While I could never take the place of This Might Be A Wiki, I thought it might be good to put a listing of relevant YouTube, mp3, and newsclippings for They Might Be Giants' new Here Come the 123s CD/DVD due out from Disney Sound on February 5. That way I don't have to constantly post every new item. Even though I probably should, because they're a whole heckuva lot of fun.
Sites of Note:
Official
They Might Be Giants homepage
TMBG download page
Disney's TMBG page
They Might Be Giants on Myspace
Not So Official. But Pretty Useful.
My Here Come the 123s review
All things Here Come the 123s-related found here
All things They Might Be Giants found here
My interview with John Flansburgh
This Might Be A Wiki
Giants Online
Here Come the 123s song listing (with video links and director info)
Boys And Girls (Really) in America: Tad Kubler Plays Show For the Kids
Hold Steady guitarist Tad Kubler (who, I'm pretty sure, is a parent) is taking some time out from recording the Hold Steady's new album to play New York's KiDROCKERS series. This Saturday afternoon he'll be playing New York City's Living Room with Langhorne Slim and The War Eagles.
Gonna walk around, gonna walk around, gonna walk around and drink (some chocolate milk).
(Hat tip: Pitchfork)
CD/DVD Review: Here Come the 123s - They Might Be Giants

Gosh, A Playdate? OK, I'll Bring the CDs
Hola! and welcome to those of you stopping by from Babble's Strollerderby. Amy kindly gave me a shout-out yesterday and, yes, I'm happy to bring the CDs. Got plenty of 'em... What kind of snacks are you bringing?
New Music: "La Piragua" - Dan Zanes
Dan Zanes has made available a second track from his upcoming Nueva York! CD. The track is "La Piragua," and it's got a sinewy melodic line and groove that I think will lead to a lot of swaying dancing in concert (or possibly family rooms). That's Sonia De Los Santos joining Dan on vocals. And dig the guitar work.
Zanes says it's a Colombian song about a mysterious small boat written during the 1960¹s by Jose Barros, one of the country's most recognized cumbia songwriters. Barros, who also wrote "El Pescador," another Colombian song included in the album, died earlier this year.
Stream "La Piragua" (as well as the previously released "Colas") at Dan's Myspace page. Nueva York! is out in April on Festival Five Records.
Could They Might Be Giants Break the Billboard Top 10?
So last week's Billboard charts were pretty anemic, as Idolator pointed out that the 61,000 albums Alicia Keys sold of As I Am was the second-lowest chart topper in the SoundScan era. And once you go down the list, it's kinda shocking to find out that 27,000 albums can get you a Top 10 slot -- 27,000 albums used to get you a swift kick in the tail if you were the major-label A&R person for an album that debuted with those sales totals.
This week's charts were little better, with the Juno soundtrack selling 65,000 albums and the Hannah Montana 2 disk placing 10th again, this time selling 30,000 albums.
So what does this have to do with kids music, our little corner of the music world? Well, you're probably aware about this They Might Be Giants CD/DVD, Here Come the 123s, which is released next week? (That was sarcasm, of course you're aware.)
Well, I think Here Come the 123s could break the Billboard Top 10. Not the kid audio chart -- the whole enchilada.
Think about it -- its predecessor, Here Come the ABCs went gold (500,000 50,000 albums) in just 2 1/2 months. The album is, at the time of this writing, sitting at #21 in Amazon's Bestsellers list, right around Billboard Top 20 artists like Colbie Caillat, Daughtry, and Mary J. Blige. Their podcast for kids is a huge hit on iTunes. I mean, really, why couldn't they sell 35,000 - 40,000 copies the first week of release? Frankly, the only reason why I didn't ask why They Might Be Giants reach #1 is that that honor will likely go to Jack Johnson, who's got a new album coming out next week, too. (And who knows a little bit about kids music himself.)