Suggested For You...

Search
Twitter-fy!
This Website Built On...
Powered by Squarespace
Kids Music Worth Airing!
E-mail Me
This form does not yet contain any fields.
    Saturday
    Dec102011

    Video: "Tomboy in a Princess Dress" - Suzi Shelton

    suzi tomboy cover.jpgSuzi Shelton's new EP Tomboy in a Princess Dress has been out for a couple weeks now, but it officially gets a big kickoff this afternoon as Shelton releases her video for the title track. Even a couple boys in the video, so it's not totally for the pre-tween girls.

    Suzi Shelton - "Tomboy in a Princess Dress" [Vimeo]

    By the way you can listen to the whole EP here. The EP was produced by Baze and his Silly Friends' Marc Bazerman and also features Little Miss Ann on "Pony Boy."

    Tomboy In A Princess Dress by SuziShelton

    Friday
    Dec092011

    Christmas CD Reviews (2011 Edition, Part 1)

    So many Christmas albums have crossed my desk (real or virtual) this year that I'm splitting my reviews up into 2 parts -- one for kids music artists or albums targeted at kids (this one) and one for the rest of the musical world. That distinction is a little fuzzy, because Christmas music, generally, is pretty family-friendly as it is. In any case, there are one or two albums here that could have been in the next installment, and there are a handful of artists in that next installment whose names are familiar to the kids music world.

    Because what people are looking for in Christmas music differs dramatically, these reviews are ordered in rough order of most to least "goofy." "Goofy" is merely a descriptive term, not a pejorative term -- it just helps those different people who want different things from their holiday music figure out where on the spectrum they should be reading.

    MamaSaidNogYouOut.JPGIt is not terribly surprising that I would lead off this list -- the "most goofy" -- with an album from The Jimmies. Ashley Albert and crew have expanded their holiday EP from last year into a full-length Mama Said Nog You Out. (The title alone should clue you in on their attitude.) It's not that they're disrespectful to the season, just that they're more interested in its absurdities. The chant-y original "Nogturne in C Minor," turning "Sleigh Ride" into lite-funk, and making the-already-not-too-reverential "All I Want for Christmas is My Two Front Teeth" into a Marcia Ball-style blues strut -- these are not the songs of someone who's going to somberly celebrate. (And with several songs celebrating non-Christmas holidays, it's appropriate for wiseacre families of every creed.) Available exclusively at Barnes and Noble, or get a free download if you order their latest album Practically Ridiculous from the Jimmies at their website.
    DearSantaClaus.jpgBilly Kelly is next up with Dear Santa Claus, a 5-song EP featuring the typical Billy Kelly-ian stew of wordplay and earnestness mixed with a little bit of Bart Simpson. The classic song here is "Glebells Jing!," which Kelly first featured a couple years ago and has somehow managed to rope an entire chorus to sing its mind-bending alteration of "Jingle Bells." (I think the cheer at the end of the song is one of relief.) The other tracks do a better job of celebrating the (secular) season, but none will stick in your head like "Glebells Jing!" Purchase the album at Amazon or iTunes. All proceeds will benefit Camp Victory, a Pennsylvania camp designed for kids with chronic health illness or disabilities.

    MerryFishesToAll.jpgTrout Fishing in America released their Christmas album Merry Fishes to All way back in 2004, but I'm just now getting around to listening to it. In typical TFA style, it features a number of silly songs, giving voice to the inner kid ("Chocolate Christmas," "Santa Brought Me Clothes," "I Got a Cheese Log"), mixed in with some more tender moments -- "Snow is Falling" and "Snow Day," for example. And then there are the just-plain oddball tracks - "The Eleven Cats of Christmas," for example, a re-work of sorts of "The Twelve Days of Christmas," and the classic "Bob and Bob," about identical snowflakes. Trout Fishing fans certainly already have this, but others may also find the jazzy and folk-y blend of humor and empathy a nice addition to their slightly more traditional rotation.

