Your Eyes (review) was a mellow CD that could pull double-duty as a lullaby album, so too her latest album, American Songs Vol. 2, could be a good folk song primer for slightly older kids. The album, released in late 2007 and a sequel to the first volume, released in 2002, consists of a number of traditional American folk songs mixed in with a few originals. Cameron puts just enough of her own spin on the more familiar songs to make them fresh without depriving them of the strengths that have made them classics. "Oh Susanna" is dialed-down a notch, emphasizing more of the sadness of the distance between the returning soldier and his love. "This Land Is Your Land" gets all the verses, with Cameron's ebullience at the end showing through.

There is pleasure in the discovery of less-familiar songs, such as the waltz of "Gum Tree Canoe." And on "Evangeline" (co-written by Cameron and co-producer Anthony Walton), Cameron retells Longfellow's tale of Evangeline and Gabriel. I also really liked Cameron's, Walton's and arranger Carter Little's bluesy setting of Sterling A. Brown's poem "Long Track Blues." Cameron's slightly high-pitched voice (think Susanna Hoffs) is set off nicely against the understated guitar and mandolin work.

I would be surprised if young kids enjoy this album much, but older kids, say those 8 and older, might enjoy listening to these songs. You can hear samples and download tracks here or at the 42-minute album's CDBaby page. Also, I highly recommend Cameron's notes on the songs, which are incredibly detailed. It's always nice to hear musicians thinking about how to record traditional folk music in a way that preserves what makes the song a classic but also brings the musician's own sensibilities to the song, thereby making it new once more. With American Songs Vol. 2, Cameron's done that. It's not necessarily a kids' album, but it's a good album.

May 23, 2008

School's Out... And In. Simultaneously.

I have written multiple times (OK, twice thus far) about the band Central Services Board of Education, the kids' music offshoot of Seattle indie-pop band Central Services. Count myself as a CSBOE fan, though one of just a few because, you know, they haven't actually released an album.

Well, soon enough that group will expand, because this afternoon the band said that they've finished the album and will have pre-release copies at their first-ever full-band performance Sunday along with Recess Monkey at Northwest Folklife. The band says they're targeting a release right around "back to school" time.

Can't make it to Seattle to pick up a pre-release copy to tide your family over this long summer? Well, then get yourself over to their Myspace page, where they've posted a zippy new track, "8 Is A Number" ('cause everyone's doing number songs this spring, dontcha know?). It's available for download in handy mp3 format, along with a "director's cut" version of the totally awesome "The Lonely Tomato." Both now with added horns!

May 22, 2008

Review: The Rhyming Circus - Ralph's World

TheRhymingCircus.jpgRalph Covert has few peers when it comes to kids' music songwriting -- Justin Roberts?, the guys from Recess Monkey?, Molly Ledford from Lunch Money? -- the list is short. Over the course of six original albums in his guise as Ralph's World, the Chicago-based Covert created a body of work that holds up against any other kids' musician, work that helped convince Disney to sign Covert to its label.

The Rhyming Circus, Covert's first collection of new material since signing to Disney, does not give any indication that his skill in putting together of kid-friendly pop tunes has waned at all. The leadoff title track is filled with a nifty little series of rhymes, of course ("Bats in hats wearing suits and spats / And cats on mats what do you think of that / Fats the rat juggling some gnats / They’re all stars in the Rhyming Circus"). "Gotta Be Good" is a sunny pop-rocker, "Edward the Tap-Dancing Elephant" has a 21st century Tin Pan Alley feel, and so on down the line. Beatles references are woven throughout ("Happy Not My Birthday," "Abby's Alphabet Soup" and the funky "Do The Math" among them, the latter closing with an emphatic final "Day in the Life" piano chord). Oddly enough, "Folsom Daycare Blues," with Covert reworking the Johnny Cash classic, is the weakest track on the album; it's sort of a cheap joke that the kids won't get at all.

For those of you more familiar with the Ralph's World oeuvre, I'd say The Rhyming Circus more in the Peggy's Pie Parlor camp than his two subsequent albums, which had a more rocking feel. I consider Green Gorilla, Monster & Me to be in the vicinity of the top 10 kids' albums of the past 10 years, so if I'm not as enthusiastic about this new album, it's not a reflection of the album's quality as much as it is a reflection of my personal musical taste. (And I know that there's a strong segment of Ralph's fanbase that adores Peggy's Pie Parlor, which I like, just not as much as the two albums that followed.)

