Miss Mary Mack Pays 99 Cents To See the Elephants Jump Over the Fence

Ella Jenkins, First Lady of Children's Music, who's been recording music for kids for 50 years, has sadly been virtually absent from music downloading. Until now. You can now get, oh, about 500 Ella Jenkins songs at the Smithsonian's Global Sound website. And the songs will soon make their way to other music download sites (such as familiar ones starting with the letter "i" or "e"). And while you're tooling around that website, make sure you check out this page and the "Children's Music" program (#16). It's a quality, 54-minute introduction to Smithsonian Folkways' kids' collection -- it includes not only the classics (Ella -- with an interview to boot, Woody, Lead Belly, Pete) but some other unfamiliar stuff, like an awesome "Brown Girl in the Ring" by Lord Invader and the Calypso Orchestra about 22 minutes in. Worth checking out if you've got the time.

Review in Brief: The Broken Record - Twink

TheBrokenRecord.jpgTake a toy instrument-obsessed guy, mix in some classic kiddie records, and through in a whole both of sampling technology, and what do you get? Twink. The brainchild of Mike Langlie, Twink is his project for mixing together samples from kiddie records a good half-century old with modern samples and drum loop. Langlie's third Twink album, The Broken Record (2005), showcases the results. Sadly, this is one of those ideas that doesn't sound quite as cool as it sounds, if you know what I mean. In other words, I had high hopes that the recontextualized sounds would result in something eminently listenable, sort of a Odelay for the kids. And, you know, sometimes it works out exactly like that. "Pussy Cat" is a nifty tune, mixing a whole bunch of kitty-related lyrics with a Tin Pan melody on top of a bunch of drum beats. I also liked "Hip Hopera," which as you might expect from the title sets "March of the Toreadors" to a hip-hop beat. But more often than not, the funky mixtures don't hold up so well as songs in repeated listenings. So many different snippets are crammed in that the songs themselves don't hold together well. The spoken-word tracks are not particularly compelling. The tracks are interesting, perhaps, intellectually, and it might be fun to play "spot the snippet" with your kids, but as a listening experience, it's a definited mixed bag. The album is definitely an all-ages affair, but I think younger kids, ages 2 through 6, might enjoy it more so than others. You can hear samples from all of Twink's albums at Langlie's Music page. Langlie's putting together a full band for his upcoming album, so I've got higher hopes for that album. I think it might have some of the consistency between tracks that this album doesn't really have. While The Broken Record shows a very creative mind at work, it doesn't necessarily compel the listener's ongoing attention in the long run.

KidVid Tournament 2007 Quarterfinals: "Pieces of 8ight" (1) vs. "Ya Gotta Have Pep" (3)

The second quarterfinal matchup of KidVid Tournament 2007 features the final in the Ella Jenkins Region, pitting the #1 seed "Pieces of 8ight" from Captain Bogg & Salty against the #3 seed, "Ya Gotta Have Pep" from John Lithgow. Vote in the comments below. Rules: Video with most votes wins. One vote per e-mail address, please. Votes due by Friday 11 PM-ish East Coast time. "Pieces of 8ight" - Captain Bogg & Salty "Ya Gotta Have Pep" - John Lithgow Click here here to choose the format you want to watch on Razor & Tie's website or click below:

"Podcast" Is Sort Of A Weird Word, Too

Peter Himmelman has recorded the latest version of the Land of Nod Nodcast Podcast. Himmelman, who ranks with the best in his enjoyment of words and his ability to look at familiar things from unfamiliar angles, is every bit as skewed -- in a good way -- on podcast as he is on record. The podcast includes three of the best tunes from his My Green Kite album, plus a couple others recorded live. And in the small-but-burgeoning genre of songs-specifically-written-for-radio/podcasts, Himmelman's tune might just be the best.

KidVid Tournament 2007 Quarterfinals: "I Hog the Ground" (1) vs. "Tricycle" (2)

Round 1 wasn't enough -- now the popular videos start going head-to-head. Round 2 of KidVid Tournament 2007 kicks off with the final in the Lead Belly Region, pitting the #1 seed "I Hog The Ground (Groundhog Song)" from Steve Burns and Steven Drozd against the #2 seed, "Tricycle" from Frances England. Vote in the comments below. Rules: Video with most votes wins. One vote per e-mail address, please. Votes due by Thursday 11 PM-ish East Coast time. [Note: As always, sorry about just showing links instead of embedding the videos. I'm trying to keep the playing field relatively level here -- if I can't show both videos here (i.e., they're not both on YouTube and clearly placed there at the artists' request) I'm only going to show the links for both of 'em.] "I Hog The Ground (Groundhog Song)" - Steve Burns and Steven Drozd When the more-accessible version inevitably gets removed (again), go to Jack's Big Music Show player to watch. Currently it's the video that plays whenever you go to the page, but if it's not the case later, just roll over the picture of a balding guy with the "I [Heart] Ground" shirt and click. "Tricycle" - Frances England To view this video, click on the YouTubed version here.

Radio Shows For Kids Like Us

Is Professor Schnoodle ready for his close-up? Amongst all the talk of songwriting workshops and sold-out song camps, I dropped Robbie Schaefer a line this week to see if he'd be doing something similar. The answer was no. Why? Turns out Robbie will become the last on-air personality for XMKids, the kids' channel for XM Radio. They've been running ads for the past couple weeks, but I've missed 'em -- he'll be broadcasting from 7 to 11 PM East Coast time Monday through Thursday and 10 AM - 2 PM Saturdays. If the show is half as amusing as Songs For Kids Like Us or how Schaefer is in interviews, it should be, well, moderately-to-definitely amusing.