    JumpinChristmas.jpgMiss Gail and the Jumpin' Jam Band, out of Atlanta, released A Jumpin' Christmas, a 5-song EP. This was probably my least-favorite disk out of the ones reviewed here, but there were a couple tracks I think are worth checking out. I liked the leadoff track "Winter," which uses a swaying 6/8 meter to paint a picture of snow falling and the play that ensues. And "Hark" is an uptempo pop-rock rework of "Hark the Herald Angels Sing" ("oh-woah-oh-oh-oh / we're gonna go-go-go") that's pretty good if you like that sort of thing (I'm OK with it, though I'm generally a carol traditionalist). I personally do not like AutoTune, and so will not be listening to this version of "Jingle Bells" ever again. You can pick up the EP in various places, including iTunes.

    SantaSongs.jpgSan Diego's Hullabaloo turns in a low-key collection of 11 secular Christmas carols and one original song on Santa Songs. These are fairly faithful renditions of the carols with comparatively minimal musical arrangement (though a few songs like "We Wish You a Merry Christmas" bring in some additonal instruments like fiddle and mandolin). Given the familiarity and simplicity of the tunes, my favorite track on the album is the one original song, "All of the Above," a gentle duet between lead Hullabaloo-ster Steve Denyes and Beth Crocker celebrating the peace and love of the season. (I also like their album-closing rendition of "Auld Lange Syne." Buy the album here and listen to 3 songs from the album here.

    HappyElf.jpgHarry Connick Jr. has turned his song "The Happy Elf" into a kids' TV special, stage musical, children's book, app, and, yes, a soundtrack. If you stripped the album of its cover art and first track (featuring Connick Jr. reading his book), you (or your kids) wouldn't really know that it's a Christmas album. The Harry Connick Jr. Trio evokes another famous Christmastime trio (no, not the three wise men -- the Vince Guaraldi Trio, silly) and the whole thing has a bit of a Charlie Brown Christmas feel. It also has a bit of a When Harry Met Sally feeling, harkening back to that soundtrack a couple decades old, which leads to the issue here -- strip the CD of the track which features Connick Jr. reading the text of the titular book, and there's not much to make you think it's a Christmas CD. The title track sounds like a happy elf, I suppose, and "Christmas Day" has a peaceful, relaxed vibe, but nothing is particularly Christmas-y (or kids-music-y, for that matter). It's good jazz, and would fit unobtrusively into a more festive playlist. But unless you (and your family) are familiar with the story and its other incarnations, you would be disappointed in getting this specifically for its holiday mood-setting. (Available at Amazon and elsewhere.)

    DZChristmasinConcordCoverArt.jpgFinally (and best of all if you're looking for a Christmas album that most closely matches the spirit of the season), Dan Zanes has released a new iTunes exclusive album called Christmas in Concord. It's got a simple, rootsy vibe that very much feels like the DZ&F crew packed into Zanes' living room and, with a little banjo and slide guitar, sang all the big Christmas carols. My favorite is "Angels We Have Heard on High," but they're all good -- it's the Christmas album here I'm most likely to be spinning for Christmas 2021.

    [I received copies of all albums discussed here for possible review.]

    Thursday
    Dec082011

    Best Kids Music 2011: Top 25 Songs

    Next up in my list of the best kids music of 2011 are my favorite songs. Now, seeing as I listen to literally thousands of kids songs every year, picking out 25 (less than 1%, probably) is very difficult, and if you asked me to make this list up next week I'm sure at least a couple of songs here would be replaced by others. Growing this list to 25 (last year's was 20) didn't make things any easier -- it just shifted the bubble.

    But these 25 (listed alphabetically by song title) are definitely among the year's best recordings.

    -- Bad Blue Jay - Caspar Babypants (Sing Along!)
    -- Bonfire - The Jimmies (Practically Ridiculous)
    Bonfire
    -- Cooperate - Sugar Free Allstars & Secret Agent 23 Skidoo

    -- The Crocodile Synchronised Swimming Team - Too Many Cookes (Down At The Zoo)
    -- Dandelion - Steve Weeks (Dandelion)
    -- Didn't Know What I Was Missing - Alastair Moock/Lori McKenna (Planting Seeds, These Are My Friends) -- listen here
    -- Freeze Tag - The Not-Its (Tag, You're It!)

