When I last told you about Denver's Que Pastas, it was to mention their free EP. (Pro tip: it's still free.)
Now I'm telling you about their shiny new video for "Mr. Butterfly." It's done by eg design, the same folks who've done the snappy set of videos for the Bazilions, with help from artist Season Mustful. Call it "The Very Funky Caterpillar."
The Que Pastas - "Mr. Butterfly" [YouTube]
Video: "Parachute (Using the Ghost of Buddy Holly As A)" - Fishboy
So I saw this the other day, and I just thought you (and your family) needed to see it, too. It's for "Parachute (Using the Ghost of Buddy Holly As A)" from Denton, Texas band Fishboy and their 2007 album Albatross: How We Failed to Save the Lone Star State With the Power of Rock and Roll. A catchy tune, a Pong reference in the video, and although it contemplates the possible death of the song's narrator, by the end it's uplifting and even makes the title make sense. Fishboy has a new album out -- Classic Creeps -- May 10 (stream it here). You can download this track for free here.
Fishboy - "Parachute (Using the Ghost of Buddy Holly As A)" [YouTube]
(Via the Pop For Kids blog, more on that anon.)
Please Release Me: April 2011 Edition
Another month, another list of new and upcoming releases. (Last month's list is here.) 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 edit or 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.
Joanie Leeds: What a Zoo! (April 12)
Brady Rymer: Love Me For Who I Am (April 12) [features duet with Laurie Berkner]
Azam Ali: From Night to the Edge of Day (April 12)
Daddy A Go Go (aka John Boydston): Grandkid Rock (April 19)
Rockabye Baby: Lullaby Renditions of the Flaming Lips (April 26)
Key Wilde & Mr. Clarke: Hey Pepito! EP (mid-April)
Eric Herman: The Elephant (DVD, national release April)
Randy Kaplan: Mr. Diddie Wah Diddie (April)
Tom Chapin: Give PEAS a Chance (May 3)
Lucky Diaz: O'Lucky Day! (May 10)
Moey's Music Party: Happily Ever Moey! A Fairy Tale Lark in Central Park (DVD, May 10)
Readeez: Readeez Vol. 3: Knowledge is Good (DVD, CD, May 13)
Egg: Hard Boiled (spring)
Rockabye Baby: Lullaby Renditions of Jimi Hendrix (Spring)
Recess Monkey: FLYING! (June 21)
Charlie Hope: Songs, Stories and Friends: Let's Go Play! (June)
Central Services Board of Education: Title TBA (summer)
Rocknoceros: Colonel Purple Turtle (Sept. 13)
Andy Z The Grand Scream of Things (Oct. 4) [produced by Tor Hyams]
Milkshake: Title TBA plus Holiday Album Title TBA (Fall 2011)
Other 2011 albums: Ah-Choo, Alastair Moock, Peter Apel, Funky Mamas, Dan Zanes, Hipwaders, Big Don, Mr. Richard, Chuck Cheesman. Also, Rockabye Baby for Van Halen, The Police, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Madonna.
New Grammy Categories Announced: 50% Fewer Children's Categories
The Recording Academy, otherwise known as the folks who put on the annual music recording industry confab called the Grammys, announced today that after a year-long review review they were restructuring the Grammy categories for the 54th Grammy Awards in 2012. Reducing from 109 to 78 categories, the Academy reduced the 2 categories in the Children's Field to one, eliminating the separate awards for Musical Recording and Spoken Word.
On the one hand, this can clearly be seen as a shot at the Children's Spoken Word recordings -- some other changes in the voting process indicated that low numbers of relevant album submissions were clearly a concern, as categories with fewer than 40 entries will now have just 3 nominees, and entries with fewer than 25 will be suspended. The Spoken Word category has, for the past few years, hung around in that 25-40 range, while the Musical Recording field always has well more than 100, often approaching 200, entries.
Oddly enough, however, it's that small number of recordings that may just give the spoken word recordings a disproportionate share of the nominees in the new, combined category. Fewer nominees, easier to vote for. And that's not even getting into the discussion once the nominees are announced, when the "famous name" aspect of the spoken word category may make it even harder for great, "non-famous" musical artists to break through.
I could be wrong. I hope I am. But I think the likelihood of independent family musicians getting nominated for 2012 just went down fairly substantially.
Itty-Bitty Review: Planting Seeds - Maria Sangiolo

Interview: Rafael Atijas (Loog Guitars)