One other comment, this directed at Disney. I know they know what they're doing, but there are few kids' artists that create as fanciful a story through song as Covert (especially on this album -- just listen to "Rodeo Peg" or "King of the Alphabet" for two examples). Why, then, do the videos for the new album (the title track is available as a bonus on the disk, and the first two can be seen here) just feature Covert in a live setting with bouncing kids? It's mostly forgettable, or at least undistinguishable from countless other kids' videos, albeit with higher production values. Disney is missing a major opportunity to create something memorable by not recruiting former Covert cover illustrator Giselle Potter to design a few videos.

The CD will be of most interest to kids ages 4 through 8. You can hear samples across the internet, while Covert's Myspace page has a few tracks available for streaming.

The Rhyming Circus is another collection of top-quality (in every way) kids' pop-rock. Ralph's World fans will not be disappointed with the release, and those who aren't fans already should certainly give Covert a shot in the stereo. Recommended.

May 21, 2008

Can Your Kid Read Cursive?

Or, if they didn't literally see their favorite music star autograph something, would they know who it came from?

Well, those of you with varying levels of disposable income can find out, thanks to a couple auctions currently going on.

First up is an auction benefitting the Reading Reptile, a Kansas City (Missouri) children's bookstore which, if it's half as fun as their website, is probably about three times as fun as your regular life. They're having a Debt Reduction Day auction, which includes such Ralph's World items as an autographed Ralph Covert guitar and autographed copies of his new album The Rhyming Circus and his new book. Or, if you don't like that, have Bill Harley write you a song. (Or, if you don't like music, just go ahead and get that Kevin Henkes "Lilly" sketch.) You have 'til May 24 to find enough loose change in your couch.

And for those of you with more disposable income than I currently have and a tween girl, might I suggest the autographed Miley Cyrus guitar as part of the XM Kids Traveling Roadshow benefiting the Children's Miracle Network? Ralph's guitar is a lot cheaper right now, but Miley's guitar is a lot cooler...

May 20, 2008

Video: "Drawing" - Barenaked Ladies

While I can't say that the '80s synth-pop of "Drawing," off Barenaked Ladies' new kids music CD Snacktime is my favorite track off the album, the new video for the song, featuring bandmember Kevin Hearn's visuals, is certainly distinct. (Go Team "DRAW"!)

But I think we need to put a moratorium on animated kids' music videos. Time for the live action, folks!

Barenaked Ladies - "Drawing"


Online Videos by Veoh.com

May 19, 2008

How Many Pickup Trucks Did We See?

It's off by a hundred miles or so, but this video is, again, particularly apropos for me today.

(Oddly enough, not so many pickup trucks, I think.)

May 16, 2008

All Play, No Work. (Or Is That The Other Way Around?)

For any number of reasons, this is where my head's at right now:

The Hipwaders - "The Work Song" (from Cinderella)

May 15, 2008

That's A Pretty Big Snack

I was wondering how Barenaked Ladies would do sales-wise with their excellent new CD Snacktime.

Turns out, pretty darn good. The album debuted at #2 on Billboard's Top Kid Audio chart, trailing only (who else?) Hannah Montana and her live disk.

Beyond that, the album hit #61 on Billboard's main albums chart, the Billboard 200. Given that Maroon 5's latest CD came in at #58 and sold 13,000 copies, that gives you a pretty good idea of how well it sold, just below the new Elvis Costello CD and smack-dab between Carrie Underwood and Danity Kane [Ed: insert your own joke here.]

To put the result into context, the album didn't do as well their 2006 album Barenaked Ladies Are Me (#17) or 2003's Everything to Everyone (#10), but did outperform their most recent Barenaked Ladies Are Men (#102) and 2004's Barenaked For The Holidays (#64).

And with that, my friends, I pledge not to use math anymore today.

May 14, 2008

Review: Family Tree - Frances England

FamilyTree.jpgIt's safe to say the path San Francisco artist Frances England took to get to Family Tree, her second album, has not been often duplicated. England, who had never been a working musician, recorded her first album, Fascinating Creatures, as her contribution to her son's preschool fundraiser. And then somehow others heard the CD and soon enough England began sending copies of it, as she puts it in the liner notes of the new CD, "half way around the world." She was no longer a secret, as those of us who first heard her described England. But while Fascinating Creatures was certainly a fine album (with all the accolades to prove it), the question remained -- could she duplicate her success?

