Reminder: Win Lunch Money's Silly Reflection!

Just a reminder, folks -- you can win a copy of Lunch Money's Silly Reflection album. All you have to do is go here by 9 PM west coast time tonight and suggest a name for Lunch Money's new album, scheduled to be released in January 2009. What's that, you say? You already own the CD? Well, then, enter so you might win a copy for that friend of yours who isn't sure about this whole "kids' music" thing. And if you don't already own the CD? You. Have. No. Excuse. Enter now.

Video: "Hangin' Around" - Debbie and Friends

I can't say that I thought "Hangin' Around," one of the tracks from Debbie and Friends' Story Songs and Sing Alongs was more than a mildly pleasant tune, but the new video for the song has done what good videos often do -- make you listen with new ears. The song lists a bunch of animal group names (which, incidentally, seem to be a whole bunch of verbs -- "flock," "mob," "span," "clutch," etc.) with some cute computer-animated renditions of said animal groups. I dig the sheep -- I think kids will really dig the whole thing. Debbie and Friends - "Hangin' Around"

Songs For Dads (Further Updated)

Father's Day is hardly a holiday that inspires much in the way of music (it probably ranks just above Arbor Day and below Flag Day in that regard), but at least the kids music genre has a few entries if you're looking to put together a kid-friendly list. You can read last year's list, but there's always new stuff to add. (Along with stuff I've forgotten, overlooked, or cruelly dismissed. You'll let me know, I'm sure, what falls in those categories in the comments.) The list, after the jump:

Good Thing It Wasn't Dog on Fleas

I have no idea what this means at all, but... A couple nights back, I had a dream in which I ate from a bag of Fritos. A bag of specially-branded Princess Katie and Racer Steve Fritos. And not just any old Fritos. Fast & Feisty Fritos. Seriously. Maybe it was the alliteration. Frito-Lay -- if you need more ideas, just call me.

Contest: Name The New Lunch Money Album!

If anticipation for a new album is represented by "E," awesomeness of most recent album is "A," and the amount of time since that most recent album is "T," then E = A * T. And for me there is no "E" higher in the kids music world right now than for the next Lunch Money album. Their first album, Silly Reflection (review), is a classic, filled with tiny songwriting gems. The album was released in late 2004, so when their new album is released on January 17, 2009, - the date they will appear on the band's website and first sell them at a show, according to the band - it will be a looong 4+ years between releases (and an entirely different kids' music landscape). Molly Ledford told me their tentative name for the album, saying it "captures the kind of kid-generated fun we are trying to salute in our songs," (and I agree, it does) but says the name's "not official." So here's where I -- or rather, you -- can provide Molly and the band some (unsolicited) help. And win a copy of their first album in the bargain.

In Between Naps: The Cure in Concert

I went to see The Cure last night. I wasn't planning on it, but about 3 hours before the show my neighbor called and said they had an extra ticket. So that's how I found myself in our cavernous 5,000-seat theatre downtown, way in the back, watching the band. As a suburban teenager of the '80s, the Cure are embedded in my musical memories, and they're impossible to get out. But I'm really only a "Greatest Hits" fan, not hardcore, so while I faintly recognized some of the songs that are nearly 30 years old at this point, I was waiting for more of the mid-to-late-'80s stuff. Oh well. If you are a fan, I think you'll like the show -- they did seem to play a broad range of stuff and the new songs they played weren't half-bad. What I wasn't prepared for was just how much the show, well, rocked. I mean, seriously. I'd never reflected on how important the bass and guitar lines were in their songs, but the mix last night brought them front and center and they sounded great. (It also helped me how hear perfectly-crafted of a pure pop song "Lovesong" is.) The only downside is that ur-Goth (or Goth-father) Robert Smith's vocals weren't out in front, and I've always thought his vocals on record were what made it all work. In fact, by choosing to RAWK, some of the nimbleness, both vocally and sonically, disappeared completely. It was a good show, but I got to sleep at 12:30 and rose with the sun at 5:00, so it's been difficult not to fall asleep at my computer or in my lunch today. So click to the jump and find out how I'm addressing my lack of sleep and those of you asking, "But, Stefan, what in the world does this have to do with kids' music?"