Weekly Summary (8/5/13 - 8/11/13)

Review: Recess - Justin Roberts

I recently watched Jiro Dreams of Sushi , a 2011 film about Jiro Ono, an 85-year-old sushi maker whose small restaurant in the basement of a Tokyo office building has received three Michelin Guide stars, signifiying it as one of the best restaurants in the world, one worth visiting a country for solely to eat at.  It's a beautiful movies in many different ways, and makes many points about craft, dedication, and skill.  (It also will make you hungry for sushi, but that's not relevant here.)

Watching the movie came at a fortuitous time for me as a reviewer, because I'd been banging my head for weeks  -- virtually -- trying to figure out how to write a review of Justin Roberts' latest album, Recess.  It is, as I've noted before, difficult to write about musicians who consistently release high quality music for families.  How do you write "this is great" without boring your audience (or, almost as importantly, yourself)?  And with Jiro , the answer came to me -- through the prism of the difficulty of maintaining one's craft over an extended period of time.

Justin Roberts released his first album for kids, Great Big Sun, in 1997; this new album is his ninth.  There is not a kids musician today who has a discography of original music for kids and families as consistently great and large as Roberts has produced over the past 16 years.  Other have a great discography featuring reinterpretations of classic songs or have fewer albums or written over a shorter period of time, but let's stop here to think about the dedication to craft his career has entailed. Sixteen years of crafting songs with a singular audience in mind.  Roberts didn't go full-time to kids music until the early 2000s, and he's now putting together a couple kids' books, but for the most part, that's more than 15 years doing a single thing over and over.  Is it any wonder that Roberts' songwriting skills are so sharp?

Many of Roberts' songwriting hallmarks are on display in Recess, starting with the irresistible title track.  Child narrator with enthusiasm on full display?  Check.  Internal rhymes?  Check.  Spelling?  Check.  (OK, I wouldn't necessarily suggest that spelling is one of Roberts' hallmarks.)  All that wrapped in powerpop that seems that seems like it can't get any more powerpoppy until he finds the amp that goes to 11.  It's a great song, among Roberts' best.  (Critic's obligatory fawning praise for producer Liam Davis and the whole Not Ready for Naptime Players, who bring Roberts' songs to vibrant life?  Check.)

His songwriting skills are such that at this point he's willing to tackle one of the most obvious (and usually tired)  subjects in kids music -- princesses and girls wearing pink -- and he completely turns it on its ear, offering up a song that many adult listeners will hear as an allegory about how it just takes a handful of people changing their attitude to overturn outdated ways of thinking ("It seems so obvious to us, it's hard to understand the fuss").

As the album proceeds, the longtime Roberts fan will hear echoes of previous songs -- I can't listen to "Hopscotch" without thinking of "We Go Duck" and their celebrations of childhood games, or "I'll Be an Alien" without several songs about kids dreaming of their escape like "Backyard Super Kid."  There are the songs that serve up an entirely different musical interlude mid-stream such as "Every Little Step."  And, yeah, there seems to be a direct line (in reverse) from the narrator of "Check Me Out, I'm at the Checkout" to that of "Meltdown!"

To me, the way this album differs from its predecessors is Roberts' increased emphasis on songs about parenthood.  In the past, those celebrations of parenthood have been more oblique (the sideways glance at the parents in "Cartwheels and Somersaults," still my all-time favorite song of his).  And on Recess, songs like  "School's Out (Tall Buildings)" take that same approach.  But a song like "Every Little Step," though ostensibly (and I'm pretty sure in actuality) about dog ownership by the dog, is easily heard as a celebratory song about the parent-child relationship.  "We Got Two" is a song about twins, but from the parent's perspective.  "Red Bird" carries on Roberts' tradition of ending his album on a gentle note, but if you take a step back, it's hard to believe the journey the album takes from the album opener to the string-assisted ballad at the end.  Yet they seem part of a whole, enthusiasm yielding to unconditional love and wonder.

