I became acquainted with semi-professionals (they played weekend gigs at weddings and parties) who dabbled in children's music, as well as "Mommy and Me" types who used their years of musical education to record a CD they could hock at their classes. One of my friends from college bragged that he and a colleague produced a cassette tape that included such memorable titles as "You Can Pick Your Friends, But Don't Pick Your Nose." Whenever I see or hear a title along those lines, it's become my Niagara Falls. It's waving a flag in my face, and the face of anyone who takes children's music seriously – that you are willing to use the most base concept to drag a chuckle from parents and a mirthful giggle from the youngest of listeners. When HAPPILY EVER NOW featured a track called "Don't Pick Your Nose," I forcibly stifled years of accumulated bile.
Raph comes by his children's music in an honorable fashion. His four-month-old son was involved in a near-fatal car accident in 2002. Strumming guitar bedside in the intensive care unit at the hospital, he became aware of the healing power of music. There's a viability to Raph's recordings, and his focus comes from a place of honesty. He just needs to get past some of the facade that makes HAPPILY EVER NOW merely a serviceable first impression to the genre.
HAPPILY EVER NOW is available from G'Raph's website, Amazon, Spotify, and Apple Music.
Here is the video for Raphael Groton's song, "Hands in the Water":
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