The answer is yes.

In many ways, Family Tree sounds a lot like its predecessor -- a melding of folk and lo-fi indie pop originals that stands out from most of the kids music world in its sound and centeredness, for lack of a better word. England's disks have a way of conjuring musical worlds that start with the security of home life and look outward, all the while sounding like Yo La Tengo or Elizabeth Mitchell or Tanya Donnelly. The debut had songs about tricycles, pancakes, and books we've all read as families; this new CD has songs about ice cream ("I Scream, You Scream"), grandparents ("Fast Train To Grandma's"), and playing with restless energy ("Free To Be Me").

But in other ways, this album shows growth from the debut. For one thing, England broadens her musical palette here, playing with a full band (Tim Thurman and Jeff Koch doing a lot of the work) on the majority of tracks. On the slightly-slow leadoff title track, for example, she offers up banjo while Dog on Fleas' Dean Jones guests on horn. "Best Friends," which also features England on banjo, may as well be a Sufjan Stevens knockoff, but in a good way. Elsewhere England rocks out ("Free To Be Me"), does country (the chugging "Fast Train to Grandma's," with nifty guitar work by Jay Heiselmann), and writes a classic folk song ("Spring Has Sprung").

In addition to the music, England is also challenging herself lyrically, writing a little more indirectly. "Tugboat" (which also features the Jellydots' Doug Snyder) is a sweet little song about how both the child and the parent -- exactly who is not clear -- will be the tugboat that always helps push the other back home. "Tea Party" is a fanciful story of a girl's (and boy's) tea party which includes a bird's commentary on the action. I think England's musical sensibility is still ahead of her lyrical skills (the directness of "Animal Friends," which encourages saving endangered animals, comes off a little flat, for example), but both have grown in the past couple years, no doubt.

Kids ages 3 through 7 will most appreciate the themes here. You can listen to tracks from the album at its CDBaby page. The album is officially released Tuesday, but CDBaby already has copies ready to ship. I should also note the lovely packaging which features (according to England) cut paper and acrylic paint using a roller to give it texture.

With Family Tree, Frances England continues on the promise of her debut, creating a musical world both adventurous and safe. Fans of Fascinating Creatures will thoroughly enjoy the new disk. And there are still lots more people out there who should be her fans. Goodness gracious, this is fabulous; I can hardly wait for disk #3. Definitely recommended.

May 13, 2008

Radiohead and Mr. Stinky Feet

There's a headline I never thought I'd write.

Many months ago I asked whether Radiohead's "pay what you want" model for their In Rainbows CD could work in the kids' music genre.

Well, folks, we're about to find out.

Kansas City's Jim Cosgrove -- yes, Mr. Stinky Feet to his fans -- has announced that starting May 20th through June 3rd his new album Upside Down will be available for downloading at his website for the price of $15, $10, $5, or, yes, $0.

No word yet on whether people can pay $80 for a Upside Down discbox with the album on vinyl and with a bonus CD.

May 10, 2008

Kidzapalooza 2008 Lineup Set. I Think.

It's a little hard to tell because the only place it's available is a less-than-helpfully-formatted Myspace page, but here's the lineup for the Chicago edition, set for August 1-3, 2008.

The Jimmies
Tiny Masters of Today
The Dream Jam Band
Homemade Jamz
The Q Brothers
The Terrible Twos
Perry Farrell
Peter DiStefano & Tor
G Love
Suzy Brack and the New Jack Lords
Paul Green School of Rock All Stars
John Yost's Rhythm Revolution

Considering one of the few bands I'm not familiar with - Suzy Brack and the New Jack Lords - is pegged as "tiki-punk," it's safe to say the stage will bring no small amount of rock.

May 09, 2008

Songs For Mom (Updated, Again)

It's that time of the year once more, when I pull out my list of songs for Mother's Day so you can burn an iTunes playlist and send it to your mom (because who burns CDs anymore?) I've pulled out last year's list and given it a tweak or two...

Here's a list of songs for mothers or songs about mothers, in no particular order. I've avoided lullabies (songs by moms, typically), as well as songs about general parentual units, or songs about moms and dads. (If you're looking for songs about moms and moms, might I recommend AudraRox's excellent "Moms & Dads," which, song title notwithstanding, is about all sorts of families.)

