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Entries in Elizabeth Mitchell (63)

Tuesday
Sep272011

Share: "Rollin' Baby" - Elizabeth Mitchell

YAMF1-Laura-Levine.jpgAhhhh... nothing like a little Elizabeth Mitchell track to take the edge off a cool, crisp fall morning. (What's that? I live in the Arizona desert and "cool, crisp" means about 75 degrees? Shhhh!)

The track is called "Rollin' Baby," and it's a cover of a track from Mitchell's sister-in-law Anna Padgett, who records as The Good Ms. Padgett. "Rollin' Baby" will remind you a little bit of "Who's My Pretty Baby?," very simple and sweet. Even better, it's free for the price of an e-mail (use the widget below).

Padgett, incidentally, has a new album, The Good Ms. Padgett Sings The Little Red Hen and Other Stories, this fall. Her first album had a vibe similar to that of her sister-in-law's, and I'm guessing her second will as well...










(Photo credit: Laura Levine)

Wednesday
Aug242011

Video: "Ong Tal Sam (Little Spring)" - Elizabeth Mitchell

Y'know, Elizabeth Mitchell's version of "Ong Tal Sam," or "Little Spring" was always one of my favorite cuts off Sunny Day, and this video just makes me love it even more. Oh, the cuteness. (Yes, I am secure in my masculinity and still feel confident in proclaiming, "Oh, the cuteness" on the interwebs.)

Elizabeth Mitchell & You Are My Flower - "Ong Tal Sam (Little Spring)" [Vimeo]

Monday
May232011

Live Video: "Bo Diddley" - Elizabeth Mitchell with Mates of State

Elizabeth Mitchell. Mates of State. In concert, together. Bill Childs has posted a few songs they performed together in concert this weekend on his YouTube channel, but this is the one that made me smile the most -- I love the energy in this one, the excellent tambourine-ing from MOS' Kori and Jason's eldest daughter, and the patty-cake at the end of the song by Mitchell and Storey. (Not to mention the Bow Wow Wow mashup, which I've actually heard before.)

Elizabeth Mitchell with Mates of State - "Bo Diddley" [YouTube]

Thursday
May052011

Kindiefest 2011: Sunday Concert in Videos and Pictures

IMG_5313.jpgIf Kindiefest's Saturday night showcase was about introducing new(-ish) names (and one longtime favorite) to a new crowd, the Sunday afternoon public concert was more about a lineup guaranteed to draw in, you know, the public.

There was indeed a nice crowd, both of conference attendees as well as local families. (It's not a coincidence that the conference is held in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Park Slope, famous (and perhaps occasionally reviled) for the sheer number of families who live around there. And unlike the showcase, with its brief 20-minute sets that may subconciously lead artists to forgo contemplation for excitement, the public concert, with 30-minute sets, and a more passive audience, allows for more variation in styles.

IMG_5279.jpgFor example, the concert kicked off with a set from Oran Etkin, who tells stories (either more traditional stories or about the instruments themselves) via jazz. He was very engaging with his young audience. Most of his songs are originals, but here he is with a take on a piece Dizzy Gillespie made famous...

Oran Etkin - "Salt Peanuts" [YouTube]

IMG_5280.jpgNext up was the delightful Heidi Swedberg and the Sukey Jump Band. The Brooklyn iteration of the band included Phillippa Thompson (who sometimes plays with Elizabeth Mitchell) and multi-instrumentalist Dean Jones. The set was similar to the one she played here in Phoenix in January, but the more enclosed nature of the performance here led to something occasionally hushed. I spoke with Elizabeth Mitchell a little bit later and she, too, enjoyed it...

