Head on over to Dan Zanes' new blog, The Welcome Table, for a free download of a track recorded as part of the session for Zanes' upcoming 2008 album En Latino.
The new song, "Colas," is not a tribute to highly sugared carbonated beverages. Rather, it is (in DZ's words), "is a traditional son jarocho from Veracruz, Mexico introduced to me by the Villa-Lobos Brothers, a trio from Veracruz now living in Nueva York." The opening riff sounds a bit like "Catch That Train," but then it moves into a slightly more traditional sound. Zanes' Spanish sounds passable. The whole track is a bunch of fun.
For Those Of You Celebrating Your Winter Holiday Now...
My major winter holiday isn't for another two weeks and then some (and, yeah, I'll have some goodies in that regard), but for those of you looking for some kid-music-oriented spin on your Festival of Lights, Yosi is hosting "HanuKids" on Saturday from 7-9 Eastern on XM Radio's Radio Hanukkah. Yosi promises "true life stories, music, candle lighting, trivia, nosh and plenty of laughs." Not quite sure how the candle lighting will work on radio, but, hey, I'm not Jewish, so what do I know?. (And if you aren't an XM subscriber but want to check it out, you can get a free trial for XM's online service here.)
Something Else!
Not really. In fact, I posted something about this a month ago, but hey, now it's on YouTube with a little extra content.
They Might Be Giants are doing video podcasts -- "Podcast For Kids!" -- to plug their upcoming Here Come the 123s, and the first one, with "High Five," is up. If all it was was the video, I wouldn't have bothered, but the podcast also includes "bumpers" from the John and John sock puppets. It includes this classic line at the end of the piece -- "Come back next week for another song... about letters... or numbers... or something else... waaaaaahhh."
Trust me, coming from the mouths of sock puppets, it's pretty funny. As for the videos on the band's site promised by the album's PR materials, well, they're still not there.
What Does An Acoustic Bicycle Sound Like?
If you want to know, then check out the latest DadLabs video, an interview with the Jellydots. Listen to the band discuss such issues as who kids really learn to cuss from and (about 4 minutes or so into the piece) chief 'Dot Doug Snyder play "Bicycle" on acoustic guitar. That song still holds up even without the amplification.
Recess Monkey in Concert. Film At 11. Or Maybe 6.
I think the world of Seattle's Recess Monkey, and so does Seattle local television. One station recently featured the band on its nightly newscast, and it's notable for clips of the band in concert and (teaching individually) in the classroom. It's also notable for the anchor saying at the end of the clip, "They even have CDs and t-shirts," as if the idea that a band playing for kids might actually record some of their songs is a bunch of insanity. Crazy!
Review in Brief: Best Friends - Ellen and Matt