If a song isn't on the list, it's because of one of the three "O"s: Oversight (I knew about the song and just forgot), Omission (I knew about the song and chose to exclude it), or Obtuseness (I didn't know about the song at all). I expect the third category to be fairly large -- it is every year -- so feel free to add your suggestions in the comments section. List after the jump...

"Mama Don't Allow" -- numerous versions; try Brady Rymer's version off of Every Day Is a Birthday
"Mama Hug" -- Brady Rymer, Every Day Is a Birthday
"Mama Is Sad" -- Justin Roberts, Yellow Bus (it's a song about divorce, so I'm guessing it's not gonna go on too many mix tapes)
"Five Little Ducks" -- try version on the Old Town School of Folk Music's Songs For Wiggleworms
"Thank You Mommy" -- The RTTs, Turn It Up Mommy!
"The Coffee Song" -- Ralph's World, At the Bottom of the Sea (not really about moms specifically, but it was the first song that came to my wife's mind when I mentioned the topic of the post)
"Hush Little Baby" -- try version on the Old Town School of Folk Music's Wiggleworms Love You, though it's just as often that Dad is the person buying baby that billy goat
"Mother and I" -- Bill Thomas (and a Circle of Friends), Time Can Be So Magic
"Hope My Mama Says YES!" -- AudraRox, I Can Do It By Myself (more about the kid than the mom, but that's what Mother's Day sometimes ends up being, no?)
"Mommy She Loves Me" -- Ginger Hendrix, Macaroni Boy Eats at Chez Shooby Doo
"Nerves" -- Terri Hendrix, Celebrate the Difference (not really celebratory, but the recipient mom will nod her head in understanding, then ask you to get her a beer)
"A Dozen Roses" and "I Made It For You" -- Peter Himmelman, both off My Green Kite
"From Scratch" -- Justin Roberts, from Pop Fly
"Sleepyhead Mommy" -- Frances England, from the forthcoming Family Tree

Another Kids' Concert I Can't Go To

Attention Phoenix-area peeps: Eric Herman continues his worldwide tour (OK, perhaps not worldwide, but it's been going on for more than a month, so that's impressive enough). This Saturday Herman will be playing at Sunset Library in Chandler (location), starting at 11 AM. Herman's been honing his show for a long time now (more than just a month), and it should be lots of fun.

We'd try to go, but we have two kids with two separate parties to go to at the same time. You do the math.

May 08, 2008

Review: Easy - Secret Agent 23 Skidoo

Easy.jpgI know that the kids' music genre is flowering when less popular subgenres such as kids' hip-hop or kids' country are starting to bubble up. I especially know that that's the case when those genres start producing albums that aren't just "kids songs done in a [fill-in-genre-name] style," but fully realized albums on their own.

Case in point: Easy, the debut kids' CD from Asheville, North Carolina's Cactus. He spends a lot of time rapping and playing with the music collective GFE as Agent 23, but who adopts the cool-kids name Secret Agent 23 Skidoo.. From start to finish, the album is totally geared at kids in its subject matter but is not dumbed down one bit in the creativity of its beats and melody. On its strongest tracks (and there are a number of them), Cactus blends smooth rapping with occasionally eclectic instrumentation ("Luck" features nice banjo work) and an all-positive message.

Sometimes that message is a little more overt -- "Luck" raps about how we make our own luck by knowing what it is we want; "Gotta Be Me" is about how everyone should have their own style, and that's OK. If the message is a bit direct, it's delivered with precision and flowing words. (Even his 5-year-old daughter Saki gets in on the act, very smoothly trading lines with her dad on "Family Tree.")

Perhaps even better are his songs that take a more imaginary bent. "Hot Lava" so completely nails the 7-year-old feeling of pretending on the fly (don't touch the floor! -- it's hot lava! -- jump from couch to couch!) that I'm not sure there is a better kids' song about the power of imagination. Songs about dragons, mermaids, and robots feature in the mix, too. It's very much story-telling with a compelling musical background.

I'm going to peg the messages and stories here as geared primarily for kids ages 4 through 9. You can hear samples of a number of the songs at the album's CDBaby page.

The list of really good kids' hip-hop albums is very short. Not only does Easy go to the top of that list, it should find a lot of fans among people who don't consider themselves big hip-hop fans. It's a really good CD, period -- lots of fun and certainly worthy of repeated spins. Definitely recommended.

