Video: "Night Owl" - Dan Zanes and Friends

Dan Zanes has been posting a bunch of clips from his 2009 DVD The Fine Friends Are Here to his YouTube channel recently. The only new video on the disk was for "Night Owl." It's a sweet and pretty video, so I thought I'd share. Dan Zanes and Friends - "Night Owl" [YouTube] Aw, what the hey, the awesome live version of "Cape Cod Girls" after the jump.

"The Body Rocks" In a Very Schoolhouse Rock-Like Way

TheBodyRocks.jpgRounder Records sold off their Rounder Kids label a little while back, but just when they thought they were out, it keeps pulling them back in, because they've just announced the August 17 release of The Body Rocks on August 17. The album's a whole bunch of songs about functions of the human body. It's the creation of Marc "Doc" Dauer (musician, producer, and physician) and features performances by Liz Phair, Pete Yorn, Minnie Driver, Guster, and Dauer’s own three kids. (Insert joke here about appropriateness of Liz Phair performing on an album about bodily functions.) The obvious reference here is Schoolhouse Rock, down to the familiar (but not in a legally infringing sense) album logo. However, based on the roots-pop songs at its Myspace pageMyspace page, I think some folks will find it a worthy successor so that there's no need for a Physiology Rock! version from the classic show. (And They Might Be Giants can probably cross Here Comes Anatomy off their to-do list.) Anyway, here's a video bio -- track listing is after the jump...

Justin Roberts, Jungle Gym, NPR, and Me

JG_(CS07)-1.jpgYes, I'm on NPR's All Things Considered this afternoon (or evening, depending on your location) reviewing Jungle Gym, the latest album from Justin Roberts. I don't want to give too much away, but I like it. Anyway, if you want to hear it "live," it'll be streaming at 6:50 and 8:50 Eastern time. And if you've stumbled across this website after hearing the review, welcome. Tons of information on the kids music/family music/kindie music/whatever you want to call it genre 'round these parts. If you like what you heard on NPR, there's plenty more where that came from. Well, not necessarily "plenty" -- Justin's one of the best -- but more than enough to make your family happy.

Video: "Space Elevator Music" - Recess Monkey

I am definitely not a skit fan, but I've always thought that Recess Monkey's were better than most. This by far has the funniest line (to me, anyway) in a Recess Monkey skit ever, but is amusing even if you're not that dialed in to the kids music scene. "Space Elevator Music" is from The Final Funktier, out next week. Recess Monkey - "Space Elevator Music" [YouTube]

Review: "Outside Voices" - The Pop Ups

OutsideVoices.jpgI'd like to think I have a good record of introducing new artists worth following to the world, but I can't be first all the time. As you'd expect, Bill Childs gets his fair share of disks, and last week in his typical understated way, he made an aside in an unrelated e-mail, saying, "I like that Pop Ups CD." I hadn't heard it, and so worked to change that ASAP and... This is nothing less than the kids music debut of the year, an inventive mix of beats and melodies that will tickle the eardrums of young and old alike. It's called Outside Voices, and it's from the Brooklyn duo The Pop Ups. The Pop Ups consist of kids music teacher Jacob Stein and Jason Rabinowitz, frontman for the indie-pop band The Bloodsugars and co-writer/producer of three Little Maestros disks on Kid Rhino, so they've come into this project with both a kids music background and no small amount of experience recording music for adult ears. The opening track, "Outside Inside," is as striking an opening track as I've heard on a kids album in some time. A guitar strum, a piano, and then a soaring vocal accented by an insistent drum track, all in the purpose of describing the difference between outside voices and inside voices. The next track "Subway Train" is an '80s-tinged electronica-assisted tale of alliterative animals on the New York subway system. The reggae-style "Balloon" leads to "Apes in Capes," which must be a Postal Service hidden track about using basic geometric patterns to draw objects. The midtempo rocket "F & G" is the greatest song about a letter pair since They Might Be Giants' "QU." And so on. The second five tracks are slightly less awesome than the first five, though I have no small fondness for the horn-assisted garage-rocker "Pasta" (I think you can guess what that one's about). And "Up and Down" is pretty much a Sesame Street video begging to be made. The 37-minute album is pitched toward kids aged 3 through 7, though I can definitely see this being one of those albums that parents occasionally sneak into the car's CD player after dropping the kids off somewhere. For the moment, you can just purchase the album via download. It's now available in both mp3 and tangible CD format. Feel free to stream the whole album below. (Um, that's an order, actually.) Can you tell I'm over the moon about this album? Good. Because it's seriously great; it's this year's out-of-nowhere surprise equivalent to John and Mark's Children's Record. Totally for kids, with no compromises for the adults listening in, this album is winning in every way. I may not be the very first to tell you about Outside Voices, but I can guarantee you that I will not be the last. Highly recommended. <a href="http://thepopups.bandcamp.com/album/outside-voices">Outside Inside by The Pop Ups</a> Note: The band provided a copy of the album for possible review.