Heidi Swedberg and the Sukey Jump Band - "When You Get Old" [YouTube]

And that was just two down...
IMG_5295.jpgNext up was Aaron Nigel Smith. Smith was an artist who I've always felt was fine on record but who held no special interest to me. But his was a performance that reminded me -- I need continual reminding -- about the difference between recordings and live shows and how it's possible to hold different opinions about each. It was lots of fun, in part due to the chorus of kids he brought in to perform a few songs with him (as soon as I saw the kids walking backstage during Swedberg's set I knew we'd be in for a treat), but even more so due to his energy on stage, which even carried over to him being in the audience enjoying other artists' sets.

Aaron Nigel Smith - "Che Che Cole" [YouTube]

IMG_5302.jpgI missed the last part of Smith's set as well as the first part of Tim and the Space Cadets' set . The first rule of Kindiefest is that it's impossible to do everything you want to do at Kindiefest -- talk, learn, eat, listen, whatever. In any case, I am glad I caught the last three songs or so of the set. Tim Kubart wins the award for most energetic dancer/participant, Musician Division, at Kindiefest 2011, as he really got into others' performances throughout the weekend. There is a giddiness to his performing as well that serves him and his music well. They've already played Kidzapalooza, but I think their new album is going to bring them a lot more attention...

Tim and the Space Cadets - "Superhero" [YouTube]

IMG_5310.jpgAh, Elizabeth Mitchell, how I do so enjoy your music. I saw her perform at Austin City Limits Festival last fall, and while those were fun sets, I think her music is best enjoyed in a setting without many distractions (or bizarre feedback from adjoining stages). The musicians off to the side were definitely engaged with Mitchell, singing along and doing the hand motions for a few songs. She brought in Heidi Swedberg and Dean Jones to sing "Shoo Lie Loo" and all in all, I felt like I'd now finally seen a true "Elizabeth Mitchell concert."

Elizabeth Mitchell and You Are My Flower "Little Liza Jane" [YouTube]

IMG_5312.jpgHi, The Verve Pipe! Or, rather, bye, the Verve Pipe! I would have gladly stayed to see them perform, but I saw them twice at ACL last fall and, more importantly, the show was running slightly behind schedule and I had a train to JFK to catch. So I bid adieu to Littlefield. But here's another clip of the band performing a song with the guys from Recess Monkey a song not off their A Family Album disk.

The Verve Pipe (w/ Recess Monkey) - "You Can Write a Song" [YouTube]

Thursday
Apr282011

Interview: Elizabeth Mitchell

IMG_3664_2.jpgI suppose the fact that it's taken me more than six months to post an interview with Elizabeth Mitchell is an indication of just how much is going on in the family music world. Luckily, like Mitchell's music, most of the information herein is timeless.

I conducted this interview backstage at the 2010 ACL Festival, where Mitchell performed with her band (including her husband, Daniel Littleton, and daughter Storey). Backstage, where we were both waiting for Frances England to perform, and over the happy music-making noises of kids at the drum circle, Mitchell and I chatted about early musical memories (think classic rock, not nursery rhymes), the jadedness of adult rock show audiences, and how she chooses which songs to sing. Also, she gives us a sneak peek into a couple of her forthcoming albums.

Zooglobble: What are your earliest musical memories?
Elizabeth Mitchell: I guess singing to myself a lot. To myself, by myself, along with the clock radio, or not.

Did you make up songs?
I think I did, I think I was just always singing. We listened to a lot of music in my home -- there wasn't a lot of playing music. I studied piano, but nobody really played. It was the '70s, so my mom loved Simon and Garfunkel, James Taylor, Carole King. And then there were also great singers like Ella Fitzgerald -- that's my mom's favorite singer, so we listened to her a lot. And my parents both also loved classic Broadway musicals such as My Fair Lady and West Side Story, so we listened to that. And I would sing along with all of it. Even A Chorus Line, which has some very questionable lyrics in those songs, and I would sing along having no idea what I was singing along with.

Also, the Allman Brothers' "Ramblin' Man." I loved that song. It was one of my favorite songs as kid. I had no idea what a "ramblin' man" was, though when I think about it, looking back, I can remember the first time I was in a motel room, by a highway, and I heard the sounds of cars and trucks going by at night. So I think there was something about "Ramblin' Man" that was resonating with me even though I had no idea what the song was about.