May 07, 2008

Kidzapalooza Branches Out

When I first saw this weekend's press release announcing the announcement of the Kidzapalooza 2008 lineup, I was somewhat confused. Lollapalooza and its Kidzapalooza stage is scheduled for CHICAGO August 1-3. The Paul Frank Store Los Angeles is, uh, located in LOS ANGELES. As the poster announcing the announcement says, "Of course!" What better place to announce a lineup for a Chicago show than in LA? Perhaps they can also tell us what's coming to the Art Institute of Chicago in early 2009.

But then came this announcement (hat tip: Idolator) that Kidzpalooza is getting its own stand-alone concert at the Hollywood Bowl September 28, with pre-show activities starting at 4:30 PM and the show starting at 6:30 PM. The only artist currently announced is chief Lollapalooza poobah Perry Farrell.

While I think this is a great idea, and one producer Tor Hyams had previously suggested would happen, two concerns:
1) Ticket prices are $12 to $70 (!) dollars. I know, I know, a bunch of people can afford that on the upper end. And that's a pittance compared to, say, Hannah Montana tickets. But I gotta tell you, it was hard enough convincing people to plop down $20 for a Dan Zanes ticket. Anything more than that, even for more multiple artists, is going to be hard...
2) 6:30 PM on a Sunday night? Monday morning's going to be a pain getting the kids ready...

I'd also note this is the same weekend as Austin City Limits Festival, which will certainly make Tor a busy man that week.

Anyway, tickets for the Hollywood Bowl show go on sale Saturday morning at 10 AM. And once you've done that (or not), go over for the events at the Paul Frank Store Los Angeles (which also includes a raffle for a trip to the festival in Chicago). Schedule is after the jump.

11:00AM Raffle begins
12:00PM Lunch is served through 2:00PM
12:30PM Paul Green’s School of Rock students rock
1:00PM Perry Farrell and Julius announce the summer Kidzapalooza line up
1:30PM Paul Green’s School of Rock students rock more
2:00 PM Cupcakes, cotton candy, popcorn and ice cream served
2:30PM Perry and Julius announce prizewinners
3:00PM Paul Green’s School of Rock students rock once more

Snacktime Leftovers

I couldn't squeeze everything I wanted to into my day of Snacktime stuff. Mostly because the stuff I wanted to talk about hadn't actually been, well, posted yet. (I tried to convince them that Monday was the day to do this, but did they listen to me? No.)

But better late than never. First, if you're on the fence about Snacktime (and you probably shouldn't be after reading my review), go over to AOL's New Releases page and you can stream the entire CD.

Second, my friends at the Land of Nod music store have posted their latest Nodcast Podcast with Ed Robertson of Barenaked Ladies. It's another fun podcast, with Ed playing acoustic versions of "Raisins" and "A Word For That" and spins a couple other tracks from the record. He also plays a game called (echo voice here) "Is It A Guitar?," lets you compose the Nodcast Podcast theme song, and answers exactly why the band got its name.

May 05, 2008

Review: Snacktime - Barenaked Ladies

Snacktime.jpgI'd like to think that my offhand comment 7 months ago ("Why has this band not recorded a kids' CD?") was the genesis of Snacktime, the first kids' music album from Canada's Barenaked Ladies. The band, after all, recorded the album in November and December of last year, a good month after my comment. I gotta tell you, if I was somehow responsible in some tiny way for the album, released tomorrow, that would justify a lot of my work here at Zooglobble -- this is one fun set of songs. (Note: I'm not delusionary enough to suggest that I actually am. But it's nice to dream, eh?)

Barenaked Ladies always seemed to me a little bit the yin to They Might Be Giants' yang when it came to geek rock -- while TMBG focused on absurdly catchy melodies, BNL's strength was more lyrical. From the goofiness of "If I Had a $1000000" to the wistfulness of "Brian Wilson" to the, er, I-have-no-idea-iness of "One Week" (which I will proudly admit to still adoring), the band always had a good narrative line and a fascination with words.

