Video: "The Sky Floats (And So Do Boats)" - Billy Kelly

Billy Kelly is a busy man. No sooner does he release the excellent Is This Some Kind of Joke? last summer than he preps The Family Garden, due out this April. No wonder he's illustrating the video for a song off Joke, "The Sky Floats (And So Do Boats)," so quickly. He doesn't have much time, people! As for the video itself, on one hand, it makes the lyrics crystal clear. On the other... it doesn't help at all. Billy Kelly - "The Sky Floats (And So Do Boats)" [YouTube]

Video: "My Valentine" - Recess Monkey

Ahhhh... Valentine's Day, the day when little boys' thoughts turn to that of Transformers Valentine's tattoos to distribute to their preschool friends. And thoughts of fish. Or maybe that's just Recess Monkey for that second part. Just in time for Valentine's Day, the band's released the first video from their eagerly anticipated June 14 release Flying. It's called "My Valentine," and it's an ode to a fish. It features ukulele and some nifty big band assistance from Johnny Bregar and Dean Jones. What's not to love? Recess Monkey - "My Valentine" [YouTube]

Video: "Balloons" - Skyboat

Your child's need for balloon-related videos will be completely satiated by this video from Skyboat. Big balloons, small balloons, balloons inflating, balloons deflating, plain balloons, fancy balloons -- really it's all here in a nicely-edited digital video. The song, from their debut On Trinity Street, has a nice marching band feel that is definitely different from a lot of other kindie releases. Skyboat - "Balloons" [YouTube]

Monday Morning Smile: "Billie Jean" - James Hill & Bakithi Kumalo

I love everything about this video: the choice of tune, obviously; the rediscovery of the lyrics; the gently educational nature of the performance; the way James Hill and Bakithi Kumalo (husband of Robbi Kumalo, incidentally) hold an audience captivated for more than 6 minutes with just 2 ukes. It's clearly a well-rehearsed piece (there are lots of YouTube videos featuring Hill covering this song), but so much the better for that fact. (Hat tip: Heidi Swedberg) James Hill & Bakithi Kumalo - "Billie Jean" [YouTube]

The Ketchup Report, Vol. 6

Another collection of random bits from around the kindie-webs... -- Perpetual Grammy nominee Bill Harley is offering up another free track. This one is - gasp! - a quarter-century old. It's "I'm On My Way" from his 1986 album 50 Ways To Fool Your Mother and it's a nifty re-working of the old traditional tune... -- The long-in-the-making "We Are the World"-style jam "A World of Happiness" is finally making its way to the light of day. Joanie Leeds and Tor Hyams released a YouTube video explaining the project, which basically boils down, "a whole bunch of kindie artists lending their talents to a single song to raise money for charity." That works for me. Originally pegged as a Haiti-relief song, now the charity of choice will be picked by a vote. -- The Wales-based animation studio Planet Sunday, best known here probably for their animation work for The Hipwaders and Debbie and Friends, also helps run their Animation Academy. The Academy (now a non-profit organization, shows kids ages 8 and up how animated films are made and gives them the chance to make their own films. Their most recent workshop resulted in a music video for The Hipwaders. According to Planet Sunday founder Greg David, "The kids and parents really got a lot out of it, and it really improved the format of the day." They've got two workshops lined up this month, on the 23rd and 25th February. One band is already interested, but they're looking to get someone else on board -- i.e., another kindie band. While David says they try to keep the costs down for kids as much as possible by getting grants and other funding to cover the cost of equipment and materials, etc., if a band would like to make a donation of either money and/or goodies for the kids it'd be much appreciated. (And, I suppose, that would go for anyone, regardless of their kindie-rocking status.) If interested, drop 'em a line here. -- I normally wouldn't like this video from L.A.'s Mista Cookie Jar -- it's way too overdone for my own tastes -- but they all combine into something... else. It's probably the tune, which is earwormy, and downloadable for free (or donation) right here... Mista Cookie Jar - "Joey the Dogg" [YouTube]

Interview: Cory Cullinan (Doctor Noize)

CoryAcousticGuitarlowres.jpgCory Cullinan, the musician/genius/madman behind Doctor Noize is both a very funny and a very loquacious man. The interview below, which was conducted in late December, was even longer what's printed below. I left out jokes and I left out even more of the obvious passion Cullinan brings to his unique family music project. Even if you've never heard of Doctor Noize (or even if you have and can't forgive him for writing that "Banana" song that's still stuck in your head), read on find out more about his musical upbringing, crazy musical plans, and views on U.S. Men's National Soccer Team coach Bob Bradley. Zooglobble: What are your early musical memories growing up? Cory Cullinan: Well, my parents used me as a drum. I think. My head's a little fuzzy on that. Pretty much the only rock band we listened to when I was a little kid was the Beatles, and they're still probably my favorite band. Other than that it was musical theater and classical music. I took piano lessons, sang a lot, and played saxophone. The sax I play onstage as Dr. Noize is still the Yamaha student model I played in elementary school. The first records I bought were Queen's The Game and Saturday Night Fever... I met Howard Jones in my teens and he was super cool to me. I loved his DIY approach to making music and his unabashedly positive, anti-whine philosophical message. I learned to play a bunch of rock songs and started writing and recording my own songs on cheap Yamaha and Casio synths I bought in Hong Kong. My most significant early musical memories were in high school with my friend Mark Van Horn. His parents were not rich, but his dad nonetheless somehow funded a makeshift eight-track recording studio in the janitor's room at the apartment complex he managed. Mark and I spent virtually all our time there when I wasn't playing soccer. We wrote and recorded entire albums together in our teens, learning both the artistic and technical craft of songwriting and recording. One of those recordings -- "Gotta Teach Others To Enjoy Life" -- is actually used unchanged in our new Doctor Noize online game, Who Dropped The Block? That's 17-year-old me writing and singing all the harmonies. We went deep. So Mark introduced me to the recording studio and my future wife, then he died in his twenties of a brain tumor -- just like my brother. Crazy. Mark and my brother inspired much of my life's philosophy, really -- I sort of do a lot of things in honor of them -- and they were two of the funniest and most naturally brilliant guys I've ever met. And I was hooked -- on both the music and the girl. I listened to and played a lot of rock and pop music, then started to find the genre a bit too musically conservative to keep my fire intrigued. I know everybody in mainstream America thinks rock is rebellious and challenging and classical music is conservative, but musically speaking that is precisely backward. That's a whole other conversation. So I went to Stanford and enjoyed degrees in Music and Political Science. I performed in the Stanford Chamber Chorale with both Dave Kim (co-founder of Outblaze) and Kyle Pickett (the amazing conductor of CA's North State Symphony, who I now play concerts with). I forged a lifelong friendship with Jay Kadis, who runs the recording studio at Stanford and taught me a lot more about recording techniques, and Jay and I still get together to record some of the Doctor Noize tracks at Stanford when I'm in town. (Don't tell the university -- this interview isn't gonna be published, right???) What specific event or two made you turn to family music?