Like the rest of his discography, the album is most appropriate for kids ages 5 through 9, though he obviously has wider age appeal.  Roberts has decided to limit his music for digital streams on services such as Spotify, and his taste for the analog extends to the gorgeous packaging for the CD, which includes a lovely cover courtesy of Ned Wyss.  Wyss also designed the secret robot in the packaging, who is your child's (and your) guide through a secret website featuring activities for your child and a treasure trove of JR rarities for, well, probably you.  (And me.)

It's actually those rarities such as a 2002 live recording of "Yellow Bus" that bring us back to the beginning, to the importance of craft. Even "Yellow Bus," a classic, fun and funny song in its own right, might only be the sixth or seventh best song on Recess.  On the one hand, in its recapitulations of themes and styles I could say that Justin Roberts' career up to this point has led him right here to this album.  But that might suggest some sort of finality to the journey, and the thing that I've realized is that he's going to continue crafting great music.  Recess  is a great album, Roberts' best (though that's a close call, to be sure), but I also know that it's very likely that one day he will release something even better.  Highly recommended.

 [Note: I received a copy of the album for possible review.] 

Weekly Summary (7/29/13 - 8/4/13)

I swear, I'm really close to posting more often, but when you think about it, a half-dozen posts for a "slow week" is pretty good...

Blog:   Interview: Keith Terry (Crosspulse Percussion Ensemble)

Videos:  "Banana Man" - Glen Hansard, "Summer Song" - Joe McDermott

Listen to Music:  Imagination - Play Date, "I'm Not Sleeping In ('Cuz It's Saturday)" - The Verve Pipe

Free Music:  Music Box - New Zealand Kids Music Sampler

Kids Music Reviews:  None

Upcoming Releases: Constantly updating...

Podcasts

Kindie Week in Review:  Episode 24: Elizabeth Mitchell, You've Been Replaced by a Cat

My Other Other Gig:  None

Bake Sale:  None

  

Interview: Keith Terry (Crosspulse Percussion Ensemble)

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Keith Terry is the founding Artistic Director of Crosspulse, a San Francisco Bay Area organization which since 1980 has been dedicated to creating, performing, and recording rhythm-based, intercultural music and dance.  Terry's biography is long and distinguished -- to summarize it in the context of an introductory paragraph would be unfair, and so I won't other than to say I'm glad to say that someone with his broad range of experience has, as part of Crosspulse, recorded the ensemble's first album for families, I Like Everything About You (Yes I Do) .  Terry recently answered some questions about his musical background, his development of "body music," and what difference, if any, there is between their shows for adults and those for kids. 

Zooglobble: What are your first musical memories?

Keith Terry: Music in the church (I grew up in a Southern Baptist family).  My mom played some piano by ear, but mostly my parents just really enjoyed music - big band and country, mostly.   So it was often playing in our home.  But I fell in love with jazz early on, as the result of my cousin taking me to hear Thelonius Monk and Cannonball Adderley at a jazz festival when I was 9 or 10 years old.  I began playing drums in the elementary school band, and continued through junior high and high school.  

Had you been much interested in making music with your body before you had your "body music" epiphany?  

I hadn't thought much about body music before that moment, although I often heard my Grandfather playing a simple hambone pattern when I was growing up.  

For my readers, what's your definition of "body music"?

Body Music, sometimes called Body Percussion or Body Drumming, is that music created by the sounds of the body via clapping, slapping, snapping, stepping and vocalizing.  Probably the oldest music on the planet, traditional styles can still be found all over the world.

What is notation like for body music?

I use the musical staff.  The five lines, from top down, represent 

clap and snap

chest

thighs

bottom or hip

feet

I write parts like I would notate any rhythm, with the addition of R or L (right and left).  If there is an accompanying vocal part, like a melody with harmony, I notate that using a separate staff.  I've tried a few different ways of notating, but I keep coming back to this.

You've been making music in front of youthful audiences for years -- why now a kids album?

Just now getting to it.  I've been busy with other projects, mostly for adults, which include performances, teaching, making CDs and DVDs, in the States and overseas.  I also founded the International Body Music Festival in 2008.  All these projects require my time.  So it just took a while for the CD for kids and their families to make it to the top of the list.

