Interview: Sherry Rich Plant (The Mudcakes)

sherrycuppatea.jpgIt can be hard to see half a world away, but there's an entire kids music scene in Australia apart from the Wiggles. It's small, but it's kicking, and trying to be heard. If there's a ringleader to the movement, it's probably Sherry Rich Plant, half of The Mudcakes. I've always enjoyed the Mudcakes' music, even from afar, and wanted to get Plant's view on kids music down under. Read on to hear Plant talk about her star-studded high school band, pirate TV, taking matters into her own hands, and other Australian music recommendations. Zooglobble: What are your musical memories growing up? Sherry Rich Plant: I grew up on an Island off the coast of Queensland, Australia. My mother Noelene Rich was a country folk singer in the 60's who toured and appeared on TV variety shows and clubs ... with the Bee Gees when they were first starting out! She was also a Girl Guide [Girl Scout] leader in charge of many large campfire singalongs and a guitar/ukulele teacher. So my brothers and I were surrounded by music whether we liked it or not! I started singing with my Mum onstage when I was 7 but I felt very shy and didn't like it much. Then when I hit my early teens my brother and I decided it was cool to play, so we learnt bass and guitar and started a high school band - which funnily enough also included Keith Urban! What made you want to first start making music for families? When my son Ramsay was born we were living in Nashville and I was working as a songwriter for BMG. Rick was a pro guitarist touring and doing studio work. With a new baby I lost the brain space to write anything but the little ditties that I made up to sing to him. I wrote the song "We're Going to Playschool" to help Ramsay get over his anxiety about going to childcare. Folks liked it and Rick and I decided to record some others for posterity. Before we knew it we had a whole album [Songs For Little Monkeys] and The Mudcakes were hatched. It was never a conscious decision to start making family music, but more like a natural shift in what I was writing about. I've always thought that the best art follows life. What sound (or band) did you have in your head when you started making family music? Has that sound in your head changed at all over time?

Video: "Do You Wanna Know My New Dance Step?" - Dog on Fleas

I can't say that "Do You Wanna Know My New Dance Step?" was my favorite song off Dog on Fleas' Beautiful World CD (or even their Bestest of the Best greatest hits collection. (In fact, I much prefer "The Moon Song," heard in the intro to this video and found on the greatest hits CD as well as their please-get-it-post-haste When I Get Little.) But is this a way cute video that makes me appreciate the song much more? Most definitely. (I particularly dig the ending.) Consider it the sequel to Newsies. Dog on Fleas - "Do You Wanna Know My New Dance Step?" [YouTube]

Monday Morning Smile: "Kitty Fight Song" - Joe McDermott

This song from Austin's Joe McDermott is so over the top -- the AutoTune, the rapid stylistic changes, the "K to the I to the T T Y" -- that you would think that there's no way the video could top it. You'd be wrong, of course, as it's just a giant LOLcat video. Or at least, it's what I believe a giant LOLcat video would look like if I bothered to search YouTube for LOLcat videos, of which I'm sure there are tens of thousands. Which I don't. I swear. If you watch just one LOLcat video this year, make it this one. Joe McDermott - "Kitty Fight Song" [YouTube]

Video: "Whatever the Weather" - The Severed Limb

I know. "The Severed Limb?" Really? But I'm telling you, "Whatever the Weather," you will enjoy it much more after you listen to this 90-second song from OKIDO's latest issue, all about weather. (Lyrics by Gabby Dawnay, illustrations by Alex Barrow, the band's accordionist.) The Severed Limb - "Whatever the Weather" (for OKIDO magazine) [YouTube]

Itty-Bitty Review: Love Me For Who I Am - Brady Rymer

LoveMeForWhoIAm.jpgDeciding to record an album inspired by spending time with students at a school for children with alternative learning styles, as Brady Rymer has done with his just-released album Love Me For Who I Am could have resulted in an album stickily sweet and boring to most listeners. But on this often rollicking album, Rymer successfully avoids both traps. Rymer's strength here is his ability to craft in song the feelings of children who have autism or Asperger's. He moves way beyond sympathy and into empathy, the ability to understand the feelings of others. That's because many of the emotional characteristics particularly felt by those children are shared in varying degrees by the rest of the population. There isn't that much of a gap between the child resisting getting dressed (in "Who Wants To Wear Shoes?") and the naked child running around in Rymer's "Dilly Dally Daisy" from a few years back. "Picky Eater," "I Don't Like Change," "Tune Out" -- from the album titles alone, you probably know a kid who would identify, even if they don't register anywhere on the autism spectrum. I think a child who isn't autistic might not want to listen repeatedly because it's not written from their perspective, but I think few kids wouldn't identify with at least a couple tracks. In any case, it's the most empathetic kids album I can think of in quite some time. Rymer marries those sentiments to his typical roots-rock sound. Once again he gets great support from his backing band, the Little Band That Could, producing a full-bodied sound with echoes of Mellencamp and Springsteen. I particularly liked "Squish Me Squeeze Me," which uses backing horns to great effect (and rhymes the word "anaconda" with "back of a Honda" in a completely non-gratuitous way). Rymer's duet with Laurie Berkner on the tender "Soft Things" is also worth repeated listenings. The album is most appropriate for all kids ages 3 through 7, though that may be different for kids who actually have autism or Asperger's Syndrome. You can here the whole album at Rymer's website. That Love Me For Who I Am is highly recommended for families (or classrooms) affected by autism or Asperger's is terribly surprising. What is more surprising, perhaps, is that other kids and families would probably enjoy listening to the album (or at least a fair number of the songs) on a regular basis. Recommended.

Video: "Sunny Day" - Elizabeth Mitchell

This video for "Sunny Day," off Elizabeth Mitchell's fine 2010 album of the same name was released late last night, but now that the sun has indeed come up (and the flowers are growing), I can say this is still a cute, handcrafted video. Features Mitchell's daughter Storey in the video, on vocals, on harmonica, on songwriting, and caterer. (OK, maybe not caterer.) Elizabeth Mitchell - "Sunny Day" [YouTube]