Laura Freeman's Somersault Season arrives a couple years after its demos were completed and a full four years after its excellent predecessor,
Color Wheel Cartwheel (
review), an album which I still play around the house, no small feat given the constant influx of material.
Like
Cartwheel,
Season is a concept album, except instead of colors, it's about the passing of the seasons. (TMBG can now cross
Here Comes Seasons off their future sequels list.) Each season gets its own foreign-language introduction (a la the colors on
Cartwheel) and three season-appropriate songs. As opposed to its predecessor, the songs here are more interactive, meaning that your kids (and you) will enjoy it more if you move. Stomp along with "My Brother's a Monster," shake along to "Can You Shake It?," or dance along with the western swing of "1, 2, 3, 4." Generally, the music takes a folk/bluegrass approach, aided especially by producer Mike West's mandolin and banjo work. Freeman's sly sense of humor is more prevalent live, but occasionally breaks through here on songs like the droll "Look in a Book."
The songs here are targeted very much at the kindergarten-and-under crowd (ages 2-5). You can hear samples at the album's
CD Baby page. I'd also recommend
Freeman's notes on the lyrics and activities.
Clearly my appreciation of
Somersault Season is hampered somewhat by my affinity for
Color Wheel Cartwheel, and while I'd recommend
Cartwheel for an introduction to Laura Freeman over this new album (particularly as a pure listening experience), I like
Somersault Season quite a bit, too. It's an especially good music-and-movement CD, heads and shoulders above most in that particular subgenre. Recommended.