    -- Garbage Man - Mr. Richard & The Pound Hounds (Backyard Astronauts) -- download free here
    -- Henry (Hudson), How Ya Gonna Find a Way? - The Deedle Deedle Dees (Strange Dees, Indeed)

    -- Hey, Josie - The Hipwaders (Golden State)
    Hey, Josie!
    -- Hey Pepito! - Key Wilde & Mr Clarke (Hey Pepito!) -- listen here
    -- I Think I’m A Bunny - Todd McHatton (Galactic Champions of Joy)

    -- John Kanakanaka - Dan Zanes and Friends (Little Nut Tree) (this is a solo performance below)

    -- Let's Dance - Lucky Diaz And The Family Jam Band (Oh Lucky Day!)
    -- Metaphor - The Alphabeticians (Rock)

    -- Mushy Berry Pie - The Thinkers (Oh Zoooty!) -- listen here
    -- A Piano Is Stuck In The Door - Beethoven's Wig Featuring Richard Perlmutter (Beethoven's Wig: Sing Along Piano Classics)

    -- Place in My Heart - Frances England (Mind of My Own) -- listen here
    -- Quarter Moon Shining - Chip Taylor & the Grandkids (Golden Kids Rules)

    -- Please Don't Move (to Another Time Zone) - Lunch Money (Original Friend)
    -- Skywriter - Baron Von Rumblebuss (Agreeably Loud!!)
    -- Soft Things - Brady Rymer/Laurie Berkner (Love Me for Who I Am) -- listen here
    -- Waters of March - Jamie Broza (I Want a Dog!)

    -- Wisconsin Poncho - Gustafer Yellowgold (Gustafer Yellowgold's Infinity Sock)

    -- Your Favorite Book - Recess Monkey (FLYING!)

    Wednesday
    Dec072011

    Please Release Me: December 2011 Edition

    I may be right in the middle of looking back at the best kids music of 2011, but that doesn't mean I'm also not looking forward at the releases headed our way for the rest of the month and through 2012. It's time again for an updated list of new and upcoming releases. (Last month's list is here.) Additions to the list are noted with a "++"; changes to previously-mentioned items are indicated with italics.

    As always, if I've listed you on here and gotten something wrong (or something not ready for primetime), let me know and I'll edit or delete it. And if you're not on here and think you should be, drop me a line, too, and I'll get you added for the next iteration.

    Suzi Shelton: Tomboy in a Princess Dress (Dec. 11)
    ++ Doctor Noize: The Return Of Phineas McBoof album and book (Dec. 19)
    Princess Katie and Racer Steve: Love, Cake & Monsters (December)
    Central Services Board of Education: Binary [tentative] (December)
    The Good Ms. Padgett: ... Tells The Little Red Hen and Other Stories (2012?)
    RhymeZwell: Robots on the Dance Floor (2012?)
    Big Don: Big Don's Brand New Beat (2012?)
    Riff Rockit: Riff Rockit (CD, DVD, Jan. 24, 2012)
    ++ Katherine Dines: Hunk-Ta-Bunk-Ta HITS (Jan. 31, 2012)
    Ellis Paul: The Hero in You (Jan. 2012)
    ++ The Fresh Beat Band: Soundtrack (Jan. 2012)
    The Bari Koral Family Rock Band: Anna And The Cupcakes (Feb. 14)
    ++ Putumayo Kids: Instrumental Dreamland (Feb. 28, 2012)
    Tim and the Space Cadets: Anthems for Adventure (Feb. 2012)
    ++ Bill Harley: High Dives and Other Things That Could Have Happened (Feb. 2012)
    Randy Kaplan: Mr. Diddie Wah Diddie (2012)
    Mo Phillips: Title TBA (March 12, 2012)
    Recess Music: La Bella Stella (March 27, 2012)
    Gustafer Yellowgold: Gustafer Yellowgold’s Year in The Day (April 3, 2012)
    Caspar Babypants: HOT DOG! (April 17, 2012)
    Orange Sherbet: Delicious (May 1, 2012)
    ++ Okee Dokee Brothers: Mississippi River CD/DVD (May 2012)
    Hope Harris: Picasso, That's Who (spring 2012)
    ++ The Funky Mamas and Friends: Pickin’ In The Garden (spring 2012)
    ++ Elena Moon Park: Rabbit Days and Dumplings (spring 2012)
    The Dirty Sock Funtime Band: Dirty Socks Come Clean (June 2012)
    Charity and the JAMband: Family Values (July 3, 2012)
    Andy Z: The Grand Scream of Things (Halloween 2012) [produced by Tor Hyams]