A fascination with words is a good thing to have for certain kids' albums, and it pays off well here. From the very first song -- "7 8 9," which takes the old kids' pun of a hungry #8 and #9's sad demise and turns it into a Western stomp that touches on Gordie Howe, Pluto, and canine (teeth) -- lovers of wordplay will rejoice here. There are several wordy classics here. On the soundplay of "Food Party" the band perfectly anthropomorphizes (sonically) tastes such as "sweet," "sour," and "bland." "Crazy ABCs" pretty much writes the final ABC song ever (sample line "G is for gnarly"). "Vegetable Town" is a slow, dreamy song about a place "Where we can ride the zucchini subway / Or watch the carrot planes land on the runway." "I Can Sing," on the other hand, is a zippy bluegrass tune which features lines like "I can dance I can dance I can dance faster / I tried to keep up but it was a disaster. / One more move and I'm gonna be the master! / So crank it up loud on the ghetto blaster."

Not every song works -- the title track, for example, mostly consists of musicians and actors (Geddy Lee, Lyle Lovett, Sarah McLachlan, Jason Priestly) phoning in their favorite snack foods, and after the first listen you're likely to skip forward (and probably once more, past "Popcorn"). But that's what happens when you put 24 tracks on a 54-minute album -- some are bound to be duds. And some songs aren't going to be of much interest to your kindergartner, but just means that songs like the awesomely rocking "Allergies" will make them convulse with laughter 3 years from now and make you hope that Dr. Demento is still recording his radio show, because it deserves to be there. (He is.)

The nice thing with all the silliness is it makes the more serious songs stand out more. "My Big Sister" encapsulates in just under a minute the woes of a younger brother and hand-me-downs. "Bad Day" is an "everything will be better" song that avoids sappiness.

The album will be of most interest to kids ages 5 through 9 and adults who got rid of their copies of Stunt a while back. [Raises hand.] You can hear some songs at their Myspace page or "Crazy ABCs" here.

By the way, you can also order the CD with a book from the band's own website. The book isn't absolutely essential -- it's just the lyrics to the songs with drawings from band member Kevin Hearn interspersed with the text -- but it's a solidly-bound hardcover, and I can't think of too many other kids' CDs where I would be more likely to read along to the lyrics with my kids than this one. It may be worth the extra $4 or $5 to you...

Snacktime is too long by half, kids will be bored by some of the songs, and "Humungous Tree" should probably be written as "Humongous Tree." And even with all that, it's still a great CD. It's not perfect, but the joy and spontaneity in its creation shines through. The Barenaked Ladies have crafted a CDs that will appeal to just about every family member, at least most of the time. It's a classic Barenaked Ladies album, just a little bit... smaller. Highly recommended.

1, 2, mp3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 -- What About 9?

I promised you more Barenaked Ladies stuff today -- this time it's a heads up that if you liked "7 8 9" from the video earlier today, for a limited time you can download that song for free here.

Gordie Howe fans need this in their collection, pronto.

Interview: Tyler Stewart (Barenaked Ladies)

TylerStewart2.jpgTyler Stewart was the last of the founding members of the rock group Barenaked Ladies, which means he's only been with the band for 18 of its 20 years of existence. He's been the band's drummer ever since. Stewart chatted by phone last week about what his kids listen to (Neil Young and High School Musical, just to begin with); his views on the relative merits of Barney, Sesame Street, and Beethoven; the genesis of their first kids' CD Snacktime; and what's to come for the band. (Photo courtesy Wikipedia.)

Zooglobble: I'm going to start the with the question I always ask whenever I interview someone and that is -- what were your musical influences growing up?
Tyler Stewart: Well, my parents are pretty young so they were into popular and good music. My dad was a big fan of British rock bands like the Who, Led Zeppelin, and the Rolling Stones, and my mom was really into Motown music and soul. There was always good music playing in my house.

Specifically, what do you listen to with your kids?
Well, my kids, their dad's a musician, so it's a pretty varied catalog, and my wife, too, has pretty good taste in music. My iPod has 14,000 songs on it, they run the whole gamut. Recently my daughter Millie was saying, "Gawd, I'm so tired of this old people's music -- I don't want to hear any more Neil Young." My daughter's nine. "I like Neil Young, but not all the time." Yeah, I'm guilty of that.

Right now they're heavily into High School Musical. High School Musical 1 and 2 is like the Grease of today.

Both my daughters really like Alison Krauss and her fiddle music. Of course they love the Beatles, the universal music of all time. And we really love to listen to They Might Be Giants, their three kids' albums, together. They know every word, and they love 'em.

Do they listen to the Alison Krauss-Robert Plant CD?
You know, I haven't gotten that one yet. I can't believe I haven't... They like the live record she did, the 2-CD one she put out 4 years ago -- they really like that one a lot.

