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    Tuesday
    Nov132012

    Video: "Count Them As They Go" - Justin Roberts

    Ah, a new Justin Roberts album, perfect for seasonally-appropriate gift-giving.  His new album Lullaby comes out next week, and with a title like that, you can surmise that it won't contain raved-up power-pop confections.

    It is, however, perfect for these rapidly shortening days of diminishing light and nesting feelings.

    The leadoff single is "Count Them As They Go," and the video from the fine folks at ALSO is, like Roberts' songwriting, a model of precision, with everything in its right place.  Lovely and reassuring.

    Justin Roberts - "Count Them As They Go" [YouTube]

    Wednesday
    Nov072012

    Video: "The Case of the Dry Markers" - Zak Morgan

    There's something ever so slightly off in this video for Zak Morgan's song "The Case of the Dry Markers," from his new album The Barber of the Beasts.  Not in a bad way, mind you, just that any song that creates a slightly ominous and nonsensical story from missing dry markers -- and then wraps that into a guest appearance from Bootsy Collins -- well, that just ain't typical.

    Zak Morgan - "The Case of the Dry Markers (feat. Bootsy Collins) [Vimeo]

    Tuesday
    Nov062012

    Video: "Give It Away" - Renee & Jeremy

    It's been a long election season.  And while I celebrate all things electoral and watch relatively little commercial TV, even I would admit to looking forward to the impending absence of political ads from our airwaves.

    Instead of watching six political ads, can I get you and your kids to watch this trippy 3-minute video for Renee & Jeremy's unique cover of the Red Hot Chili Peppers' "Give It Away" from their covers album A Little Love?  It will make you feel much happier before you dive into your exit polls, pundits, and electoral maps for the day.

    Renee & Jeremy - "Give It Away" [YouTube]

    Tuesday
    Nov062012

    Radio Playlist: New Music November 2012

    Time to post another Spotify update for new music (see October's playlist here).  It's limited, of course, 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, hey, there's always next month.

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

    **** New Music November 2012 (November Kindie Playlist) ****

    Todd McHatton – Fuzzy & Orange
    Doctor Noize – Welcome to Grammaropolis
    The Harmonica Pocket – Turkey in the Straw
    Big Bang Boom – Bicycle
    David Tobocman – Run Run, Race Car
    Boxtop Jenkins – Wag More (feat. Indigo Girls)
    Vered – At 63
    Jennifer Gasoi – Little Blue Car
    Elizabeth Mitchell – May This Be Love
    Randy Kaplan & Kristin Mooney – John the Rabbit (feat. Jack Saxenmeyer) (from PLAY Music Vol. 2)
    Helen Austin – Five Little Things
    The Tumble Down Library – Bartholomew
    Jonathan Grossman & the Nerdz – Who I Am
    Beth Nielsen Chapman – The Big Bang Boom
    Zak Morgan – Nancy Jane

     

    Tuesday
    Oct302012

    Review: Can You Canoe? - The Okee Dokee Brothers

    I know, I already reviewed the album for NPR.  But it's always good to get a few more words in.

    ***

    It could have been -- it should have been -- a gimmick.  The Okee Dokee Brothers, the Minneapolis duo of Joe Mailander and Justin Lansing, heading down the Mississippi River in a canoe for a month, just the two of them, with the goal of producing an album's worth of river/exploration songs by journey's end.

    But the resulting album, Can You Canoe?, exceeds all expectations in its breadth and scope, its heart and humor.  Their take on the traditional "Haul Away Joe," featuring The Band's Garth Hudson, tempts me to pull out every synonym for "joyful" in my thesaurus -- boisterous, rousing, or, perhaps most appropriately given the nautical theme of the album, buoyant.

    In its boisterousness, "Haul Away Joe" is probably more the exception than the rule on the album, with songs tending more toward the contemplative, such as "Thousand Star Hotel," or "Small and Simple," featuring Elizabeth Mitchell.  The opening title track is the gentle invitation to exploration that serves as the throughline of the album.  What happens on the river doesn't stay on the river -- it sticks with you for a long time.  And it's not so much the big things as it is the small, such as the animals and bugs (see "The Bullfrog Opera" and "Rosita").  And while there's certainly a time and place for solitude in nature, one often needs companions to make that exploration work, a theme emphasized by "Haul Away Joe" and "Along for the Ride," which features Rachel Loshak.  Producer Dean Jones does a nice job directing traffic and filling out the Brothers' Americana sound.

    Justin and Joe didn't actually canoe down the river by themselves -- they had a couple other folks along helping out and filming a DVD with interviews and music videos packaged with the CD.  There's nothing essential about the DVD -- if for whatever reason you prefer the digital mp3s, you and your family can probably get along with out it -- but it's certainly a step above most bonus DVDs.  (Most of the footage is now available on the band's YouTube channel.)

    The album is most appropriate for kids ages 4 through 9, but the album approaches Dan Zanes and Elizabeth Mitchell territory in terms of its being truly suitable for all ages.  Can You Canoe? is wide-eyed in the best sense, and easily one of the best kids albums of the year.  Highly recommended.