"I Like Everything" doesn't have a lot of songs that are primarily body music -- is that method of making music that is more appreciated live?  

Well, Body Music certainly has a strong visual element to it because it's also a dance.  In a way, the listener is only getting half the piece when only hearing it.  But I think we did a fairly good job at capturing the sounds of the body in a way that conveys the music.   Crosspulse performs on a wide variety of percussive instruments, so it's more about representing what the group does, overall.   The body is only one ingredient in the our repertoire.

Are kids more or less rhythmic than adults?

Perhaps slightly, but I believe, and I know this through my teaching and performing experience, that kids are capable of comprehending and playing complex rhythmic patterns.  That's why there's little difference in our shows for kids and our shows for adults.  We don't "dumb it down" for kids.  We may frame it differently or talk about it in certain ways, but the content remains fairly consistent.

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You've had a long and varied career -- is there anything else you'd like to tackle?

I'm currently working on "The Rhythm of Math" with my co-author Linda Akiyama.   Rhythm of Math uses body music to teach mathematical skills to 2nd through 6th graders.  This fall we'll release our first book/DVD.  We piloted the program in several public schools last spring.  We had such enthusiastic response from teachers and students, we were motivated to create the book.  We've already got ideas for the Middle School program for pre-Algebra.  I feel like we're on to something special which may possibly help a lot of kids who are having difficulty with accessing these skills through "traditional" teaching.  This excites me.

The International Body Music Festival continues to grow.  Now in its 6th year, we've begun touring a Body Music show featuring artists from the Festival.  We took one show to Lincoln Center a few years ago, and this fall we'll bring 10 Festival artists to Boston for a week to perform and teach at Wellesley and Berklee.  Because of the difficulty to obtain artists visas for foreign artists to perform in the U.S. we will likely be producing the IBMF outside the US for the next few years.  2013 will be in Oakland and San Francisco,  then Indonesia in 2014, Paris in 2015, and we're in discussion about Ghana in 2016.  I'm enjoying watching this project take flight.

I'm touring more lately in a duo with my wife, Evie Ladin.  Evie is a percussive dancer who sings and plays banjo and guitar.  I do body music, sing, and play bass and percussion.  Evie and I stretch each other in the "singing, while playing and moving " category.

I enjoy my career.  Music makes me whole and it's connected me to people and taken me places I never could have predicted.  I plan to follow it as long as I can.

What's next for CPE and kids and families?

We have some great summer shows and workshops coming up, in the San Francisco Bay Area and in Los Angeles.  [Ed.: See tour calendar here.]

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Weekly Summary (7/15/13 - 7/28/13)

Some vacation and some other deadlines mean that this weekly summary is actually a dual-week summary.

Blog:   Kindiefest: Not an Elegy, Radio Playlist: New Music July 2013, Video: "Tell Me It All" - Frances England, Listen To This: Justin Roberts "Recess" Sampler

Videos:  "Ice Cream Sunday" - Groovy David, "Why Is the Sky Blue?" - Nick Cope

Listen to Music:  None

Free Music:  None

Kids Music Reviews:  None

Upcoming Releases: Constantly updating...

Podcasts

Kindie Week in Review:  Not-an-Episode 3: Sometimes I Just Take a Break, Y'Know?

My Other Other Gig:  None

Bake Sale:  Episode 6: Noah and Nanda Wilson (AKA Mr. & Mrs. Muffins), The Misty Cowboy and LP, Jon Samson, A New Kids Album

  

Listen To This: Justin Roberts "Recess" Sampler

Yay, Justin Roberts' new album Recess  is out this week, and to further whet your appetite if you haven't already snagged your copy, Roberts has put a sampler featuring the first three tracks online.

Sadly, as the page notes, no pop-up robot included. 

Justin Roberts - Recess  sampler [Soundcloud]

The first three tracks from Justin Roberts Recess. Available now on Compact Disc. Includes a Pop Up Robot and special secret website access. Also available on iTunes. No Pop Up included.