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Entries in Billy Kelly (19)

Thursday
Feb102011

Video: "The Sky Floats (And So Do Boats)" - Billy Kelly

Billy Kelly is a busy man. No sooner does he release the excellent Is This Some Kind of Joke? last summer than he preps The Family Garden, due out this April. No wonder he's illustrating the video for a song off Joke, "The Sky Floats (And So Do Boats)," so quickly. He doesn't have much time, people!

As for the video itself, on one hand, it makes the lyrics crystal clear. On the other... it doesn't help at all.

Billy Kelly - "The Sky Floats (And So Do Boats)" [YouTube]

Monday
Oct252010

Video: "Me and My Brand New Haircut" - Billy Kelly & Davy Jones

You saw the trailer, now watch the actual video from chorally-approved BIlly Kelly and Davy Jones. What's the movie term for "hair wrangler," because he or she was the hardest working person on that set.

(You know, I now realize that when I saw a very-closely-shorn Kelly at Kindiefest in May, it was just a cry for help.)

Billy Kelly with Davy Jones - "Me and My Brand New Haircut" [YouTube]

Tuesday
Oct192010

Listen To This: "People Really Like Milk" (Wilson High School Chorale)

While the impact of the chattering classes versus that of the actual creative community should be viewed as minimal, I'd like to think that I'm at the maximum end of that minimal impact for Billy Kelly's brilliant "People Really Like Milk." (See here.) So I feel a bit proud and a bit protective of the song. I'm its helicopter parent.

So when Kelly himself notices that a high school choir has adapted the song for its own use, I am naturally drawn to it like a moth to a flame. The sound quality is poor, the crowd screams at odd places, and the camera operator is clearly related to the guitarist, but, hey:

A high school choir just performed a kindie rock classic.

We should all be so lucky. What's next? Raffi on Glee?

PS -- if you have any detail which one of the dozens of Wilson High Schools across the country is actually responsible, please drop me a line...

Wilson High School Chorale - "People Really Like Milk" [YouTube]

Tuesday
Sep282010

Video: "Me and My Brand New Haircut" (The Teaser) - Billy Kelly & Davy Jones

I'm pretty sure that I've never posted a teaser video here, a video for a video. But, then again, I've never had the opportunity to post a teaser video featuring Billy Kelly and Davy Jones for their awesome duet "Me and My Brand New Haircut" from Kelly's Is This Some Kind of Joke? disk. Combine found footage, lollipops, and sandwiches in a can, it's the best teaser video you'll see all day. Maybe all week. All year, even.

[Update: Watch the whole thing here.]

Billy Kelly and Davy Jones - "Me and My Brand New Haircut" (teaser video) [YouTube]

Tuesday
Aug172010

Review: Is This Some Kind of Joke? - Billy Kelly

IsThisSomeKindOfJoke.jpgBilly Kelly is the whoopee cushion of kids music. Last year he stormed (politely) onto the kids music scene with Thank You For Joining the Happy Club, featuring the instant classic "People Really Like Milk" and other songs that usually brought smiles and occasionally laughs to listeners nationwide. For his just-released follow-up Is This Some Kind of Joke?, a self-described musical comedy album, he dials the funny up to 11.

The album starts off with poppy Is This a Joke?, which in just 2 minutes and 45 seconds, exhibits most of the Billy Kelly style -- nifty rhymes, fancy words, and a song you actually have to think about and listen to carefully if you're going to catch every reference. (I've listened to the album at least a half-dozen times, and I still think I've only caught 90% of the humor.) I say "most" of the style, because that song avoids the self-aware humor Kelly employs often. It's OK -- he uses it elsewhere, such as on "Me and My Brand New Haircut," on which Davy Jones sounds like he totally gets the joke. The chorus on the dance tune (natch) "The Dance From Outer Space" is like the best Greek chorus ever. Kelly hits more musical styles than he does on his debut (I especially liked the funk-sampled "Everybody's Got Their Underwear On"), but it's all in service to the lyrics. If you've heard the album, the lyrics "I already told you I can see you," "Thank you for saying you're welcome," "What's wrong with that guy over there," and "Where is the turtle wax?" will bring big smiles to your face. It's a bit darker than Happy Club -- instead of a song called "Springtime: It's My Favorite" there are songs about an alien dance taking over the world and swamp creatures threatening to take over the world -- but nothing too dark.

And "The Legend of Johnny Box," which owes a big debt, unsurprisingly, to the Man in Black. Wow -- it's one of those songs that starts out unassumingly, builds up to something big, then somewhere east of Poughkeepsie takes a turn into something silly, then epically silly, then beyond silly into that realm few people are willing to go. Let's put it this way... it's more than seven and a half minutes long, and it's worth every second.

As with his debut, it's going to be older kids who most appreciate the dense wordplay and humor Kelly packs in here, say ages 7 on up. You can hear some of the songs at his Myspace page or samples of all the tracks here. I should note that the first 1,000 copies of the album in physical format come hand-signed and packaged with an erasable marker and an incredibly dense maze in poster format that might take your kids the better part of an afternoon to work through.

Like some mutant offspring of the Holland-Dozier-Holland Motown songwriting team and Spike Jones (or possibly "Weird Al" Yankovic's cousin), Billy Kelly has written the album that precocious third graders have wanted all their life and just didn't know it. Their parents didn't know it, either, but now they do. No joke -- this is a seriously fun album. Highly recommended.