Not satisfied with listening to "Lovely, Love My Family" by the Roots? Looking for a lo-fi version of the Noggin video that's been airing a whole bunch to amuse your desparate young'un?
Here you go....
Repeat After Me: Kids Place Live

It's Not A Performance On Grammy Night, But Still...
If they get nominated, I don't think that Justin Roberts or Laurie Berkner are going to be performing at the big Grammy ceremony on Sunday, February 8, but at the very least a nomination will get them a Grammy weekend performance. Word from Muddy Girl Productions' Karen Rappaport McHugh that all 2008 Grammy Award nominees in the children's music category will be invited to perform at Los Angeles' new Grammy Museum. (The museum is so new, it isn't even open yet -- it opens December 6.) Anyway, the nominees will perform on Friday, February 6 (for school-children) and Saturday, February 7 (for families) from 10 to 11 AM. Spoken word nominees will also be included in the event.
Even potentially more interesting (if you're in the LA area, at least), the Grammy Children's Music Showcase is just the first in a new concert series at the Museum. Rappaport McHugh's been planng a monthly children’s music series which will take place in their 200 seat theatre. The series will focus on a different genre of music each month. They've already compiled a list of bands that the museum is interested in inviting to perform, but artists who believe they fit into a particular month's genre are still welcome to contact Karen at "muddygirlproductions AT verizon.net."
The schedule by genre is as follows:
Video: "They" - Me3
It's not really a music video -- even though it comes from a music album -- and for the most it's not really animated in the sense that it conveys motion.
Rather, this one-minute long spoken-word video of The Thin King's "They" from Me3 is how Shel Silverstein would be communicating today if he were still alive. Perhaps it's even a long-hidden outtake -- Jason Kleinberg's drawing looking not a little bit like Shel's. I think Shel would approve.
Me3 - "They"
Review: Dragonfly - Johnny Bregar

No Middle Road: Neil Sedaka To Release Kids Album
When I hear about another adult artist making an album for kids, usually it makes some sort of sense -- they've got kids themselves, or perhaps they have a touch of goofiness that makes for an easy relationship with a kids' audience.
I can feel safe in saying that I never thought I'd include Neil Sedaka in the ever-burgeoning list.
And I feel doubly safe in saying that I never thought Sedaka would take to reworking his own classic songs for the kids' set.
I mean, I'm used to seeing punk and hip-hop and metal and classic rock songs reworked into kid-friendly tunes. But I'm not used to seeing Mick Jones or Missy Elliott or Metallica or Robert Plant reworking their own songs. What happens when a certified master of the pop song tweaks... himself?
We're about to find out -- on January 6, 2009, Sedaka will release Waking Up Is Hard To Do, featuring 11 tracks, including re-workings ("spoofs"? "re-imaginings" -- what the heck do we call these?) of "Breaking Up is Hard To Do," "Where the Boys Are," and "Love Will Keep Us Together."
As I said in the title to this piece -- I'm not sure there is any middle road here. It will either be a mess or something touched with a bit of genius.
Here's the tracklisting and album art.