More Halloween Songs and Videos

In my last edition, I highlighted some free Halloween tunes. This time 'round, the songs aren't free, but the videos are. Is that better or worse? First up, Princess Katie and Racer Steve hired a 53-piece orchestra for their Halloween tune, which is about 51 more pieces than they could have gotten had they hired the Shepherd family. I think they made the right choice. Also, I draw like crap, so the video's waaaaay better, too. Princess Katie and Racer Steve - "Halloween" [YouTube] But wait, there's more!

Radio Playlist: New Music October 2011

Time again to update the Zooglobble radio station, covering assorted tracks collected late summer and early this fall. I had to move a number of tracks to a "New Music November 2011" playlist, so here's hoping one appears by, say, November 2011. 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 as random as the on-air play order (which is due to Internet music restrictions). Tea Party - The Jimmies (Practically Ridiculous) Back Home - Secret Agent 23 Skidoo Punk Rocks - In The Nick Of Time (Making Silly Faces) What!? - Snapdragon Seeds (Snapdragon Seeds) Quarter Moon Shining - Chip Taylor & the Grandkids (Golden Kids Rules) Farewell to the Farm - Ted Jacobs (Back To the Garden) Wesley Werewolf - Skelly and the Punkins Wake Up Baby! - Dan Zanes & Friends (Little Nut Tree) I Think I’m A Bunny - Todd McHatton (Galactic Champions of Joy) Feets Up (Featuring Rani Arbo) - Alastair Moock (These Are My Friends) Echolocation - Rocknoceros (Colonel Purple Turtle) Still Small Voice - Palo Colorado (U R Some 1) Garbage Man - Mr. Richard & The Pound Hounds (Backyard Astronauts) Seafood Song - Chuck Cheesman (Dancing With No Shoes On) Baby Makes Three - Papa Crow (Things That Roar) A Piano Is Stuck In The Door - Beethoven's Wig Featuring Richard Perlmutter (Beethoven's Wig: Sing Along Piano Classics) Farm To The Table - Shannon Wurst (Green & Growing (Roots Music For Eco-Kids)) Go Out And Play - The Plants (Sprouting Out) Country Ditty - The Toy Trains (The Toy Trains) The Tale Of The Hasty Baker - Miss Lynn (Something New) Bus Stop - Yosi and the Superdads (Wake Up!) Keep on the Sunny Side - Professor Banjo (PB and Jam) 1..2..3..4..5..6..7..8..Drums - Mike Park (Smile) I Like Silver, I Like Gold - Ben Rudnick (Live In Lexington) The Antelope Can't Elope - Bill Crosby (Boomerang Orangutan)

Video: "Flying" - Recess Monkey

The difference between Recess Monkey and you? (OK, me.) You (or, er, I) go to the airport for a trip and hope to catch up on my backlog of New Yorkers and the Seattle trio go to the airport for a trip and film a freakin' video. This one, for the title track from FLYING!, was filmed at SEA-TAC and features the occasional odd glance from onlookers, innovative camera techniques, and a in-flight instruction card I don't recall seeing the one time I flew JetBlue. Recess Monkey - "Flying" [YouTube]

