Readers Who Need Readers: Upbeat Passover Music

Readers. Readers who need... readers. Are the luckiest readers... in the world. Got a request from a reader as follows:
I'm looking for some upbeat Passover Song and Dance Music for children between the ages of 6- 12. Something we can beat tambourines too and for the most part has English lyrics but a Hebrew tone.
I don't think the Why Not Sea Monsters? discs are quite what this reader is looking for, and other than that I don't have any good ideas. But I'm sure you do. E-mail me or just go ahead and share them in the comments. Thanks.

Review: Sir Jerry's World - Sir Jerry

SirJerrysWorld.jpgGet this man a TV show. Now. Wondering what in the world I'm talking about? Go check out the website or the music video (lower right-hand corner of the "house" -- the sky-blue horizon room -- yeah, I know it sounds ridiculous, but it's a good indication of the creativity at work with this artist. Take one listen to Sir Jerry's World, the 2006 release and second kids' album from Toronto-based Sir Jerry, and tell me that that 37-minute album wouldn't make for a great episode of television, regardless of whether you're 8 or 38. Sir Jerry, er, Jerry Levitan, interviewed John Lennon -- yes, that John Lennon -- when he (Jerry) was just 14 years old. As a result, a lot of his press coverage tends to make Beatles comparisons, but I don't hear it too much. Sure, perhaps in songs such as "The Chi L'in Purse," the Eastern sounds of the story song give it a very Beatles-go-to-India effect, but Sir Jerry explores a much broader musical palette. The horn-based rock of "Sir Jerry's Theme," the played-for-laughs rapping on "Do the Melman," the sheer They Might Be Giants-esque goofiness of "Swinging Through the Portals of Time," the winsome pop of "Superhero," -- all show a very Beatlesque willingness to try new things, but don't really sound like the Beatles. Another more apt comparison musically that's been suggested is David Bowie and Ziggy Stardust, which on tracks such as "King Santa" makes more sense. (And the band, led by Levitan's partner in musical crime Ruben Huizenga, sounds pretty good, too.) With so many different musical approaches and combination of jokey and less-jokey stuff, the album doesn't quite hang together, but it's definitely never boring. The album is targeted mostly at kids ages 4 through 9. You can hear some selected tracks at Sir Jerry's website (go to the room in the upper-left-hand corner and click on the piano to hear 2 songs from each of his albums). With an elaborate stage show (up to 10 people at a time) and time spent acting on Toronto stages, Sir Jerry would seem to be a natural person to tackle a goofy Pee Wee's Playhouse-type TV show. I like Sir Jerry's World the album. But I'd love Sir Jerry's World: The TV Show.

Review: Just Look At You - Jamie Barnett

JustLookAtYou.jpgFor those of you who find CDs with not one, but two, duets between adults and kids well, not worth your time, please move on. You won't like this disk. (Are they gone? Good.) It's a risk, of course, anytime you let a younger child sing lead on an album, but on Just Look At You, the 2005 release from California-based schoolteacher and occasional musician Jamie Barnett, the payoff is more fulfilling than a chorus of KidzBoppers. So is the album itself, a gentle mix of guitar-based folk and other styles with a warm lyrical content. On "The Sun Shines," Barnett duets with his niece Alyssa, and when he describes her as singing "bravely" in the liner notes, the description is apt -- it sounds just like your niece might sound like, and it fits perfectly. On the soft and funky blues "I Love Pancakes," Barnett is backed by a ragged kids' chorus, as he is on a few other tracks. Which isn't to say Barnett is entirely dependent on the younger voices -- perhaps the best track is "Goldilocks," a retelling of the fairy tale that is remiscent in both the tone and the vocals of John Prine's "Jesus - The Missing Years": "She’s not a bad person but I’m telling you / My friend Goldilocks she does things she shouldn’t do / She walks into people’s houses but she doesn’t really care / That she doesn’t even know the people who are living there" Add to that the retelling of the Montgomery bus boycott ("381 Days"), which is given just enough lyricism ("When Rosa Parks sat down / The people around / Did not even know what they saw / What they were looking at then / Was the beginning of the end / Of a hateful unjust law") and a singalong chorus to lift it above most history lessons set to music, and the entire album is suffused with warmth. I think kids ages 3 through 8 are most likely to appreciate the 31-minute album, though its mostly gentle nature may make it appropriate for quiet time for even younger ones. You can hear samples of all the tracks here. Just Look At You is a quietly powerful album, which shows, among other things, how courage can come from taking a stand or just singing along. For a change of pace from brighter, shinier pop, Barnett's album is an excellent choice. Recommended.

