Sara Hickman Will Take Over the World in 2010. Or At Least Texas.

Does your state have an official state musician? Well, as a person who's been living in and traveling to/from Texas for about a quarter century now, I can assure you that Texas cares about its music. And for 2010 the Official Texas State Musician is none other than Sara Hickman. Considering that their 2009 Official Texas State Musician is Willie Nelson, Hickman's in fine company. She's also in other fine company. In this week's newletter she announced that she was going spend year focusing on families...
Sara has decided to utilize the opportunity to bring attention to arts/music in the schools, in families. Her mantra is FAMILY TIME ROCKS! and she hopes to raise awareness of how school funding is being cut for the arts, and to sell cds to generate income for BIG THOUGHT (Dallas, TX) and Theatre Action Project (T.A.P./Austin), two groups that bring poetry, theatre, creative expression to kids in Texas that, otherwise, would not be exposed to creative thought... Her feeling is that families who create and play together, stay together.
And to that end she's collaborating with a whole lot of folks. Of greatest interest to fans of Sara's family music (namely, me), she will be: -- Working with Jason Molin on Family Time Rocks!", which will "incorporate music, ideas, conversation to stimulate/motivate/create family creativity time!" (Exclamation point in the original, though, hey, I'm OK with it.) -- Producing a CD for Monica Cravotta and friends "musician moms sharing songs for wee ones! Whee!" (again, exclamation points and "Whee" in the original, though I'm partial to "Whee!" myself.) -- Working on a DVD of animated shorts of her children's songs. The second and third items are exciting enough. The first? Really exciting. One, because Molin has a little experience with writing kid-friendly music (The Jellydots covered Molin's "Lake Rules" on their Hey You Kids! disk). Two, because if this song from Hickman's and Molin's "Newspaper and Trumpet" compilation is any indication of what the rest of the disk will entail (at least musically), it will be way fun.

Review: We Are The Not-Its! - The Not-Its

WeAreTheNot-Its_sm.jpgOne of the signs of the maturation of the kids music genre is that there are more debut albums with a sense of confidence. Rather than tentative steps into what might be an unfamiliar world, more folks seem to have a very clear understanding of what their sound is and how their image might support it. Most confident perhaps are Seattle's The Not-Its, who almost from the beginning they burst onto the web had a clear idea of their sound (finely honed alterna-pop, generally), lyrical aim (generally direct though not without the occasional knowing adult aside), and look (women dresses, men shirts with ties). And nothing on their debut We Are the Not-Its! suggests they've had any second thoughts about those things. From the get-go, the band fires on all cylinders. Starting an album with your own "theme song" is often a dicey move, but "We Are The Not-Its" is one of the two or three best theme songs ever (bonus points for the nifty pun "It's only got one eye / And don't forget to dot it"). "When I'm Five" has a hook that could pull in Moby Dick; you'll probably want to play "Let's Birthday" more than just once a year. Though the songs tend toward alternative pop, they're perfectly willing to slow things down a bit, such as on the sweet "Helicopter" or the country "Dressin' Up." The voice of Sarah Shannon (who was the lead singer of '90s band Velocity Girl and who takes most of the lead vocals here) definitely is a big asset to the band as well. There are points at which I thought the lyrics veered somewhat oddly between the too simplistic and too aimed-at-the-parents. "When I'm Five" features the lines "When you're five / They say there's so much to know / But I'll stay sharp as a tack or a whip or whatever / Until I figure out the status quo" and "I love my school / My teachers rule." (Hey, I love that first line, but I'm thinkin' that goes waaaay over the head of a four-year-old.) I think my favorite songs are the ones that don't necessarily impart simple life lessons (sharing is good, baths are good) but are just stories, such as "Shadows." But it's probably a credit to the songs themselves that those simple life lesson songs are pretty darn listenable, too. The album is best for kids ages 3 through 7. You can hear the songs from the 30-minute album at their own page. So, yeah, this album rocks. Families who are fans of Ralph's World, Justin Roberts, Lunch Money, or the Hipwaders shouldn't hesitate to get We Are the Not-Its as its combination of crunchy guitar-filled hooks and very kid-focused lyrics should prove very popular with that set. And it's just their first album -- can't wait to hear what comes next. Definitely recommended.

Video: "Three Little Birds" - Bob Marley (Noggin)

Folks, you know that I wouldn't link to a non-embeddable video if it weren't really, really cool. So when I link to Noggin's video page and tell you to watch the video for Bob Marley's "Three Little Birds" (right now, it's the first one in the video player) I hope you realize that it's really, really cool. It is sweet and cute in all the best ways -- that's, like, the cheeriest sun ever. The song itself is a slightly truncated version of the version on Ziggy Marley's B Is For Bob collection of Bob Marley tracks Ziggy remixed and re-imagined. More details here.

Dan Zanes Plays Wedding Music

OK, that's a totally misleading title, or at least a 90% misleading title. But I thought the typical Zooglobble reader would probably enjoy this clip of Dan Zanes' brother-in-law Donald Saaf playing with his Little Hope String Band. The notes on the video below indicate that the band is working on a CD of wedding music, and if you just watch the video, I think you'll find Saaf's band is probably as close as you'd get to having DZ play your wedding. Little Hope String Band - "Exekiel Saw De Wheel" [YouTube] Oh, what the hey, here's a Dan Zanes wedding mix...

One Last Mike Seeger Thing...

Well, I can't guarantee that, but the Smithsonian Folkways just posted a clip of Mike Seeger talking about his childhood and his early musical training (Charlie Byrd, following Earl Scruggs around). I love the way Seeger says that his parents would get them to hurry up to get ready for bed by "Get Along Home, Cindy" because if they didn't get to bed quickly, the music would stop. I do that with reading with Little Boy Blue with sporadic success -- I should totally try music instead. More comments on Seeger from Folkways here.

Video: "We R Super Heroes" - Robbert Bobbert and the Bubble Machine

I have two words for this, the video for "We R Super Heroes," from Robert Schneider's debut Robbert Bobbert and the Bubble Machine album. TOTALLY. AWESOME. No, scratch that -- it challenged "totally awesome" to a 100-yard dash and crossed the finish line before "totally awesome" got out of the blocks. Robbert Bobbert and the Bubble Machine - "We R Super Heroes" [Spinner]