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Entries in Deedle Deedle Dees, The (33)

Wednesday
May192010

Listen To This: "Zora" (Live) - The Deedle Deedle Dees

I mentioned Lloyd Miller's thoughts on the "business" of kids music yesterday, but didn't want to leave it there, especially when there's new Deedle Deedle Dees music out there to listen to.

One of the interesting things the Dees did this spring was put on a monthly variety show at Brooklyn's famed Knitting Factory. It wrapped up a couple weeks ago with a show inspired by famed afrobeat musician Fela Kuti. (They performed Kuti's "Zombie" with preschoolers and also did an afrobeat original called "No Animal," which you can watch after the jump.) They also performed a new song called "Zora," inspired, you will not be surprised to hear, by author Zora Neale Hurston. Short and insistent, you'll be hearing this song later this summer, I can almost guarantee it...

The Deedle Deedle Dees - "Zora" [YouTube]

Two more new songs (including that afrobeat one) after the jump...
The Deedle Deedle Dees - "Babe Ruth" [YouTube]

The Deedle Deedle Dees - "No Animal" [YouTube]

Wednesday
May192010

Lloyd Miller, Small Businessman

A few months back, I asked "Is kids music recession-proof?" (The answer: no, not entirely.)

Well, someone else has asked that question, and they have a video camera and an editor, too. More importantly, the folks at Film@11.tv asked Lloyd Miller from the Deedle Deedle Dees to talk about his business. It's odd -- I tend not to think about musicians as businessmen and women, even though we just talked about it at Kindiefest. But they are, of course, and Miller has a good grasp on what's stayed steady (the big gigs) and what hasn't (the birthday parties).

And, near the very end, he also provides an origin story for the band's name. Still can't tell if he's joking.

Sunday
Feb142010

Review in Brief: American History + Rock 'N' Roll = Deedle Deedle Dees

AmericanHistory+RNR_DDD.jpgI think the world of Brooklyn's Deedle Deedle Dees for many reasons. Some of them are obvious -- catchy tunes, they RAWK -- and some are less so. One of those "less-so" reasons is that the band is so clearly following their muse, writing and playing songs that interest them.

I mean, I can't think of any other kids musician or band who would record a song about, say, Eleanor Roosevelt, as the Dees have done on their latest album American History + Rock 'N' Roll = Deedle Deedle Dees. But there it is, a dreamy song about Eleanor Roosevelt, getting advice about what to do as she was becoming First Lady -- it's a nice character sketch.

"Nice character sketch" is a good description for the Dees' history-based music -- rather than trying to sing about the big, important historical events, they're more apt to sing about the smaller historical moments or non-Presidents -- the saucy, horn-assisted strut of "Bring 'Em In" (a possibly true story about the pitcher Satchel Paige) or the party of "Tres Muralistas" (about the Mexican muralists Diego Rivera, Jose Orozco, and David Siqueiros). And when they do hit the people you're more likely to read about in a fifth grade history book, it's more about just trying to give the audience a little hook to remember the person by; in "Tub-Tub-Ma-Ma-Ga-Ga," it's remembering that Harriet Tubman led people by walking, rather than trying to explain (in song) what the Underground Railroad was.

Musically, the album moves from shuffling rock ("Little Red Airplane") to horn-aided Mexican-tinged folk ("Tres Muralistas") to punk ("Put on the Dress," based on a true story of -- and featuring on the record -- Bill Childs). The musicianship is solid throughout and I especially enjoyed some of instrumental flourishes (the guitar on "John Muir" or the piano on "Si Se Puede!")

Though the Dees have songs for younger kids (primarily from chief Dee songwriter Lloyd Miller/Ulysses Dee), this album is entirely history-based. As a result, while younger kids will probably enjoy dancing around to the music, kids ages 7 and up will most appreciate the songs and stories told here. You can hear some samples here and I highly recommend the song notes the band's been posting here.

These are not the catchy, big-picture pop tunes of Schoolhouse Rock; instead, this album is more interested in the nooks and crannies of history. I hope the Dees continue to follow their personal muses -- their music isn't necessarily for every listener, but it's vibrant. The fact that it's an excellent historical survey is just a bonus. Definitely recommended.

[Disclosure notice: The band provided a copy for possible review.]

Wednesday
Dec302009

The Deedle Deedle Dees Can Wait

Y'know, posting 'round here has been on the slow side for a number of reasons the past week or so, and I suspect that a lot of you have been, you know, spending time with your families rather than on the Internet. So I'm unilaterally extending the deadline on my contest to win American History + Rock 'N' Roll = The Deedle Deedle Dees, the brand-new album from, er, The Deedle Deedle Dees. I'll bug you about it in the new year, so just go here and enter now...

Sunday
Dec202009

American History + Rock 'N' Roll = Deedle Deedle Dees + Contest

AmericanHistory+RNR_DDD.jpg(or, therefore, Contest = American History + Rock 'N' Roll - Deedle Deedle Dees.)

A couple years back, I ran a contest for The Deedle Deedle Dees' latest album, the excellent Freedom in a Box. To enter, folks had to suggest a historical personage the history buffs in the band might want to write a song about. The randomly selected reader was longtime reader Katy, whose family offered 4 different personages, including Amelia Earhardt, Benny Benson (who came up with the idea for the Alaskan state flag), and Eleanor Roosevelt.

Now, although my contest idea was just a goof, chief songwriter Lloyd Miller offered to write one song from the winning entry, and the band actually created songs for those 3 real-life figures, along with other more famous and less famous folks, on their rocking new album American History + Rock & Roll = The Deedle Deedle Dees.

So, since my last Deedle Deedle Dees contest worked out so well, let's do it again. By 11 PM East Coast time on Wednesday, December 30 ed: contest deadline extended to Wednesday, January 6, enter below by suggesting another historical figure the Dees could write a song about. In addition, write the name of a school system or library system you think would be happy to receive a bunch of excellent songs from both the historical and rocking perspective. No promises that the Dees will write a song for the randomly-selected winner, but I do promise that the randomly-selected winner will receive 2 copies of the album -- one for their own family, and one to give to that school system or library system that they offer up.

Thanks, good luck, and if you want to see the track listing, here it is...
Track listing:
1. Little Red Airplane
2. John Muir
3. Do the Turnout
4. Growl Growl
5. ¡Sí Se Puede!
6. Bring 'Em In
7. Tres Muralistas
8. Party Girl
9. Tub-Tub-Ma-Ma-Ga-Ga
10. The Brooklyn Bridge Song
11. Put on the Dress
12. Xu Lapi Knewel, New Jersey