Mike Seeger: Further Thoughts

This weekend I wrote a few words in memory of Mike Seeger, who died on Friday at the age of 75. I wrote it -- quickly, probably too quickly -- from the perspective of a listener, not a musician, with an attempt to place him in the broad context on children's music. Elizabeth Mitchell took issue with my description of his influence on children's music:
"I have to disagree with you though about his contribution to children's music. For me, personally, his work is enormously significant. The two collections that he made along with his family are definitive and essential. They bring Ruth Crawford Seeger's [his mother's] exquisite arrangements to life in extraordinary ways."
And what I've noticed since then is that the strongest, most moving words from folks in the wake of his passing have come from musicians. Witness Bob Dylan's comments -- written in 2004:
"Sometimes you know things have to change... Somebody holds the mirror up, unlocks the door, and your head has to go into a different place. Mike Seeger had that effect on me. He played on all the various planes, the full index of the old-time styles, [and] he played these songs as good as it was possible to play them. What I had to work at, Mike already had in his genes."
And now Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer have weighed in with their own thoughts:
"In the past ten or so years, our casual friendship through folk festivals and jam sessions became a deeper one. Longer visits, longer talks, more music. Mike introduced Marcy to the cello banjo of the 1910’s and it was a life-changer. He enjoyed hearing her take the old instrument to new places that honor tradition and stretch it as far as it will go. He gave credibility to our Old Time Banjo Festival with brilliant performances, all the while, listening to and appreciating every note and song played by the other musicians."
What's clear is that while casual fans might have appreciated him, it's the musicians who revered him the most, regardless of whether they play for 2-year-olds or 82-year-olds (or occasionally both simultaneously). Once again, my condolences to his family and wide circle of friends... Mike Seeger, Cathy Fink, Marcy Marxer & Adam Hurt - "Aint Gonna Work Tomorrow" [YouTube]

Video: "Nature" (Live @ Kidzapalooza) - Band of Horses

I know, I already posted one Band of Horses live video from the Kidzapalooza stage from this Saturday's Lollapalooza. But this might be my favorite song from the video uploaded thus far. Not only that, but the band says that this song, "Nature," will be on Yo Gabba Gabba!'s upcoming Season 3. Not sure humidity in a Chicago summer is awesome, but this song might be. Band of Horses - "Nature" (Live at Lollapalooza 2009's Kidzapalooza stage)

You Have Less Than Two Weeks To Prepare for the Fresh Beat Band

That's right, less than two weeks until the premiere of The Fresh Beat Band, the new show from Nickelodeon that everybody has an opinion on. The live-action show will premiere with back-to-back episodes on Monday, August 24, at noon ET/PT, followed by two weeks of new episodes Tuesday, August 25—Thursday, August 27, and Monday, August 31—Thursday, September 3, at noon ET/PT. You can already watch some videos at the Nick Jr. site, in the remote chance that your child isn't seeing enough promos on your actual TV. (Though they don't currently have "Stuck On You," a song which is almost tolerable for repeated adult listening. By "repeated," I mean twice. I have limits.) Don't say I didn't warn you. Please plan accordingly.

Video: Yuto Miyazawa and Band of Horses (Live @ Kidzapalooza)

Not at the same time. OK, so it's a 9-year-old playing a 40-year-old song, but at least we're getting a little closer to seeing a family music act on video from Kidzapalooza 2009. Yuto Miyazawa - "Purple Haze" (Live at Lollapalooza Kidzapalooza stage 2009) OK, here's the Band of Horses song from Saturday. No word if they started 20 minutes late because Care Bears on Fire ran long (inside joke)...

Video: Joshua James Live @ Kidzapalooza 2009

Y'know, those iPhones have video cameras now and the Flips are easy to use (I should know). I'm with Tito, it shouldn't be this difficult to have any of the other folks who make music on a more regular basis for kids (or the kids themselves) captured on camera. This sounds like a nice cut (I'm unable to figure out which one specifically) from Joshua James, Sunday's special guest at Lolla's Kidzapalooza stage. But I know there was a lot more that brought down this house this weekend... Joshua James live at Kidzapalooza stage, Lollapalooza 2009.

If Only Somebody Had Done This Better...

I have no idea whether Da Jammies is destined for a network or will be lost in straight-to-DVD purgatory. All I know is that I watch the video above, listen to the songs at their Myspace page, and read the description of the show, an
"animated series that follows five kids from the Suburbs who attend a Performing Arts school. These kids sing, dance and rap, all with a dream of becoming famous as they each are on a mission to make it in the music biz"
and I wish that it had been done better. Oh, yeah, it had: OK, there's no actual animation, but it's a waaaay cool song. Ironically, Class of 3000 is itself subject of a copyright infringement lawsuit.