    Other expected 2012 albums: Ah-Choo, Peter Apel, Ratboy, Jr., Sugar Free Allstars, Renee & Jeremy, Farmer Jason duets album, The Bramble Jam, Secret Agent 23 Skidoo (Make Believers), Bobby Susser (Wo), Eric Herman (2 albums: one music, one comedy skits), Rockabye Baby for the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Keith Munslow (2 albums: one solo, one with Bill Harley ++), Wayne Potash ++, Alex and the Kaleidoscope Band ++, Lori Henriques ++, Shine and the Moonbeams ++

    Wednesday
    Dec072011

    Best Kids Music 2011: Top 10 Album Packages

    It was a little harder this year picking out 10 favorite album packages in my review of the best kids music of 2011. Not because design is getting worse, but because I am slowly entering the 21st century when it comes to reviewing music.

    Which means accepting electronic versions of albums in lieu of the physical CD.

    Now this isn't a case of asking you kids to get off my damn lawn. Really, I'm fine with it -- while I prefer the physical product (if only because I tend to listen to music sooner that way), I understand why mp3s are easier, especially for the artist. And while receiving the slim jackets that just consist of the front and back cover and the CD mean I don't get all of the lovely album art or have lyrics handy when listening, when you have something like 1,000 or CDs in boxes, there is a certain allure in having those slim packages.

    And it should be noted that the primary focus, of course, is the music encoded in the mp3s or tucked away in those slim packages. Caspar Babypants CDs (which do feature cute cover art from Kate Endle) come in slim packages -- they could come wrapped in newspapers and I'd be overjoyed to get them to listen to the music inside. But an attractive package can sometimes help break down the barriers to listening to kids music for people new to the genre who think that it's still cheap and chintzy.

    This list is also a little bit like Wheel of Fortune. (Hunh?) Remember how on the final bonus round puzzle the finalist used to get to choose a few letters which (if present) would be turned by Vanna? Yeah, well everybody ended up picking "E" and "T" and "S" and other common letters. So now they automatically show those letters (along with "R," "N," and "L") and the finalist picks other letters.

    I sort of feel like Smithsonian Folkways and Putumayo and Dan Zanes are sort of like the "E" and "T" and "S" of album packaging -- you're always going to get quality work for them. I'd probably be better off just eliminating them from consideration and picking, say, a Top 5.

    Maybe next year. Anyway, with the caveat that it feels weird not putting Dan Zanes or Putumayo on this list (I'm sure they were lovely as always, but we received "slim" packages this time around not that I'm in any way complaining, I swear), here are my 10 favorite kids music album packages of 2011, listed in alphabetical order.

    OutsideMyDoor.jpgLori Henriques
    Outside My Door
    It's probably unfair that Henriques' brother is Joel Henriques, proprietor of the most excellent Made By Joel website, which shares arts and crafts projects for children. But, it's important to take advantage of the talents you have in your midst, and the packaging features cute line drawings, the lyrics (important for Henriques' wordy songs), and recycled paper.

    That looks lovely... just as the rest of these disks do...
    TheGoldenState.jpgThe Hipwaders
    Golden State
    One of the entries on this list is a collection of disks that I thought presented an attractive, simple package. The latest album package from the California trio is just as simple, what earns it its own mention on this list is its gorgeous album art by Brian Clarke. It so perfectly matches the sunny West Coast vibe of the excellent music inside that you could be forgiven for thinking the album art came first and the Hipwaders recorded an album as its soundtrack.

