Radio Playlist: New Music June 2011

It has been way too long since I updated the Zooglobble radio station. (Ahem.) This playlist airs in the mid-afternoons (West Coast time), but if you can't listen in the afternoon, the tracks are scattered throughout the day, too. As always, the listing below is alphabetical, but the play order on air is random due to Internet music restrictions. Stinkerbelle (Timeout Mix) - Alex The Seal (Kids' Club) Metaphor - The Alphabeticians (Rock) Skywriter - Baron Von Rumblebuss (Agreeably Loud!!) House On Wheels - Caroline Herring (The Little House Songs) Tired Eyes - Mark Erelli (Innocent When You Dream) All I Wanna Do Is Dance - Fuzzy Lollipop (Sweet!) The Alphabet Song - Groove Kid Nation (Wheels On The Bus) Wisconsin Poncho - Gustafer Yellowgold (Gustafer Yellowgold's Infinity Sock) 10-4 Good Buddy - Hullabaloo (Road Trip) Waters of March - Jamie Broza (I Want a Dog!) Froggie Went A Courtin' (Featuring Secret Agent 23 Skidoo) - Joanie Leeds And The Nightlights (What A Zoo!) 1 2 3 4 - Kurt Gallagher (1 2 3 4) I Love The Mountains - The Learning Station (#1 Best Kid's Songs!) It's Hard To Wait For Your Birthday - Lori Henriques (Outside My Door) Bluebonnet Time - Lucas Miller (I <3 Earth) Let's Dance - Lucky Diaz And The Family Jam Band (Oh Lucky Day!) Magic Pony - Miss Amy & Her Big Kids Band (Fitness Rock & Roll) Gonna Take My Hat - Mister G (Bugs) Super Scientist - Monty Harper (Songs From The Science Frontier) Our Family - Mr. Leebot (Erratic Schematic) The Funkier The Better - Nikolai Moderbacher (The Funkier The Better) Would You Sing Me? - Octopretzel (If I Were A Song...) Hip Hop - RhymeZwell (Nursery Rhymez) Super Can - The RTTs (Goodie Bag) Wear My Pajamas To School - Rudy Trubitt (Wear My Pajamas To School) Un, deux, trois - Sophie & Les Petites (Bonjour) Dandelion - Steve Weeks (Dandelion) Cooperate - Sugar Free Allstars & Secret Agent 23 Skidoo Slow Food - Van Oodles (Flossophy 101) Lester's Dementia - Zak & Dela (The Candy Machine)

Please Release Me: June 2011 Edition

It is time again for my updated 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. I've slightly changed the update conventions from last month. Additions to the list are how noted with a "++"; changes to previously-mentioned items are still indicated with italics. ++ Rockabye Baby: Lullaby Renditions of Def Leppard (June 14) Recess Monkey: FLYING! (June 21) Putumayo Kids - Kids World Party (June 28) Rock the Cradle: Dreamin' with Def Leppard (June 28) [new lullaby series from Tor Hyams' Happiness Records feat. Def Leppard band members] ++ The Not-Its!: Tag, You're It! (June 28) Charlie Hope: Songs, Stories and Friends: Let's Go Play! (June) Egg: Hard Boiled (June) Key Wilde & Mr. Clarke: Hey Pepito! EP (July 1) Moey's Music Party: Happily Ever Moey! A Fairy Tale Lark in Central Park (DVD, July 12) ++ Suzy Bogguss: American Folk Songbook (July 18 / Aug. 2) Eric Herman: The Elephant (DVD, July 19) [watch one of three amusing spoof preview videos here.] Laurie Berkner: Party Day (DVD, July 26) ++ Ben Rudnick & Friends: Live in Lexington (July) [double CD set, 2008 live concert] Hipwaders: Golden State (Aug. 2) ++ The Wiggles: Ukulele Baby! (DVD, Aug. 9) The Jimmies: Practically Ridiculous (Aug. 16) ++ Recess Music (Various Artists): Wild Child (mid-August) ++ Maestro Classics: My Name is Handel (Aug. 24) ++ Music for Little People: Toddler Favorites: The Movie (Aug. 30) ++ Riff Rockit: Title TBA (CD, DVD, late August) Central Services Board of Education: Title TBA (summer) ++ In The Nick of Time: Making Silly Faces (Sept. 6) Rocknoceros: Colonel Purple Turtle (Sept. 13) ++ Maestro Classics: A Soldier’s Tale (Sept. 15 Caspar Babypants: Sing Along! (Sept. 20) ++ Ted Jacobs: Back to the Garden (Sept. 20) ++ Beethoven's Wig, feat. Richard Perlmutter: Sing Along Piano Classics (Sept. 27). [features piano works by Chopin, Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Schumann, Debussy, Stravinsky, Schoenberg, and Joplin] Andy Z: The Grand Scream of Things (Sept. 30) [produced by Tor Hyams] Hope Harris: Picasso, That's Who (October) ++ Recess Music (Various Artists): U R Some 1 (mid-October) ++ The Dirty Sock Funtime Band: Title TBA (November) ++ Suzi Shelton: Title TBA (fall) Randy Kaplan: Mr. Diddie Wah Diddie (fall?) Milkshake: Title TBA plus Holiday Album Title TBA (Fall 2011) Other 2011 albums: Ah-Choo, Alastair Moock, Peter Apel, Funky Mamas, Dan Zanes, Big Don, Mr. Richard, Chuck Cheesman, Ratboy, Jr., Todd McHatton, Jim Gill. Also, Rockabye Baby for Van Halen, The Police, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Madonna.

