Review: My Name Is Chicken Joe (Book/CD Set) - Trout Fishing in America

MyNameIsChickenJoe.jpgWith about 30 years of recording behind them, Trout Fishing in America have a back catalog that is plenty large enough with which to start doing some interesting things. To wit, My Name Is Chicken Joe, the first book collaboration the duo of Keith Grimwood and Ezra Idlet have done with The Secret Mountain publishing company. The collection is out this week and it essentially is a "best of" collection of some of Trout's wordier, folkier tracks. The "star," so to speak, of the 11-track collection is "Chicken Joe," which gets its lyrics (about animals with non-sensical names like the cat named "Chicken Joe") illustrated over a couple dozen pages. The illustrations by Stephane Jorisch remind me of gonzo illustrator Ralph Steadman with about 90% less gonzo. (There is no other way to describe them than "cute.") Lyrics to the other ten tracks each get a couple pages of illustration as well. But we're mostly about the music here. The 11 tracks -- all previously-released -- include a number of excellent Trout Fishing tracks, not just the title track, but also "My Best Day," "It's A Puzzle," and "Fill It Up." For the most part, the selections tend toward the folkier (notwithstanding the rocking "I Can Dance" and the klezmer-touched "Boiled Okra and Spinach"). It's a fine collection, but it by no means is a complete Trout Fishing "Best Of." The collection lacks Trout classics such as "18 Wheels on a Big Rig," "Three Little Ducks," and "The Window," but those are songs that depend upon interaction between Grimwood and Idlet and not so much on the lyrics. Written down on paper, those latter songs wouldn't be so interesting -- it's Trout's classic live stage banter that makes those songs favorites to many listeners. The songs here are songs on which the lyrics themselves take center stage. The songs will be of most interest to kids ages 5 through 9. (The book, maybe a little younger.) You can hear clips of the 33-minute album wherever books/CDs are sold online (or watch this video of the title track). If you're interested, you can also buy the CD just by itself, but with the book barely costing more than the CD, I say go for the book. (I should note that book itself is of high quality -- typically the books in these book/CD arrangements have a pretty cheap feel to them, but not this one.) Longtime Trout Fishing in America fans will likely appreciate the book My Name Is Chicken Joe because it marries some delightful illustrations to a sweet Trout song, though may be disappointed by the lack of even a single new track. I'd recommend it more to newcomers to the band, who may appreciate the book more for that "best of" quality. Here's hoping, though, it leads to a couple more books (and, by extension, a couple more greatest hits volumes).

Video: "Family Time" - Ziggy Marley (plus bonus video just because...)

Ziggy Marley is gearing up for the May 5th release of his Family Time family album. And what better way to gear up than by posting something on YouTube? Marley's video for the album's title track is way out in front of the 2009 competition for "Most Smiles in a Video." Also, "Most Cartwheels." (Pity, though, that it doesn't include my favorite part of the track, Marley's daughter Judah's singalong.) Ziggy Marley - "Family Time" (Hat tip: Warren) Now, besides that, I should also note that Marley played the White House Easter Egg Roll. And, yes, there's video...

The Barry Louis Polisar Tribute Album: Potentially Awesome

No, that's not the name -- it's my verdict. I've known for awhile of the tribute album consisting of Barry Louis Polisar covers, produced by Polisar's son Evan Aaron Cohen of the Radioactive Chicken Heads. But now it's got a name -- We're Not Kidding -- and, more importantly for the purposes of this website, songs for your listening pleasure. I use that phrase "listening pleasure" advisedly, because the songs I've spun thus far have been uniformly winning. I started out with the familiar names -- Key Wilde & Mr. Clarke, Elizabeth Street, Tor Hyams, Ham & Burger, The Boogers -- and all of those tunes worth the time. (Check out the electric guitar on Key Wilde and Mr. Clarke track.) And then I moved to the unfamliar, the top of the page. After 4 songs, some fabulous, none less than interesting, that's when I realized that this could be, well, potentially awesome. A 2-CD set could be too much Barry Lou, but the combination of Polisar's songwriting with the varied musical approaches and high quality production (never Polisar's strength) make me very eager to hear the final product, set to be released this year.