    LifeOfSong.jpgElla Jenkins
    A Life of Song
    As always, a particular strength of Smithsonian Folkways' releases is the care and dedication they put into their liner notes. (Full disclosure: I've contributed an essay to one of their previous family releases.) One would hope that an album entitled A Life of Song from living legend Ella Jenkins would have detailed notes, and the liner notes for the album do not disappoint. A brief introductory essay from Jenkins herself, a short but elegant biography, and notes and lyrics for every song, it's a fittingly detailed complement to what is in essence a musical biographical sketch.

    OriginalFriend.jpgLunch Money
    Original Friend
    I'm biased -- I like illustrator Brandon Reese's work so much, I had him design this site's logo. And the South Carolina trio Lunch Money has been dedicated to good design (album-wise and otherwise) from the begin. So it wasn't much of a surprise that this album (the second of Lunch Money's that Reese has provided the artwork for) was so lovely. From a purely visual enjoyment standpoint, this is probably my favorite album of the year.

    TagYoureIt.jpgThe Not-Its
    Tag, You're It!
    While not as detailed, perhaps, as Original Friend, the Seattle band the Not-Its! have created a very distinctive visual style -- their visual brand, as it were -- from the very beginning. And while they employed a different artist to do their cover artwork this time around, it still looks very "Not-Its!" to me. Which is a Good Thing.

    FLYING Cover 72 dpi.jpgRecess Monkey
    FLYING!
    Another band who's had a distinctive visual style almost from the beginning, the Seattle trio (must be something about trios... or Seattle... that lends itself to good album artwork and packaging) utilized the services of Jarrett J. Krosoczka to provide some of the artwork for their superhero-themed album, creating a whole comic strip to accompany the title track (and its album-ending reprise).

    GoldenKidsRules.jpgChip Taylor and the Grandkids
    Golden Kids Rules
    If the Ella Jenkins album requires lots of background and detail because it's a musical biography, the Smithsonian Folkways people take a different approach on what is a very personal album from songwriter Taylor. Recorded with his kids and inspired by a family wedding, the album doesn't need technical notes -- instead, the liner notes feature personal reminisces from Taylor, an essay from his brother, actor Jon Voight, and gentle art direction.

    See.jpgHolly Throsby
    See!
    The album artwork has every bit of the DIY vibe of the music inside from the Australian singer-songwriter. A lovely cover photo, cute drawings of the animals mentioned on the album by Throsby herself, lyrics and chords -- it's just one of those packages that you can give to a person who thinks (not entirely without merit) that kids' music comes packaged in cheap cases with poor font selection and even worse Photoshopping to show that, yes, there's an alternative.

    Green_Growing.jpgShannon Wurst
    Green & Growing
    It's one thing to record an album of songs dedicated to sustainable agriculture and "green living" -- it's another thing to print the album "locally on recycled paper" with a tastefully simple set of notes inside. But it's another thing entirely to then ship it in "recycled material," as Wurst describes it on her website. To break the code, that "recycled material" is a sewn envelope made out of a paper grocery bag. It so stunned me that I still have the envelope -- I'm pretty sure it's the only CD envelope I've ever kept.

    ShiningLikeAStar.jpgMindOfMyOwn.JPGTheFamilyGarden.jpgTheseAreMyFriends.gifThingsThatRoar.jpgLaura Doherty (Shining Like a Star) / Frances England (Mind of My Own) / Billy Kelly (The Family Garden) / Alastair Moock (These Are My Friends) / Papa Crow (Things That Roar)
    These are all fine examples of fairly simple album packages that present the music (all of it in these cases good) in the best possible light. Be they simple digipaks (paper with a plastic jewel case base) or eco-wallets (folded cardboard sleeves with a slot to slip the CD in), these five albums make the best of comparatively limited visual space to convey the important things about the music inside. Sometimes that's pictures, sometimes that's hand-drawn artwork, sometimes that's credits. But all five show that it's possible that good art direction is doable without breaking the bank.