Video: "Forget You" (Cee-Lo Green) - Camilla and the Chickens

TheMuppetsSoundtrack.jpgThe Muppets, the latest entry in the Muppets film canon, premieres Wednesday (and the soundtrack tomorrow), so we're getting close to seeing the whole thing, but obviously the songs are starting to hit the interwebs. Said webs got thrown into a tizzy when the Muppet Barbershop Quartet cover of Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" went public (it was pulled for awhile, but now it's back). Now you can also hear Camilla and the Chickens cover Cee-Lo Green's massive hit "Forget You." Well, it was known as something different mostly, so we'll just call it "Cluck You." [Note: I swear, I thought of that line all by myself. I know, others probably did before me. But I'm proud of it.] Camilla and the Chickens - "Forget You" (Cee-Lo Green) [YouTube]

Share: "Oh, How You've Grown" - Frances England

Frances England has written me a song. OK, she's written you a song. You, there in the back with the Danish? Song for you, too. Explanation? England's written "Oh, How You've Grown" and offered the tender song on her website for free as part of her Holiday Family Creative Challenge. Not only can you download the mp3, you (that is, the non-commercial you) can use it as the soundtrack to your own family holiday scrapbook -- she's calling at an "end-of-the-year visual postcard." You can see England's own video here -- sepia makes everything more nostalgic. Frances England - "Oh, How You've Grown" [YouTube]

Video: "Counting on a Friend" - The Bazillions

The Twin Cities' The Bazillions just keep cranking out one great video after another from their album Rock-N-Roll Recess. After a series of animated videos from EG Design, they've taken a completely different tack for the video from "Counting on a Friend." It's a stop-motion animated video from EG Design. (I mock, but it's just as cool as its predecessors.) The Bazillions - "Counting on a Friend" [YouTube]

Itty-Bitty Review: Galactic Champions of Joy - Todd McHatton

GalacticChampionsOfJoy.jpgKids' music often resides in the realm of the real -- the concrete here and now. Music from Southern California's Todd McHatton doesn't follow that formula, especially on his latest disk, Galactic Champions of Joy. Sure, there's a song about going to the pool -- "Tommy Had a Super Towel," which kicks off the album -- but it's much more about the towel and Tommy's imaginative (and perhaps literal) flights of fancy with it. One "Little Money Man" and "Say Hello to My Hippo," McHatton sings consecutive songs about flatulence; in the former, money appears when the title character "cuts the cheese." And on the final track, the surreal and genius (and totally justified hit) "I Think I'm a Bunny," McHatton takes the role of a monster who thinks he's, well, a bunny, while the young girl he duets with has to convince him that he is, yes, indeed, a purple monster. (I would be disappointed if the song doesn't turn into a picture book at some point.) The music here is mostly swirling psychedelic power-pop that could have been released at any point in the past 35 years (say hello to the Beatles, or McHatton's hero Harry Nilsson, or Matthew Sweet). It can be gorgeous at times, and it's rarely simple. (This is Exhibit A in the argument against the notion that music for kids need only be bland.) Kids ages 5 through 9 will most appreciate the music (and lyrics) here. You can stream the 47-minute album here. If parts of Galactic Champions of Joy feel a little bit like a daydream, that's entirely appropriate. The imaginative life of a child can be every bit as important as the concrete day-to-day details, maybe more so, so an album that dives deep into those ideas should be valued. Most families will enjoy at least part of it, but some families will probably find this to be one of their most beloved albums. Recommended.

Dan Zanes Releases, Celebrates Christmas in Concord

DZChristmasinConcordCoverArt.jpgNothing like news of a Dan Zanes Christmas album to make the season bright(er). Word from Brooklyn this week that Zanes will follow up his excellent fall release Little Nut Tree with Christmas in Concord. The 5-song EP will be available on iTunes starting on November 29. [The EP is now available here.]The five tunes (tracklisting below) are traditional Christian Christmas tunes. Zanes notes that those tunes were part of Christmases in his hometown of Concord growing up:
"I moved away from that narrow canon in the years since I left home as a seventeen year old in favor of more varied musical pastures, but this holiday season something pulled me back... I now realize that there were some very moving songs being sung year after year and I’m grateful for the memories of those parties and for the experience of gathering year after year with friends and neighbors to sing, eat, have a few laughs and eat some pickled herring.”
Zanes did indeed travel more broadly, musically (remember his Holiday House Party from 2008?), so this is definitely much more traditional. thumb-Dan_Zanes_Profile_HiRes.jpgIn addition to the EP, Zanes is also putting on a Christmas in Concord concert on Saturday afternoon, December 17 at City Winery in New York City. The concert is intended to be a celebration of the Antonsons' annual Christmas party - a seasonal highlight in Concord, NH from 1968 through 1989; sounds like it'll be much different from the House Parties of '08. Zanes promises "special guests! christmas music! songbooks! holiday spirit!," all of which I'd expect from Zanes (including the lowercase spelling). No word on the pickled herring, though. Sounds like a blast. If we were anywhere near NYC that weekend, we'd be there. EP tracklisting (and possible sneak preview) after the jump.

The Best Library Hip-Hop You'll Hear All Year

LibraryHipHop.jpgOK. Probably the only library hip-hop you'll hear all year, but whatevs. So I got this disk from one Melvil Dewey -- no, not the librarian from the turn of the (20th) century and the inventor of the library categorization system that bears his name. Rather, it's Scott "Scooter" Hayes, who works as a librarian in Wilmington, North Carolina and for the past couple years or so has spent the rest of his time singing, or, rather, rapping the praises of libraries. (And occasionally spoofing the Masters.) So now he has a CD out called Library Hip Hop, a disk which is long overdue. (See what I did there? I mean, besides steal the last line from Dewey's PR piece?) Now, if you're a librarian reading this, you've probably already heard of Dewey. (And if you haven't, then you probably need to check out (see what I did there again?) the whole album. If you're anyone else, you do not need this album. It's like listening to an album about bowling -- just about bowling, no bowling-as-metaphor-for-life songs. Which would be pretty cool for 2 or 3 tracks but might not be that interesting 12 tracks in. But you might just dig the beats and the videos below. (The jacket, I offer no such guarantees for.) Melvil Dewey - "Library Card" [YouTube]