Share: Hey Pepito! EP - Key Wilde & Mr. Clarke

HeyPepito.jpgHave you had your coffee yet? Your kids had their chocolate milk? No? Well, don't worry about it. Just stream the first song on this new EP from Key Wilde and Mr. Clarke, you'll all be ready to conquer the world. (Or at least power your bike up the hill.) Titled Hey, Pepito!, the 6-song EP features four new songs, including the aforementioned title track, the only-slightly-less hyper "Don Mario's Song," "Talking Big Pet Pig," which is, well, the story of the "Big Pet Pig" as told by Bob Dylan, and a very sweet "Summer Lullaby." (It also features "It's So Good" and "Mary the Fairy.") The EP is officially released July 1, but you can stream it below.

Interview: Barry Louis Polisar

BarryLouisPolisarPhotoCopyrightByMichaelG StewartOne.JPGBarry Louis Polisar is simultaneously children's music best kept secret and one of the most visible (or at least audible) artist for the mainstream. A secret in that you don't necessarily hear a lot about him within the kids music world compared to other, more active artists, but at the same time, placement of "All I Want Is You" in the movie Juno and in a new Honda ad have given Polisar a reach into popular culture that exceeds just about any independent family musician. In the interview below, Polisar talks at length about his influences, his views on the current kids music scene and his role in it, and where his creative energies are now. What are your musical memories from childhood? My main influences were Johnny Cash and Alvin and the Chipmunks. I have a recording on my website of me singing Cash's "Ring of Fire" when I was about seven years old and it was always a favorite song. Alvin and the Chipmunks certainly gave voice to the naughty, rebellious side of childhood back in the late fifties -- and the very first flier advertising my songs included the line "picking up where Alvin and the Chipmunks left off." I also liked the witty lyrics and humor in Roger Miller's songs which were popular in the early sixties and another favorite was the Australian singer Rolf Harris who had a hit with "Tie Me Kangaroo Down Sport." To this day I can sing every line of every song from his album and many of those songs would be considered wildly inappropriate now by some parents. I've read you first started writing songs at school, but when did you seriously begin to write music for kids? I began my career while I was in college. I was 21 years old in 1975 -- not too far removed from being a kid myself. I went to the University of Maryland and had planned on being a teacher. I had bought a guitar and was teaching myself how to play when a teacher saw me with it, and asked if I would entertain the kids at the school where she was teaching. It was at that school that I overheard another teacher yelling at her students, copied down her tirade and wrote my song "I've Got a Teacher, She's So Mean." Because I was planning on being a teacher myself, word spread that I had written this song and the next thing I knew teachers from other schools were calling me asking me to sing that song in their schools. I ended up putting myself through college singing in the schools and after a year of concerts at schools and libraries, I had made enough to finance my first album. So even though I was still in college, I was writing and performing all the time. Sesame Street had heard about my songs -- by then I had recorded a second album -- and they called me to New York to talk about writing songs for a project they were working on; Big Bird recorded my song "I've Got A Dog and My Dog's Name is Cat." About how many songs have you written/published, anyway?

Newborn: The Itty Biddies

IttyBiddies.jpgI'm kicking off a new series today, though it's really not different from what we've been doing here at Zooglobble since the beginning -- highlighting music you might not otherwise be aware of. In particular, the "Newborn" series will feature artists who have only just begun to dip their toes into the kiddie pool. If I'd made the connection last week, I might've had Space Balloons kick off this series, but instead I'm going to introduce you to the Itty Biddies. The Biddies are a side project of The Lascivious Biddies, a NYC-based "cocktail pop" trio featuring Lee Ann Westover on lead vocals and ukulele, pianist Deidre Rodman, and bass player Saskia Lane (yes, of Dan Zanes' band). After Rodman and Lane each had a child, the trio started writing songs for kids. One thing led to another, and now they're playing a number of shows for the wee ones, including a number of shows for CarnegieKids. You can hear a number of songs, both covers ("Ask" by the Smiths -- well, duh! that's a perfect kids' song!) and originals, at their website. Unsurprisingly, for a band that's been together for a decade (in adult form, anyways), the playing is tight and the harmonies are tighter. And if they record more songs like "Brighter Days" below, then I'm sold.

The Itty Biddies sing "Brighter Days" from Lascivious Biddies on Vimeo.

Here's a live video with an energetic crowd, to be sure...

Monday Morning Smile: The Little Red Plane

The video below titled "The Little Red Plane" uses music only as background for the visuals, which come courtesy of UK animator Charlotte Blacker and her family. It's very gentle and reminds a little bit of the very first Wallace and Gromit short. Which, if you know me, is very high praise indeed. (Hat tip: reader Kelli Ann, who found it here.) Charlotte Blacker - "The Little Red Plane" [YouTube]