My kids, they run the gamut, they like all kinds of different music. That's sort of my goal. When I got them iPods, I filled them with all kinds of varied different kinds of music so that nothing seems surprising. I don't want them to have any musical prejudices or fears at that age. So that when they want to listen to Hilary Duff, OK, we'll put on Hilary Duff...

But that's their own choice, and they've listened to everything else...

And it's for them. When you become a parent, you really realize that some stuff is for kids. I think my epiphany with that came with Barney, and I said, I don't really like this very much. But my child is absolutely enthralled and loves it. And I realized, this is not for me.

Who in the band first broached the idea of doing a kids', a family friendly, CD?
Well, I think it's one of those things we always thought we had in us, when we started to have kids. It's funny when you're in a band and one day you realize, wow, there's more kids in this band than band members, 11 to 5, more than 2-to-1.

One of the things you spend a lot of time with when you're in a rock band is juggling. Trying to juggle your family life with being away on the road and still putting enough dedication and craft into your art and also still being a present father. That takes up so much of your energy. And then it was almost collectively we thought, you know we could do a record for kids, and have our kids involved. We are parents, we listen and watch enough kids' entertainment as it is, why don't we make something that we really like, too. Because every so often something comes along in the land of kids' entertainment that just blows everyone away, like The Incredibles. Or I remember back in the '70s there was the "triangle-heads" thing with Harry Nilsson...

The Point?
Yeah, The Point! Made for kids, but everyone loved it. Most Disney fare, in general. You watch something like Mary Poppins, and everyone is thrilled. You know, bridging that gap between kids and parents.

So we knew we had that sense of play. We knew that we understood children and what makes 'em tick because there's so many hanging around the band -- we thought, hey, we could do this. And then our manager, Mr. Shrewd, Terry McBride, said, "For the first fifteen years of your career, I worked your [---] right off and had you on the treadmill. But now that I have children, I understand." He said it'd a great idea for you to put out a kids' record.

BarenakedLadies08.jpgIn the grand scheme of the changing music business -- now artists are selling very few records. Careers have got a whole different shape because of the internet. The traditional models of putting a record out, and touring, and going to radio to sell a song, all that stuff has really changed in the past 5 to 10 years. We were at the point in our career where we were coming to the end of our major label record deal and we decided to do things on our own and navigate things differently. One of the philosophies behind that is to use your assets, to realize that everything you do, now that it's not owned by a major label company, is an asset. (Photo courtesy Nettwerk.)


So we put out a Christmas record. That's something that'll be out there forever; it's not based on a hit single or a tour, it's based on people picking it up and playing it every Christmas. We did some TV soundtrack work, we did the music for a Shakespeare production, and a kids' album fits into that milieu of us branching out and trying a whole bunch of new and different ways to get our music and our name out there.

I know that you are not the main songwriter in the group, but were the songs written for the album, or were there a lot of tunes or lyrics that were written 5 or 10 years ago and you just had never found the proper place on your "adult" albums to put something?
No, all these songs were task-specific. We came in and we wrote songs for this record. Kevin Hearn contributed a lot of songs. He really took it on and said, this is great, I'm writing kids' music. And Ed [Robertson] wrote a whole bunch, too, and Steven [Page] and Jim [Creeggan] and myself also wrote songs. It was really a bandwide effort. We're very excited by the fact that we got together with this task-specific and essentially wrote and recorded a whole album within a month-and-a-half. Recorded it all in three weeks. It was just quick, bam-bam, the way we did it. And I think that kinda shows in the material as well. Sometimes when you're making a studio record -- coming off our last studio record, where we put 30 songs on it, spent a lot of time, six months, working on the record -- it was kind of liberating to just go in and have a sense of fun about it, and not being to precious about it.

And there are at least 2 or 3 songs on there that aren't much more than a minute. They're song fragments -- you could have spent a lot of time trying to flesh that out, and you thought, no, this is nice. Why exclude it?
Exactly. There are some little perfect moments on there. And you think of the attention span of kids, too, it's not always so great. You can blame Sesame Street for that. [Laughs.] I remember reading this scholarly critique of Sesame Street and how it was a perfect reflection of the new television generation. But that was my absolute favorite show. Barenaked Ladies have probably been more inspired by Sesame Street than any of the works of Beethoven or Shostakovich.

