Interview: Doug Snyder (The Jellydots)

Finally had the chance to upload (and post) a nice little interview with the genius behind The Jellydots, Doug Snyder. He played a couple sweet shows here in Phoenix a couple weeks back, and I caught him in between sets. We talked about his guitar, work on his upcoming album, and other Jellydot-ian news. (Oh, and Little Boy Blue wandered in occasionally, so apologies for the odd camera angles for some of the interview.)

Contest: Win "Dizzy" From Lunch Money!

DizzyCover1.jpgA while back, I suggested that preordering Dizzy, the second album from South Carolina's Lunch Money would be an excellent pre-order. I have not wavered from that stance. Of course, you need not pre-order any longer. And, even better, I've got a copy of the excellent new album to give away, courtesy of Molly and her crew. Just list your favorite favorite food (note clever tie-in to the song "Ate Too Much of My Favorite Food" off the new album) in the comment section below. One entry per family, winner chosen at random, all entries due by 8 PM West Coast time Thursday night. Thanks and good luck (and, really, go ahead and get that CD anyway...)

Bunny Clogs Live! Film At 11. Or, Er, On 11.

Local TV morning shows aren't typically a kids' music hotbed, but every now and then it sneaks on between the recipes and weather. Witness the clip below from the Twin Cities' "Showcase Minnesota" show on Channel 11, which features the Bunny Clogs, or at least Adam Levy and his daughters on backup vocals singing the appealing "Midtown Greenway" from the fine More! More! More! disk. (Hat tip: this nice review of their Cedar Cultural Center record release show, replete with pictures, from the City Pages.)

Review: Here I Am - Caspar Babypants (Chris Ballew)

HereIAm.jpgOne thought I had upon spinning Here I Am!, the upcoming first album from Caspar Babypants, the alter ego of Chris Ballew from the Presidents of the United States of America, was that it shouldn't be this easy for someone who spent a lot of years making music for adults to turn his or her attention to the kids music genre and turn out an album that sounds so good. And maybe it isn't easy. But it is good. Now, there's no such thing as an overnight success, and Caspar Babypants is no different. Ballew put together a compilation of kids songs for a Seattle-based organization way back in 2002 -- he's been doing this for awhile. But over that time he's expanded his repertoire and approach considerably. There are 22 tracks here, almost all of them with something special to recommend them, so I'll just touch on a handful. Ballew has done a good job finding traditional songs -- some, like "Three Blind Mice," are changed enough to keep them listenable after a couple spins ("Mice" gets a 60's London sounds makeover and additional lyrics in the spirit of the original.) Others, like "Billy Pringle," get rescued from obscurity and are given new life. Amidst the traditional songs, kids and folk, Ballew also mixes in some originals. Among my favorites are "Monkey River," an old song of Ballew's that he's recorded more than a dozen times and, lyrics tweaked slightly, is a hypnotic little family song. "Heard A Bird" is a great pop tune for 3-year-olds that could've been written 100 years ago. Production-wise, these simple songs get some small amount of ornamentation, but not much. There's a lot of keyboards, some guitar, the occasional tape loop, and a fair amount of "la la las" and "cheep cheeps." I'm a sucker for good "la la las." Ballew gets the occasional vocal assistance from Jen Wood and Fysah Thomas, but for the most part, it's just him and his instruments. If I have any complaint with the disk, it's that at 49 minutes, it feels just a little too long -- it might have been better to trim 6 or 7 tracks from the disk. This album will hold the most appeal to kids ages 2 through 7. You can hear (and download) several tracks from the album at the Caspar Babypants website. Now, I don't usually review albums ahead of their scheduled release date, and Here I Am! won't actually be available until February 14. But I think this album deserves an exception to that rule. It's just simple, organic kid-folk and pop. With his Caspar Babypants project, Chris Ballew might make a whole bunch of great CDs for the family -- this is the first of them. Highly recommended.

This Post Is Brought To You By The Letter "Z"

It will not come as a great surprise that I am a little protective of the letter "z." It is of no small importance to this site ("Ooglobble" being even weirder than I'm willing to be). And even though there are some pretty decent kids music-related products that use the word "kidz," I feel the time has come to take a stand. On Facebook, of course. So, yes, along with new-ish fan pages for folks like Egg, Lunch Money, or Hap Palmer (not to mention longer-running fan pages such as those for, well, this site), I invite all of you similarly concerned with the misappropriation of the letter "z" for pluralization purposes to join Citizens Against Pluralizing with "Z". (Or "CAPZ" for short, natch.)

Video: "The Lonely Tomato" - Central Services Board of Education

I've long, long, long been a fan of Central Services Board of Education and especially their song "The Lonely Tomato." So now that the band's done a video for the song featuring animation from Seattle animator Galadriel Liceaga, you think there's anyway I'm not going to mention it here? Of course not. (I dig the mult-spectacled tuber.) Central Services Board of Education - "The Lonely Tomato"