Friday, July 29, 2022
A Great Time To Be Louis and Dan
Wednesday, July 27, 2022
No Place Like Space for Justin Roberts
Roberts (and his family) trudged through the pandemic doing occasional homebound concerts to reach listeners. The span held incredible highs (time with his son) and lows (the death of his father; a sadness I also suffered through). SPACE CADET gently weaves through some sensitive topics, such as special needs ("Truman Was A Tornado"), self-discovery ("I Have Been A Unicorn"), and ADHD (the title track). Kids love trains, so Roberts uses that affection as a metaphor for inclusion on "Everybody Get On Board":
Sometimes you’re perfect
Other times you ain’t
But we all got a beating heart
Every day is like a brand new start
To try and play an open chord
So everyone can get on board
The secret to Justin Roberts' music is how he pivots a song from what you think it's about to where he really wants to go. "I'm Not Just An I" starts with "igloo" and "icicle" but builds to an unexpected finish with "My i disappears when I'm with you, all your love is me and i am you," which is when you see he's dedicated the tune to his wife, Anna. When you come right down to it, Roberts is no space cadet – he's leading the whole brigade.
SPACE CADET is available from Justin Roberts' website, Amazon, Spotify, and Apple Music.
Here is the video from his song, "Everybody Get On Board":
Wednesday, July 13, 2022
Claudia Sings Kids Songs By the Sea Shore
Gunn encourages kids to invest in their own imaginations on songs like "The Loneliest Whale," "Pirate Princess," and "Into the Blue":
Under the sea let's swim all day
Into the blue with all of our friends
Under the waves that never end
Behind us all the waves go blue
The ocean calls to me and you
Performers are subtlety (and not-so-subtlety) showing children that they need it's not all fun and games – as a world citizen, you can't grow up to become an unfettered narcissist. Your own bedroom might revolve around you, but "We Are All Waves," and our actions are all part of the same ecosystem. For every action negative (polluting, bullying) or positive (sharing, recycling), there are ripples that affect many others, as "everybody feels the waves."
Make sure to purchase SING FOR THE SEAS through a vendor that provides the songbook activities and science notes by Dr. Melissa Gunn (possible relation). The world would not exist without our oceans, and Claudia Robin Gunn delivers a spiritual tribute to what makes them important and why everyone (not just kids) should actively champion keeping them clean and accessible.
SING FOR THE SEAS is available from Claudia Robin Gunn's website, Bandcamp, Spotify, and Amazon.
Here is the video for the song, "Spring Song":
Friday, July 08, 2022
Friday Feels Right for Brady Rymer
A mainstay in the children's music and kindie industry for more than 15 years, Rymer and Company produce reliably upbeat and appealing songs. "Superpowers" decodes the Marvel/DC universes for young listeners, pointing out that giving big hugs and greeting people with a beaming smile are just as important as being invisible or reading minds.
"Babies of Summer" talks about the excitement in spotting new offspring of pets and wild animals. However Rymer is up to his charmingly misleading ways on the seemingly-similar "Following the Bunny Tracks." Kids may think the tune follows a child tracking a baby rabbit, while parents should realize it's also about growing up, "steady as a clock ticks, moving on and on, proof that you were here and gone."
Presciently, Rymer tackles the current war on diversity on "Outline." The song uses the premise that every child is a blank slate, who fills in each aspect of their lives with different colors as they mature and become their own person:
And love will be the reds
Kindness be the blues
And hope will be a rainbow of hues
And joy will be the greens
Faith will be the greys
To fill me in and lift me off the page
Rymer selectively chooses cover songs, from Diana Ross's "I'm Coming Out" on his previous release, UNDER THE BIG UMBRELLA, to THAT FRIDAY FEELING's version of Allan Toussaint's New Orleans classic, "Yes We Can Can." You'll feel the zeal and vigor pumping through your car speakers or home audio system. Not to mention the frantic playtime celebrations of Rymer originals, "Seven Hours of Fun" and the title track. Rymer and his unsinkably sunny crew give you 12 reasons to keep that Friday feeling going all week long.
THAT FRIDAY FEELING is available from Brady Rymer's website, Amazon, Spotify, and Apple Music.
Here is the band's video for the title track, "That Friday Feeling":
Wednesday, July 06, 2022
Josh Lovelace Moonwalks With Young Folk
For many performers, the answer to the question "What did you do during quarantine?" is "I recorded some introspective family music." For Lovelace, MOONWALKING is his first post-pandemic CD and he's more interested in connecting with his audience than messaging about the ways the world has changed in so short a timeframe. The closest reflection on the recent past is the poppy "Wash Your Hands," but who hasn't used that term with their youngsters in the past millennium?
Lovelace perpetuates his obsession with undergarments, first addressed on Young Folks' first CD on "A Bear in the Woods Ate My Underwear." On "Rosie Cat," he addresses an idiosyncratic hope "that she won't eat my underwear." He also deals with daughter Margo's objections to her mother possibly being aquatic on "Mommy's a Mermaid," pointing out "While most mommy's have feet, I think it's really neat."
Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers once said – after returning from a world tour, where all his desires and needs were catered to – that the thing keeping him grounded was his wife leaving the garbage for him to take out. And that he had to ask "Where are our outdoor trash cans?" Lovelace seeks to rationalize his existence as a rock performer/father of two on the track "Cool Dad in a Minivan":
Cool dad in a minivan
I'm going so fast, well as fast as I can
Don't need no sports car for this practical man
'Coz I'm a cool dad in a minivan
MOONWALKING ends with the one-two gut punch of parental empathy and emphatic awe of "I Believe In You" and "Goodnight, My Dear," a standard in the Lovelace household that makes its recorded debut here. "Growing up, you will always be enough, and always fall back to my love," Lovelace sings. You believe that he means every word and accept that the song shares that sentiment with any child uncertain of their abilities. As long as we're breathing, we remain young folk. MOONWALKING puts a spotlight on how alike we all are, asleep, awake, and as a community.
MOONWALKING is available from Josh Lovelace's website, Amazon, Apple Music, and Spotify.
Here is the video of Josh singing, "This Little Light of Mine":