Please Release Me: February 2011 Edition

It's that time again, time to update my list of new and upcoming releases. As always, if I've listed you on here and gotten something wrong (or something not ready for primetime), let me know and I'll change/delete it. And if you're not on here and think you should be, drop me a line, too, and I'll get you added for the next iteration. ScribbleMonster: Look Both Ways (Feb. 15) Rockabye Baby: Lullaby Renditions of Weezer(Feb. 15) Ella Jenkins: A Life of Song (Feb. 22) Putumayo (Various Artists): Acoustic Dreamland (Feb. 22) Readeez: Readeez Vol. 3: Knowledge is Good (February) Moey's Music Party: Playground Rock Star and Happily Ever Moey! (DVD, both February) Gustafer Yellowgold: Gustafer Yellowgold's Infinity Sock (Mar. 1) David Weinstone: All I Want (Mar. 8) Groove Kid Nation: The Wheels on the Bus (Mar. 8) Maria Sangiolo: Planting Seeds (Mar. 13) Jamie Broza: I Want a Dog (Mar. 15) Doni Zasloff Thomas: Shabbat Shaboom! (Mar. 22) Lucky Diaz: Title TBA (March) Debbie and Friends: Story Songs and Sing Alongs (DVD) (March) Billy Kelly: The Family Garden (April 5) Joanie Leeds: What a Zoo! (April 12) Daddy A Go Go (aka John Boydston): Grandkid Rock (April 19) Eric Herman: The Elephant (DVD, national release April) Randy Kaplan: Mr. Diddie Wah Diddie (April) Brady Rymer: Title TBA (April) Rockabye Baby: Lullaby Renditions of Jimi Hendrix and the Flaming Lips (those are two separate Spring releases) Recess Monkey: Flying (June 14) Milkshake: Title TBA plus Holiday Album Title TBA (Fall 2011) Other 2011 albums: Ah-Choo, Peter Apel, Rocknoceros, Funky Mamas, Dan Zanes, Hipwaders, Big Don, Charlie Hope, Mr. Richard, Chuck Cheesman. Also, Roackabye Baby for Van Halen, The Police, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Madonna.

Video: "Go Go Ninja Dinosaur" - Four Tet (Dir. by Carolina Melis)

Remember how much I liked the video for "What a Big Wide World" from Essie Jain? Well, the director of Jain's video -- Carolina Melis -- was also responsible for a video for "Go Go Ninja Dinosaur," the Four Tet track from the Belle & Sebastian-curated kid-comp Colours Are Brighter (review). Very, very cool. Somebody please get Melis a contract to do a video game or permanent residency on Yo Gabba Gabba!, please. Four Tet - "Go Go Ninja Dinosaur" [Vimeo]

Share: "DidiPop Goes To Hawaii - DidiPop

DidiPopGoesToHawaii.jpgDidiPop has decided to give her music away (digitally, at least). That's right, the Los Angeles-based artist is now offering free streams and mp3s of her two full-lengths and other assorted tracks. DidiPop Goes To Hawaii may just be what you need if you've suffered from one too many East Coast snow storms...
A widget with every DidiPop song after the jump...

Monday Morning Smile: "Waters of March" - Jamie Broza

I think the world would be a better place if there were more Antonio Carlos Jobim on family music stations. This version of "Waters of March," featuring Jamie Broza and his daughter Carmen, makes me smile. The fact that the song is often thought of as being about the passing of time lends a poignancy to the intermixed shots of Carmen when she's younger. But I think it's just a fun little song. (And it's probably a better choice for kids' radio than, say, "The Girl from Ipanema.") Broza's new CD, I Want a Dog!, is out March 15. Jamie Broza - "Waters of March" [YouTube]

Believe It Or Not, Kidz Bop Is Getting More Popular

KidzBop19.pngFor those of you who thought that maybe after probably two dozen different releases (including their main series), the allure of Kidz Bop would begin to fade... I have bad news to report. Billboard this week reported that the latest Kidz Bop disk, Kidz Bop 19, hit number 2 on the charts this week. Not the Top Kid Audio chart, but the Big Kahuna, the Billboard 200. It sold... wait for it... 70,000 albums. The #2 rank ties the series' highest chart position (Kidz Bop 9) is its its best sales "week since 2007 (Kidz Bop 12, when it debuted with 71,000 at No. 7. Billboard reported that Kidz Bop distributor Razor & Tie pointed to a stepped-up TV marketing campaign for the album. Also, exclusives at Target and Walmart helped push the title's mass-merchant (e.g., Target, Walmart) share to about 55%. Razor & Tie also noted in a separate press release that "sales of KIDZ BOP albums have grown nearly 40% over the past 24 months, while overall music industry sales are down more than 20%." KIDZ BOP 19 also debuted at #1 on the Billboard Children’s Chart, where there are currently two other KIDZ BOP albums in the Top 10. The new release follows a chart-topping 2010 where KIDZ BOP 18 was the #1 Kids’ Album of the year (KIDZ BOP 17 was #2) and the KIDZ BOP Kids ranked as the #1 Kids’ Artist of the year, according to Billboard. Other kid audio albums on the Billboard 200 include the Big Time Rush soundtrack (53), Disney Princess: Ultimate Song Collection (124), Kidz Bop 18 (131), Hannah Montana Forever (136), Tangled soundtrack (137), and the Aquabats' Hi-Five Soup! (181). That's 7 albums in the top 200, which isn't a bad result. (Compare that, for example, to the top Classical Album, which debuted at #167 on the Billboard 200, or top World Album, which debuted at #111; neither genre chart had more than one album on the main chart.) Now, as always, chart position has - at best - poor correlation with listeners' perceptions of quality. (I am partial to the Tangled soundtrack myself.) The strong performance of the mass-marketed Disney/Kidz Bop stuff is a double-edged sword for an independent artist, though. On the down side, trying to break through on the Kid Audio chart against those albums is tough. On the other hand, there's value in having the genre doing so well. Sell a couple thousand albums in a week, and you might only hit #6 or #7 on the Top Kid Audio chart... but you might break through onto the Billboard 200 chart as well. (Sell a couple hundred and you could get on the Top 100 Kid Audio chart.) I realize 2,000 albums in a week is a dream for most artists, but it does seem within range of a handful of artists given a concentrated one-week push. But 70,000 albums? Yeah, that's not happening.

Video: "I Eat Kids" (Barry Louis Polisar) - The Radioactive Chicken Heads

Nothing like a little Barry Louis Polisar to scrape the warm and fuzzy edges off kind and gentle kids music. This is a reasonably straightforward telling of Polisar's "I Eat Kids," as performed by the Radioactive Chicken Heads from the 2-CD tribute album We're Not Kidding!. Well, except for the actual eating of kids. Right? The Radioactive Chicken Heads - "I Eat Kids" (Barry Louis Polisar cover) [YouTube]