That snippet... I love snippets like that. They get right to the point and move on to the next thing. It's like humor. The longer the setup usually the worse the joke, but the more spontaneous and quick something is, the more you're laughing.

The PR materials implied this might be a one-off thing, but if this did really well, or even if it did really poorly, but you had lots of fun, would you consider doing another kids' album?
Yeah, sure. Like I said, the way we approach our whole career now, anything's possible. The collective will would have to be there. "Hey, this is really rewarding and exciting." On the other hand, it's really special that we did this. The experience was fun and liberating, sometimes you want to protect those experiences -- sometimes when you revisit something it doesn't have the same kind of charm or loses its luster. But at this point in our career we're not saying no to anything, except perhaps a reality show based on our drug addictions. Because we don't have any... The main thing for us is that we keep making and performing creative and fun music that people want to listen to. We're 20 years in now, any way we can do that, that's great. Mostly it's about satisfying our own creative urges and keeping our fanbase dancing.

What's next for the band? You're doing a promo tour for the CD, are you planning on any other concerts? You're going into the studio later this year for your next "adult" album?
That's correct, the next A-dult album.

A-dult
Triple X. [Laughs]

That's what you should name the next Barenaked Ladies album. Triple X. Just to differentiate it from Snacktime.
Yeah, that's basically it. We decided to not tour this record per se, large scale. We may end up doing a few shows here and there. It'd be fun to do a "family fun day," or something like that. But as of right now, those are just in the elementary planning stages, so we're just going to do this promo run and see how that goes and sort of get down to work writing the next studio record. It's kind of a pivotal moment for us -- it's our 20-year anniversary. We have a boxed set coming out too in the next little while with all our Warners stuff...

Happy Cinco de Barenaked Ladies

... or is that Barenaked de Mayo?

Anyway, in honor of tomorrow's release of Barenaked Ladies' first CD for kids, Snacktime, I've got a bunch of BNL/Snacktime stuff to post today.

First off, is the video for "7 8 9," the album's leadoff track... This has been out for a while, but you can't go wrong with animated numbers. 'Tis the season of animated numbers, I think.


May 02, 2008

Stuck in Flyover Country

Sigh... while Bill and Audra stink it up with a whole bunch of people out in Brooklyn this weekend (in a good way), there are bunch of artists headed out to Stagecoach to play their Half-Pint Hootenanny.

I've got a full weekend myself planned, but, y'know, Indio is pretty darn close...

For those of you interested in Half-Pint Hootenanny, the schedule's after the jump, plus details on the special something organizer Karen Rappaport McHugh promised for the weekend....

McHugh said she's bringing a GIANT CHICKEN. I saw a picture, folks, and she ain't kidding. 20 feet tall. Seriously.

Saturday
12:15-12:45 ....... Uncle Ron and Aunt Sandii
12:55-1:40 ......... The Bon Family and California All-Stars Cloggers
1:50-2:20 ........... Tom Freund and Friends
2:30-3:00 ........... The BummKinn Band
3:10-3:40 ........... Buck Howdy with B.B.
3:50-4:20 ........... Brady Rymer
4:30-5:00 ............ Kid Fiddlers
5:10-6:00 ............ Croakers Youth/Family Square Dancing Club

Sunday
12:15-12:45 ............ Uncle Ron and Aunt Sandii
12:55-1:40 .............. Croakers Youth/Family Square Dancing Club
1:50-2:20 ................ The BummKinn Band
2:30-3:00 ................ Tom Freund and Friends
3:10-3:40 ................ Brady Rymer
3:50-4:20 ................ Buck Howdy with B.B.
4:30-5:00 ................ Kid Fiddlers
5:10-6:00 ................ The Bon Family and California All-Star Cloggers

Kids Do TMBG's Seven

Like the title says. The fact they brought in a trombone slays me.

May 01, 2008

Video: "Gotta Be Me" - Secret Agent 23 Skidoo

I'll have more about North Carolina's Secret Agent 23 Skidoo and his first kids' hip-hop CD Easy in the near future, but for the moment, let me just leave you with this, his new video, for "Gotta Be Me." Pretty simple, with kids jumping around, but with sufficient production values and a fun song to make it worth 4 minutes of your (or your kids') time.

Secret Agent 23 Skidoo - "Gotta Be Me"


Kids' Music -- Sites

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Kids' Music -- Other Media

Kids' Music -- Consumption

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Phoenix: All Music Is Local

Not Quite A Uke Addiction

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