It's a great melodic line, though.
It's great. It's a great song. I love the Allman Brothers. We actually did a recording of the Allman Brothers song "Blue Sky" recently. I'm a sucker for '70s classic rock, I love classic rock.

You've talked before about how much like the Ruth Crawford Seeger book [American Folksongs for Children, others] -- so you didn't listen to that as a kid?
Oh, no, no. That wasn't part of my children. That was an adult experience for me. I didn't grow up with a folk tradition as part of my family life. It was something I discovered as an adult, but it was something that happened the same time that I started teaching, so they were both huge light-bulb moments. It was really magic that they happened at the same time, because they really created this path that I'm on now.

So when did you started teaching music and singing in preschool?
That was 1993. I fell into a job. I was playing kinda pop music, and I was not inspired. I was not excited about "let's get a record deal!" - the whole thing left me kind of cold. I got this job through a friend of a friend. I was always drawn to working with children and that was how I got the job. At first, I don't think I even told them I was a musician. And then along the way I said, "I could bring in my guitar." So I did, and it just happened naturally, singing with the kids, and it was so exciting...

I was playing in a rock band at the time, and I'd go see a friend's band at CBGBs and I'd find myself thinking, "What would my students think of this now? What would they think of these people? They're all tough they're trying to be, how cool they think they are." I was so much more drawn to their perspective than that of my peers at that point in my life. That was something that stayed with me for a long time.

SunnyDay.jpgYou have this new album [Sunny Day] -- I'm curious how you go about picking songs because you have few original songs. On your records they're mostly covers, more recent songs, or folk songs -- how do you choose?
We're very open in what our interpretation of children's music is, clearly. And it's usually that the song has an openness to it that can be interpreted in many different ways. I also try, with putting a new album together, to create a new neighborhood where there's all different kind of neighbors living on the same block, where there's Augustus Pablo and Ruth Crawford Seeger as next door neighboors. To me that's a really exciting reimagining of what life can be and what kind of music can inform our daily lives. So that's a big part of it, keeping some diversity and unexpected juxtapositions of traditions, that we can all really live together peacefully and joyfully and bringing that to people through sound.

I also really love a recording like "Little Liza Jane," taking a really old song and reimagining it in a personal context. It becomes this conversation I'm having with music and songmakers from a hundred years ago and that's something I also want us all to feel with making music, pulling a thread through time.

And culture --
Yes, absolutely.

That's one of the things I like about your albums. It's not just the Velvet Underground next to Woody Guthrie song, it's also --
A Korean folk song, yes.

IMG_3662_2.jpgA Korean folk song -- where do you find those... for lack of a better word, "foreign-language" songs?
Well, I often do just through people that I meet. Our violinist, Jean [Cook], is Korean and she brought a lot of songs that her mom taught. And just now I did an interview with someone whose mother is German and French and she was going to teach me a song. I always keep my ears open and that's really the best way to learn. When we went to Japan two years ago, we asked a friend who was Japanese to teach us some language so we could get by over there and she taught us a couple of songs -- songs are a great way to learn a new language, because they're often it's really basic, elemental language and you can hold on to it, and remember a word, find that word and use it to communicate.

Well, I think Frances [England] is about to come on, so I'm going to ask one more question, and that is, so what's next for you?
Two records -- we're trying to finish a Spanish album with Suni Paz that I'm so happy about, we're so close. We sang a little Spanish today, don't know if you caught that.

I did.
"John the Rabbit"... "Juan Conejo / Si, senor." And then we've got an album called Blue Clouds, from that song "Blue Clouds," which is in the HBO Rosie O'Donnell special from earlier this year, and I guess it's a lullaby record. I was really resisting the lullaby record but I'm surrendering to it now and that one's almost done as well.