Listen To This: "Mezuzah" / "Apples & Honey" - The Macaroons

How's this for a kids music supergroup of sorts? A couple guys from The Zambonis (North America's favorite all-hockey band, who are partially responsible for "Hockey Monkey"), a guy whose band DeLeon turns Sephardic folk tunes into indie rock, and Michael Azerrad, best known for the book Our Band Could Be Your Life. OK, not a kids music supergroup, seeing as they have maybe one great kids song between them. But put them together as The Macaroons, a kids band with a fairly Jewish focus, and you have a potentially ground-breaking album. They're putting out an album later this year on JDub Records, and I'm here to tell you that regardless of your faith, you need to listen to the two tunes they've posted post haste. Both songs -- the stomping, hair-metal with a sense of humor "Mezuzah" and the sweet pop-rock of "Apples & Honey" -- are, well, awesome. In case you're not Jewish and need the Internet to explain things (like I did), here's teh internets on what a "mezuzah" is. You don't need any help with "Apples & Honey," which is a sweet Rosh Hashannah song. "It's when things get sticky / Just remember life is sweet" -- special meaning for those of the Jewish faith, but a sentiment the rest of us could get behind.

Video: "Educated Kid" (Live) - The Hipwaders

I need very little reason to post anything related to The Hipwaders' "Educated Kid." So, here's the band playing the song live at San Francisco's cross-country traveling Tricycle Music Fest West last weekend, along with a whole bunch of inflatable guitars, natch. (What, no kindie Christmas songs, guys?) The Hipwaders - "Educated Kid" (Live @ Tricycle Music Fest West) - [YouTube] Here are a couple more videos from the band...

Listen To This: "C'mon" - Renee & Jeremy

Here it is, folks, the title track from the new Renee & Jeremy album, C'mon. As I mentioned before, the duo's using some interesting methods to distribute and promote their new album, due out November 10. They've hooked up with TopSpin, who among other albums, helped distribute the recent David Byrne/Brian Eno collaboration. Anyway, to get a free mp3 of the title track -- and you want to get it, because it's a wonderfully zippy and slightly mellow song perfect for a fall morning -- just enter your e-mail in the widget below. And if you want to spread the word, just click on "share" below.

Austin Kiddie Limits (ACL Fest) 2009: Final Thoughts

PA024123.jpgSo I've talked a lot about Austin Kiddie Limits and the 2009 Austin City Limits Music Festival generally. (Need proof? Here's Day 1, part 1, Day 1, part 2, Day 2, and Day 3.) I thought I'd wrap up my coverage with a few final thoughts and suggestions for improvement about the AKL stage, plus add a few pictures. 1. The revised stage configuration of this year's AKL stage was an improvement. Less sound bleeding from the Xbox 360 stage next door meant that the AKL artists were never drowned out. Yay! And maybe it was just my imagination (or possibly the cooler weather), but the new layout seemed blessed with more shade. 2. It's still too loud between sets. Lord knows we're big fans of Romeo and his BBoy City crew (quite possibly Miss Mary Mack's favorite part of the festival this year), but they're forced to crank the volume to a point that it drives all the families away from the stage. Perhaps next year they can swap the dance stage and the pottery/kefia tents so that it's pretty close to the stage and the volume can be reduced. 3. There are probably points where the sound on the AKL stage during sets can be reduced -- I could hear 23 Skidoo's set close to half a mile away as we were crossing Lady Bird Lake. 4. Moving on to the weather -- I will gladly take a chance of (or actual) rain in return for cooler weather. I'm so glad that the festival's been gradually pushed back into October and am happy to see it further pushed back to the second week of October (Oct. 8-10, 2010) next year. 5. The guest sets have been really cool, and I'd love to see them used even more to drive families to see bands they wouldn't have seen otherwise. That was the case for me with K'Naan on Friday. I also got a chance to meet Ben Sollee backstage briefly on Sunday before heading back to Arizona, and based on this clip of Sollee covering "Wild World" later that day, I have a feeling that if I'd seen him at the AKL stage playing his cello, I'd have been sure to see him later that day on a bigger stage. (Though it should be noted, I did see him playing with Abigail Washburn the year before.) 6. The fact that the AKL stage hosted both K'Naan and Ben Sollee, both Mr. Leebot and Secret Agent 23 Skidoo, speaks to the fact that the stage can handle a fair amount of diversity, which is somewhat reflective of the ACL Festival as a whole. There's obviously only so much diversity you can have when you've got just 8-10 acts playing a set or two, but I encourage Tor to continue mixing it up as much as possible. 7. Can these festivals really be done with families? Well, it's definitely hard work, but if you're willing to sacrifice some of your own needs (sorry, Karen O, maybe next time), you can definitely see a lot. I'm conflicted because I have to balance my own musical tastes with that of my kids with my need to cover the festival (and the AKL stage in particular) on the press pass with the fact that my family lives in Austin and I want to see them, too. Sometimes I felt like I did none of those things well. But the AKL stage is situated about as well as it can be to serve as a base station for families exploring the festival. (And, hey, there's always babysitters.) 8. Finally, thanks to everyone at C3, particularly Tor, for making the AKL stage (and the press area) run so smoothly. Hope everyone reading got a good sense of the weekend of fun... Pictures after the jump...

