Video: "Foot Notes" - Jim Gill

I've always enjoyed the playfulness in Jim Gill's music, and this new video for "Foot Notes" from his upcoming fall release Music Play for Folks of All Stripes is an excellent example of his playful word play. What it lacks in, say, melody, it makes up for in improvisational generosity. As a matter of fact, you can dance to it. You just need to think about it a bit. Jim Gill - "Foot Notes" [Vimeo]

Video: "My Little Chicken (Chopsticks)" - Beethoven's Wig`

What do you get when you cross Seven Brides with Seven Brothers with musically destructive poultry? I have no idea. But while you're pondering that, distract your kids for a minute or so by letting them watch the first video from the upcoming Beethoven's Wig album Sing Along Piano Classics, out next month. It's called "My Little Chicken," but you probably know the base melody as "Chopsticks." It's amusing. Perhaps your kids will be able to answer the question I've posed above. Beethoven's Wig - "My Liittle Chicken (Chopsticks)" [YouTube]

Video: "Ong Tal Sam (Little Spring)" - Elizabeth Mitchell

Y'know, Elizabeth Mitchell's version of "Ong Tal Sam," or "Little Spring" was always one of my favorite cuts off Sunny Day, and this video just makes me love it even more. Oh, the cuteness. (Yes, I am secure in my masculinity and still feel confident in proclaiming, "Oh, the cuteness" on the interwebs.) Elizabeth Mitchell & You Are My Flower - "Ong Tal Sam (Little Spring)" [Vimeo]

Share: "Back Home" - Secret Agent 23 Skidoo

SA23mic.jpgIt just premiered on Sirius-XM's Kids Place Live, and now you can have it for your very own. Yes, Secret Agent 23 Skidoo world-premiered "Back Home," another slice of kid-hop, this afternoon, but you can download it for free. Perfect for all those kids heading off to a new school... Skidoo is in the studio now recording his third album, scheduled for release in spring 2012. He has not lost his touch...

Radio Playlist: New Music August 2011

Yay! It's another update of the Zooglobble radio station, covering assorted tracks collected over the summer. I've got a bunch of new music that's come in over the past couple weeks or so, so I expect another update to be not too far behind. 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 according to iTunes' weird alphabetization logic, but the play order on air is random due to Internet music restrictions. I Can Sing A Rainbow - Amy Meyers (Git On Board) Sneaky Snake - Buddy Miller Featuring Duane Eddy (I Love: Tom T. Hall's Songs Of Fox Hollow) Loud and Quiet (Featuring Frances England) - Caspar Babypants (Sing Along!) Best Friends - Charlie Hope (Let's Go Play!) I Believe in Pasta - David Rees (I Believe in Pasta) Train Going Past (Choo Choo!) - Earl Leonard (Hello Good Morning) Family Sandwich - Egg (Hard Boiled) Hey, Josie! - The Hipwaders (The Golden State) Synonym Toast - Jeff Warren (Synonym Toast) I Can Fly - johnny & jason (Go,Go...Go,Go,Go) Hey Pepito! - Key Wilde & Mr Clarke (Hey Pepito!) My Family (Acoustic Version) - Laurie Berkner (Party Day!) Animals - Melita Doostan (Wild Child: Recess Music) I'm A Pterodactyl - Mike Whitla (Dinostory) Puppy Dog - The Not-Its! (Tag, You're It!) Little Ray - The Raytones (My Hero Is You!) Your Favorite Book - Recess Monkey (FLYING!) Mr. Bassman - Sondre Lerche (Muppets: The Green Album) Little Liza Jane - Syd Straw (Play Music) Mushy Berry Pie - The Thinkers (Oh Zoooty!) The Crocodile Synchronised Swimming Team - Too Many Cookes (Down At The Zoo) Cows at the Zoo - Vince Junior (Swing for the Sky)

Review: Muppets: The Green Album - Various Artists

MuppetsTheGreenAlbum.jpgCaring whether your kids have "good" (read: "your") taste in music, books, and movies is a foolish thing to do, so it means something that the day that my daughter said she really didn't like The Muppet Movie was one of the very few times when I actually, well, cared. It's a great movie, a little cheesy at points maybe, but funny and tender, one of the great movie musicals of the past half-century. (Seriously -- there are very few post-1960s musical on the AFI list of the Greatest Movie Musicals, and even fewer created specifically for the screen.) Why do I relate the story? Well, more so than most albums reviewed here, it's my opinion, not that of kids, which matters here, because Muppets: The Green Album isn't really a kids music album. The album is a collection of 12 Muppet-related songs, drawn mostly heavily from The Muppet Movie or from songs heard on The Muppet Show. Much like Disney's collections of covers from their own stable of American tunes, Disneymania, Disney's approach here is to get popular (critically or otherwise) artists to tackle the Jim Henson-related songs. The fact that some of these artists weren't yet born when The Muppet Show went off network television doesn't seem to have hurt their recruiting efforts. (The fact that the rest of 'em were kids when the show was still on probably helped tremendously.) And as is the case with any such collection, Disney or otherwise, this album succeeds or fails based on how good the songs are and whether the artists bring anything new to them (or, if they ruin their charm). As to the former issue, I think I've made clear my admiration for the Paul Williams-Kenny Ascher-penned songs for The Muppet Movie, but in addition to those classics, you also have songs like the Joe Raposo-penned Sesame Street song "Bein' Green." What do the artists do with them? Well, some combinations work really, really well -- punk group the Alkaline Trio give "Movin' Right Along" a fun kick in the pants it didn't know it needed, and Sondre Lerche resurrect "Mr. Bassman," a song from a Muppet Show episode. I liked The Fray's take on "Mahna Mahna" more than I expected to, though it's probably the most faithful cover here. OK Go put their own spin on the theme song, and even though I could do without the tacked-on guitar solo, they do manage to keep the listeners' attention during what is, well, a theme song. And Andrew Bird's take on "Bein' Green" nails Kermit's wistfulness without making his cover a carbon copy. But following Kermit is a tough act, and while many attempt to cover "Rainbow Connection," very few succeed, and I can't say that Weezer and Hayley Williams from Paramore do, either. As for "Night Life" from The Great Muppet Caper, covered here by Brandon Saller of Atreyu and Billy Martin, I'll just quote my wife after hearing it for the first time: "I never need to hear that ever again." So, is this a kids' album? Not really. I'll put the age range for the album at ages 8 and up, not because any of it is inappropriate for younger kids, but because unless they've seen lots of Muppets on TV/DVD, they won't have the context for the music. (Older kids can enjoy the music on their own terms, or perhaps even recognize a few of the bands.) For a little while longer, you can stream the album here. In the end, Muppets: The Green Album has a number of very good recordings from an underrated American songbook. Is it a great kids' album? No. Is it a lot of fun for those of us of a certain age who are still able to tap the kid inside? For the most part, yeah. For those Muppet fans, it's recommended. Disclosure: I received a copy of this album for possible review.