Concert Recap: The Deedle Deedle Dees (Phoenix, April 2009)

DDDeesAtCMOP.jpgIt was a whirlwind weekend for Brooklyn's Deedle Deedle Dees here in Phoenix and the Valley of the Sun. On Friday they played 3 shows at local elementary schools. Then on Saturday they visited the Children's Museum of Phoenix and played a couple sets in the gorgeous first-floor atrium. Nice mix of the history stuff and sillier, slightly younger stuff. But all I got is new stuff. Remember the "Have the Dees write a song" contest? Here is the winner: The Deedle Deedle Dees - "Little Red Airplane" (Live) DDDeesAtCOB.jpgOne of the things I noticed about the show, both at the Children's Museum and at Church of the Beatitudes, where the Dees played a show Sunday afternoon, was just how much more active Lloyd Miller (Ulysses Dee) was than the last time I saw him play (at the Family Music Meltdown Bill and I put on in Austin in 2007). To be sure, the fact that Lloyd was without his standup bass was the primary facotr, but they interacted much more with the crowds I saw. Yay for between-song banter! Yay for band-assisted dinosaur feet! The Deedle Deedle Dees - "Vegetarian Tyrannosaurus Rex" (Live) Anyway, the shows were a blast. Look for the Dees' new album (from which 4 of the 5 videos' songs are drawn)sometime in September. More video and photos after the jump.

Itty-Bitty Review: Honey, Sugar Baby Mine - The Von Swing Family

HoneySugarBabyMine.jpgThe story of Brooklyn's Libby Shapiro isn't terribly novel at this point. As she puts it in her PR materials:
Throw a rock and hit a musician in Brooklyn, it is true. And [she's] yet another professional musician living in that fine borough who spent her life making music for adults, who, once she had a family, started singing for and with the kids the songs she loved and sang as a child...
Whatever points Shapiro loses for originality, though, she picks up in putting together a winning collection of kids' favorites (with a few curveballs mixed in) on her debut album as "Wanda Von Swing" on the Von Swing Family's Honey, Sugar Baby Mine. The band puts a Cajun/zydeco stamp on some of the traditional songs such as "Skip To My Lou" and "Crawdad," putting piano, accordion, guitar, and stand-up bass to good use. All the songs feature Shapiro's distinctive and full-bodied voice, which sometimes comes close to overpowering the simpler toddler songs, but on songs like "Buffalo Gals/Red Haired Boy" and Shapiro's original "Shake It, Baby, Shake It," it makes for a good match. And it's impossible not to like an album that ends with a gently rollicking cover of Hank Williams' "Jambalaya." The album will appeal most to kids ages 2 through 7. You can hear samples of the tracks at the album's CDBaby page. Honey, Sugar Baby Mine is what might've happened had Dan Zanes swung through Louisiana many years ago as he was starting to think about music for families. It's just good kids and family music, American roots style. Recommended.

Phoenix-Area Reminder: The Deedle Deedle Dees (and Record Store Day)

Don't forget, folks, The Deedle Deedle Dees are playing all over Phoenix this weekend. They already rocked a couple Valley of the Sun elementary schools today, and Saturday they play at the Children's Museum of Phoenix at 10 AM and 11 AM (no reservations necessary -- they're playing outside!). And Sunday they play at the Church of the Beatitudes (7th Ave./Glendale in Phoenix) at 2 PM. And I'll even try to get to Stinkweeds' Record Store Day event. I'll probably miss the kids' music they'll have starting at 10 AM or so, but I'll stop by around 11 AM. And I'm going to the symphony with Miss Mary Mack Saturday afternoon, but I have nothing to do with organizing that.