Kids Music and Beer

Last week there was an article about a growth spurt in microbreweries in the Phoenix area. I took an interest in the article because, well, I like beer and one of the (not-new-at-all) microbreweries is within walking distance of my house. (Think globally, drink locally.) But the article illustrated a number of principles that also applies to the kids music genre. So indulge me if you will... 1. Kids music genre still needs to educate a perhaps skeptical public. They're so amazed," says one microbrewery owner of the quality inherent in the product. Nobody has to explain why there's literature for kids, but music for kids? I would guess that regular readers of this site (families, artists, or others) have often been in the situation of having to say something like, "No, there's some really good kids music out there crafted with care." 2. Don't alienate your potential customers by slamming their taste.
[There] are beer lovers who find the microbreweries' offerings too aggressive or bitter. "I get that a lot," said Matt Mercer, the brewer at Old World Brewery in north Phoenix. Customers tell him his beers have too much flavor or are too strong. "If you're used to drinking water," he said, "I guess so."
Or the guy who says he's tempted to give a customer a glass of water if they ask for a Budweiser or something that tastes like a Bud. Argh. I understand that you think you have a better product. But insult the audience at your peril. Remember, your audience is the exception, not the rule. The rule's a lot bigger. Much better is the attitude of the brewer who, instead of getting mad when someone orders a Bud, serves a sample of his own beer alongside the Bud. I'm not suggesting kids musicians should be working songs from High School Musical into their acts. But an appreciation of why (for reasons good and not-so-good) those mass-market acts are, well, mass-market (i.e., popular) is a good thing to keep in mind. 3. Your competition is your friend. Obviously, music has always been a little less competitive than other industries as nominally competitive artists constantly collaborate on songs and albums. This is something the craft brewers have taken to heart:
Only about 25 percent of beer drinkers drink craft beer, said Hoffman, of Dave's Electric. That leaves an untapped market of drinkers to pry away from their Millers and Coors. "We're trying to get a piece of that much larger pie," he said, "and not necessarily a piece of each other's pie."
Amen to that. I've seen RIAA figures that suggested that only about 3% of music sales are for kids music. And I'm sure that the number of parents who've bought an album remotely considered "kindie" is probably similar. Seems like there's some potential for growth there. Hence the frustration with folks who promote their new kids album along the lines of, "Finally, a kids music album parents can enjoy!" There are so many reasons that's just wrong, wrong, wrong. But beyond that, musicians should be popping up on everyone else's album. There's been some of that, but much more can be done. Kids musicians should be sharing concert bills, swapping booking tips, giving advice (and generally using sites like this one), because the genre's nowhere near a zero-sum point. One artist's success is, to some extent, a small success for other artists. A large crowd for a big-name artist opens doors for artists without as much name recognition. 4. Keep doing what you're doing. Finally, what I like about the folks interviewed is that none of them have suggested that they've tweaked what they've done to appeal to a mass audience. They know that they're not going to have the mass appeal of the Budweisers of the world, and they're OK with that. That's one of the things I appreciate the most about the kids music genre right now. There are so many folks trying so many different things and people are comfortable writing and performing music that might not have been heard fifteen or twenty years ago. Oh, sure, there are still the pioneers who are either still going or whose albums have faded from view. But the sheer number of the musical approaches is so much greater now. Worldwide fame is going to be mostly elusive in these turbulent times for the music business. But a decent living making music for families is available to a lot of talented musicians... if they work together on it.

Listen To This: Steve-n-steveN (or, Steve Burns and Steven Drozd)

UniVsOcto.pngToday the Flaming Lips are releasing their latest studio album, a two-disk set entitled Embryonic. Seems like it's as good a time as any to start talking about Steve-n-steveN, the collaboration featuring Blue's Clues star-turned-indie rocker Steve Burns and multi-instrumentalist Steven Drozd from the Flaming Lips. This collaboration's been talked about for a while (the songs have been posted for awhile, too), and given Burns' and Drozd's previous foray into music for kids, the fact that it's getting closer is Good News For All Involved. The "About" description sums up the 6 songs on the Myspace page thusly:
One day, while searching everywhere for Princess Rainbow, a lonely unicorn named Steve Burns met a magical musical octopus named Steven Drozd in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. "Hi," said Steve to Steven. "I like writing stories about outer space, wizards, and feelings." "That's cool," said Steven to Steve while playing a bass guitar, Micro Moog synthesizer, and two Stylophones simultaneously. "I like to make brain burning musical soundscapes. Maybe you could add your stories to my music." "Okay", answered Steve, "let's always do that right here in Oklahoma and never in New York City." And that's just what they did... for all us children.
Songs about poop, facts, unicorns, and octopi. Basically, it's Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (already one of the best not-kids-albums that's really a kids' album) meets preschool. And, yeah, it really sounds like that. Totally worth 20 minutes or so of your attention. (Thanks to Cormac at Kids-Tunes for the reminder.)