Itty-Bitty Review: Champions of the Universe - Ratboy Jr.

Trying to describe the music of New York's Ratboy Jr. is an exercise in merging two disparate references.  Funk made by your favorite dog?  Music for the easily distracted kid in all of us?  A blender with really good taste in guitar-drum duos?

Whatever.  It's weird, and so long as your family is down with the first 8 1/2 minutes of the album -- a loping song about a sentient rock ("Bill"), a pure pop hit about high fiving one's shadow ("High 5 Your Shadow," natch, along with a digression into the difference between a solar and lunar eclipse), and a gentle, dreamy song about eating clouds ("How To Eat a Cloud"), then y'all will make it through the rest of the album with a silly grin on your face.  For every crunchy Americana and Velvet Underground-inspired tune from guitarist/kazooist Timmy Sutton and drummer/glockenspielest Matty Senzatimore, there's a song like "Pretend Your Hand's a Puppet," which includes an air-drum solo and more "la la la's" than ANY song in recent memory and which should wipe away any churlishness the listener has stored up from the past week.

The album is best for kids ages 4 through 8 (as well as your inner 7-year-old).  Producer and multi-instrumentalist Dean Jones helps sand down some of the band's rough edges, while creating some new nooks and crannies for the band to explore, but in the end the album rests upon Ratboy Jr.'s unironic enthusiasm, heart, and willingness to wear its rubber chicken on its sleeve.  Recommended.

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

 

Video: "Thingamajig" - Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band

Everyone who's heard "Thingamajig" off Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band's upcoming Lishy Lou and Lucky Too!  disk out October 1 has gone gaga, nutso, flipperteejiberty over the song celebrating words real and just off the tip of our tongues.

There is now a brand-spankin' new video to go along with the song, and it's just as bright and spangly as the song itself.  Not only is it a fine introduction to the album, it also appears that it's a fine introduction to a new TV show featuring Lucky and Alisha and the rest of the band.  Lishy Lou and Lucky Too has its own website, and the Google cache of the site reveals that it's a live-action TV show where they "live together in a magical treehouse with all sorts of friends and guests that visit them from time to time."  Consider me intrigued.  Feel free to spin the song (and download for free for the price of a tweet or a link until Aug. 24) here.

Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band - "Thingamajig" [YouTube]

Radio Playlist: New Music August 2013

It's been four weeks since my July new music playlist, which means it's time to post another Spotify update for new music (see the July playlist here).  As always, it's limited in that if an artist hasn't chosen to post a song on Spotify, I can't put it on the list, nor can I feature songs from as-yet-unreleased albums.  But I'm always keeping stuff in reserve for the next Spotify playlist.

[Note to self: include the new Dan Zanes / Elizabeth Mitchell album next month (when it's actually released).  Thanks, self, you go, guy!]

Check out the list here or go right here if you're in Spotify.

**** New Music August 2013 (August 2013 Kindie Playlist) ****

The UpSouth Twisters – Head & Shoulders
Human-Tim & Robot-Tim – Shine
Frances England – Move Like Saturday Night
Lena – Happy as Clams
Alice DiMicele – If I Were an Otter
Enzo Garcia – Home
Birdie – Slip N' Slide
Bob McGrath – Sing... Sing a Song - Vocal
Birdie's Playhouse – Snail Cha Cha

Fozzie – Movin' Right Along

 

Monday Morning Smile: "Delaware" - Perry Como

It's not often that someone in my "day job" suggests something that makes it onto this site.  OK, I'm not sure it's ever happened, but there's always a first time.

I'm not sure that Perry Como is the first person to come to mind in terms of whose voice is best-suited for a novelty song -- it's Perry freakin' Como, after all,  But this song, introduced to me by a co-worker and more than a half-century old, made me smile, and it might make your local 9-year-old geography-obsessed kid smile, too.   (Why the changing languages and the martial step?  Who. Knows.)

Perry Como - "Delaware" [YouTube

Weekly Summary (8/12/13 - 8/18/13)

Review: Blink of an Eye - Frances England

I've had the occasional thought over the past few years about what kids music might sound like a few years from now.  What happens when the kids who grew up connected online and encouraged in a DIY world become parents themselves?  What happens when mass-market TV gives way to a million tiny screens (or at least a thousand different programmers)?  When parents have no idea who Pete Seeger is (but have memories of that Lumineers concert they went to once)?

I don't think Frances England's fourth album Blink of an Eye is the answer to any or all of those questions, but it is an answer that presages it.

If on her previous album Mind of My Own , England cranked up the volume and the energy, on this new recording, the San Francisco artist dials it all back a bit.  It's not that England has abandoned melody -- the title track which leads off the album, for example, has a lovely wordless ending to the chorus (helped no doubt by the presence of Elizabeth Mitchell and Caspar Babypants on the track).  But it's all very jangly -- producer Dean Jones and England employ a ton of different percussive instruments throughout the album (I'm pretty sure "Move Like Saturday Night" uses even more different items for percussion, if that's possible).

Although the production values are much higher than those on England's debut Fascinating Creatures, famously recorded as a preschool fundraiser and the first time she'd made an album, the impulse is the same.  It's a very-DIY sound equal parts folk and indie rock, put together with craft and care.  "Little Wings," even though it moves forward propulsively on Morgan Taylor's guitar work, is a quiet piece.  On a number of the songs, England chooses to deemphasize her vocals -- the result on those tracks is impressionistic in effect, the aural equivalent of that collage of an album cover.

And that's really what England is aiming for (and succeeding) lyrically.  Many of the songs are fleeting glimpses -- memories -- of family life and parenthood.  "Blink of an Eye" is the most obvious, but it's the dreamy "Salt Water Spin" and "Look How the Light Dances with Trees" that feel like England telling herself -- and by extension her family and us, the listeners -- "Don't. Forget. This."

This album will be most appreciated by kids ages 5 through 9, though its mellow nature will have a broader appeal for quiet-time spins.  You can listen to the whole thing at England's music page

Frances England has carved out a career making very personal music for families -- more so than many artists, I believe she thinks specifically about her own family as the audience.  This approach -- challenging oneself to learn new skills and then reflecting their life outward using those newfound skills -- is one area where I think kids music will evolve.  Maybe even one day a couple decades from now a 28-year-old new parent will remember those albums they listened to on "CD" or an "iPhone," pick up an instrument (or a computer), and try to convey those same dreamy feelings to their own child.  One can hope, anyway.  Highly recommended.

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