Review Two-Fer: Papa Crow / Chuck Cheesman

ThingsThatRoar.jpgI don't think that Jeff Krebs and Chuck Cheesman are the same person. Having said that, I've never seen the two bearded guitarists in the same place at the same time, and some of the similarities on their new albums leave the question open in my eyes. The kindie world is very focused on rock and pop and sometimes other genres at the moment, which leaves the folk music that for many years was the backbone of the genre somehat pushed to the background. As a result, these two albums stand out more than they might have ten or twenty years ago. DancingWithNoShoesOn.jpgI've long been a fan of Chuck Cheesman, a former Old Town School of Folk Music Wiggleworms teacher who now lives in the pines of Northern Arizona in Flagstaff. His first album for families, A Family Handbook, was a solid record of mostly traditional tunes, and his just-released second kids' album Dancing With No Shoes On is just as solid. It's an occasionally goofy, occasionally heartfelt, always warm collection of songs. It's folk music that draws no small amount of inspiration from Woody Guthrie (see "Seafood Song" or "A Big Dog Ate My Homework," perhaps). Given his longtime experience playing for kids, he's got a good sense of what kids will respond to, songs like the banjo-aided "Chocolate-Covered Brussels Sprouts" and the bluesy (natch) "Milkstache Blues." It's a mostly upbeat, sunny approach -- something to play in the summer, or maybe a warm Northern Arizona fall. The 35-minute album (which includes 4 songs heard on his first album) is most appropriate for kids ages 3 through 7; you can hear song clips here. If Dancing with No Shoes On is a sunny, almost summer-y folk album, Things That Roar, Jeff Krebs' (aka Papa Crow) first album for families is a little more hushed, a Michigan winter to Cheesman's Arizona mountain summer. Nothing is being reinvented here (OK, maybe the beat loops on "High Up on a String" are a little new), but the 14 originals are put together with care. It's not just a guy and a guitar -- it features (among other things) accordion, banjo, sleigh bells, and a couple nice duet turns by Kerry Yost. Krebs has an appealing voice himself and shows off some nifty guitar and ukulele work on songs like "Polar Bear in a Snowstorm" and "Ukulele." And if "Chicken Lips" doesn't become a minor radio hit, I'll be sorely disappointed. Kids ages 2 through 7 will most appreciate the songs here. You can hear some songs from the 32-minute album at the Papa Crow ReverbNation page. When I mentioned this as one of my favorite new albums of the fall, I deliberately included Crow along with Dan Zanes, one of his inspirations. Things That Roar is a gentle breath of fresh air, and maybe my desire for cooler weather caused me to prefer that to Dancing With No Shoes On, but they're both fine albums. Chuck Cheesman is one of those artists who, if they were in a larger market, would be much better known; Dancing With No Shoes On is just an excellent collection of new and folk music. And while Papa Crow's got a ways to go to reach the heights of Zanes or Elizabeth Mitchell or Frances England, artists who've inspired him, but Things That Roar is a small delight and fans of those artists will probably find in Papa Crow someone they want to hear more of as well. Both albums are definitely recommended.

Monday Morning Smile: "Peggy Sang the Blues" - Frank Turner

EnglandKeepMyBones.jpgThank Bill for this one. It's from English singer Frank Turner, whose album England Keep My Bones will almost certainly end up in my top five albums of 2011 and who I was first introduced to by Bill. It's punk with a county/folk edge, or perhaps it's country/folk with a punk edge. Totally tuneful and joyful (except when he's not trying to be joyful) and an excellent live. Not all of the new album is appropriate for kids, and the lead single, "Peggy Sang the Blues," concerns a visitation in Turner's dreams by his dead grandmother. Which is fine by me, because it's got the best damn chorus of the year, including the lyrics "It doesn't matter you come from / it matters where you go / and no gets remembered / for the things they didn't do." I hope my own kids know that. Frank Turner - "Peggy Sang the Blues" [YouTube]

Itty-Bitty Review: Sing Along Piano Classics - Beethoven's Wi

BeethovensWigSingAlongPiano.jpgWhile the concept of Richard Perlmutter's Beethoven's Wig is kinda genius -- take famous classical melodies and attach often-funny lyrics to them -- I'd kinda found the past couple entries a little lacking, at least compared to the first couple albums. It was the Die Hard of kids music -- starting out strong, but no longer essential. Well, John McClane won't head back to theatres for a fifth time until February 2013, but Perlmutter is bringing back his own creation for a fifth time in the recently-released Sing Along Piano Classics. If this new album is any indication, you may want to keep that weekend free for moviegoing because Bruce Willis Richard Perlmutter brings back his "A" game. As the title suggests, Perlmutter uses famous piano melodies as the basis for his "Weird Al"-like parodies, and many of them hit the mark. "A Piano Is Stuck in the Door" reworks Scott Joplin's "The Entertainer" to amusing effect, while "Poor Uncle Joe" appropriately talks about death in Frederic Chopin's Funeral March. A death of a car, but still. Most of the melodies are very familiar, and Perlmutter tweaks that familiarity on that in some cases -- lots of nonsense syllables in his version of W.A. Mozart's Sonata in C Major, or a clucking chicken in "My Little Chicken." And his take on Mozart's "Alla Turca" (unfamiliar name, but a familiar melody), which he calls "Mozart Makes Kids Smart," is slyly sarcastic ("Instantly / kids can be / the Little Einsteins we expect now / Did you know / with more Mozart / there'd be no child left behind?"). Given the occasionally tricky wordplay, the album is most appropriate for kids ages 6 and up. The 45-minute album features both versions with and without the lyrics; you can hear samples here. Ironically, given his gentle mocking of the "Mozart Effect," Sing Along Piano Classics is actually a pretty good introduction to some famous classical melodies, pairing some well-loved (and in some cases, centuries-old) melodies with smart and silly lyrics. It's a lot of fun. Yippee-ki-yay, Mozart-lover. Definitely recommended.