ScribbleMonster Loves Spare the Rock, Really Loves Michigan

Did you hear the new ScribbleMonster song on Saturday's Spare the Rock? You really should. (It's about 42 minutes in.) And for those of you wanting the incredibly-catchy "I Wish I Lived In Michigan" on CD, news on ScribbleMonster's Myspace page that the CD is in here. The Myspace page has four cuts from the 49-track (!) CD.

New Year's Resolutions: 2007

I've only occasionally made New Year's resolutions, since there's little about going from December 31 to January 1 that compels me to do resolutions. But, hey, as a tired trope for unsolicited advice, it works great! So here are a few New Year's resolutions for every one else in the kids music world except me. (OK, me, too.) 1. The resurgence of kids music is no longer news. When a trend is so prevalent it gets its own acronym (YAKMA - Yet Another Kids Music Article), it's jumped the shark. So I'd like members of the press to stop writing articles along the lines of, "Have you heard? There are a bunch of new kids musicians. [Insert quotation from Dan Zanes.]" You have until February 2007, the one-year anniversary of the Laurie Berkner DVD release. After that, please come up with a new angle. 2. Stop the madness: Enough with the dissing. Artists: Please, please, please stop defining yourselves by who you're not. OK, you're not Barney, the Wiggles, or Raffi. That tells me nothing except you're not purple, dinosaurs, color-coded, or the man who single-handedly created the kids music section in your local record/bookstore. At the very least, tell me who else you sound like -- Fountains of Wayne? Stevie Wonder? Sabbath? 3. "Have you heard? There's kids music entire families can enjoy!" Yes. Yes we have. And while you're at it, dear, beloved kids musicians and members of the observing press, the idea that "music that the whole family can enjoy" is somehow rare has been pretty much obliterated (if indeed it ever was true). I know that it's marketing hoo-hah, but at this point, I'm close to believing that the presence of that phrase (particularly on press releases) is an indicator that it's not one of those many albums that will be of much interest to parent or child or both. 4. Album art still matters. I've harped on this before, but I'm still amazed at how many kids music albums are completely done a disservice by their covers, bad enough to make me put them at the bottom of my to-listen pile. Perhaps ten years from now, when the college students of the Napster era become parents themselves, will kids music join a lot of other music in being a downloaded medium. But until then, most parents and kids will enjoy their music through a physical medium and nothing says "I'm not giving that as a gift" like something that looks like, well, what I could put together. Please take a little time and find someone to put a little thought into the album packaging. See Lunch Money or Frances England for examples of how to do it. 5. Spend less time listening to recorded music and more time listening to live music. No matter where you live, whether you can hear kids musicians every weekend or once a year, go out and hear music with your family. Doesn't have to be kids' music -- classical, folk, whatever. If it involves dancing on the part of the participants so much the better. 6. Spend less time listening to recorded music and more time playing music. I enjoy discovering all these artists and revisiting old favorites with my family. But I rarely derive more pleasure from those than I do plunking out a tune on the piano, or violin, or ukelele while my family warbles along and shakes whatever rhythmic item they have handy. I doubt my kids will remember of these great albums. I hope they remember singing "Pay Me My Money Down" in the living room. Happy 2007, folks, I hope it's great.