Please Release Me: May 2010 Edition

An update of last month's list of upcoming family music releases... Hullabaloo: A Mighty Good Day (May 30) StarFish: Enter Sandbox (June 1): Still my favorite album title of the year thus far... Justin Roberts: Jungle Gym (June 8) Recess Monkey: The Final Funktier (June 15) Laurie Berkner Band: The Best of the Laurie Berkner Band Putumayo Kids (Various Artists): Rock 'n' Roll Playground (June 29): Features Dan Zanes, Peter Himmelman, Uncle Rock, and Charity and the JAMband, among others. Billy Kelly: Is This Some Kind of Joke? (early July?) Dream Jam Band: Leave It In The Soup (July 13) The Not-Its: Time Out To Rock (July 20) Pete Seeger: Tomorrow's Children (July 27) Various Artists: Many Hands: Family Music for Haiti (Aug. 10) The Okee Dokee Brothers: Take It Outside (August) Secret Agent 23 Skidoo: Title TBA (very late summer) Jim Cosgrove: Title TBA (Fall?) Elizabeth Mitchell: Sunny Day (Oct. 5) Flannery Brothers The New Explorers Club (Oct. 5) Jamie Broza: I Wanna Dog (October) David Weinstone: Title TBA (October) Frances England: Mind of My Own (Fall?) Caspar Babypants: This Is Fun! (Nov. 2) Others working on albums with potential 2010 releases? Lunch Money, Ella Jenkins, Conductor Jack and the Zinghoppers

The Best of the Laurie Berkner Band Set To Relieve Jack's Big Music Show Withdrawal Symptoms June 22

The Best of The Laurie Berkner Band_FINAL COVER_lowres.jpgShe performed with a whole bunch of folks at a Haiti benefit, she's performing with a whole bunch of folks for, er, Nickolodeon's benefit, and what else is Laurie Berkner going to do now? (No, not go to Disneyland. She's a Nick girl.) Well, as previously reported, she's going to release a greatest hits album. Now we have the full details -- album art there to the side (which does reward the close viewer of the art -- see the moon with the nightlight chain?), release date (June 22), and track listing. It includes a few audio tracks from previously-released videos and "Open Your Heart," newly recorded with the band. From an industry perspective, I find the release interesting because it's really the first greatest hits release from a kids music star in the digital world. How well will it do if folks can easily just make their own "greatest hits" CDs? Or do people still buy full albums, even for (especially for) kids? Track listing below:

New Album from Ella Jenkins On Its Way

EllaWithUke.jpgIt's a little hard to get a handle on exactly how many albums Ella Jenkins has released for the Smithsonian Folkways label. I've seen 28 mentioned; her Wikipedia discography suggests 30, if you include 2004's cELLAbration!. Really, the last proper Ella Jenkins album -- Sharing Cultures with Ella Jenkins was released in 2003, and I think we can agree than 7 years is too long to hear from her. But we don't have much longer to wait, as Smithsonian Folkways confirms it is indeed releasing a new Ella Jenkins album of, yes, newly recorded material. It's recorded, but the other stuff (art design, etc.) is yet to be finished. And so it'll probably take a little while longer, but between this and that new Pete Seeger album, 2010 is looking to be a very good year for the oldest of old school artists. Count me in that camp. (Photo courtesy Adventures in Rhythm)

Randy Kaplan: The Kids Are All Id (and Orange-y)

TheKidsAreAllId.jpgThe idea of a "release date" in the music industry is a slippery one these days -- is it when you start selling the disks at shows? When it shows up on iTunes? When you tell a major magazine it is so it meets their 4-month lead time? No matter when it's released, there's definitely some anticipation for Randy Kaplan's new disk The Kids Are All Id. If features the by-now-standard Kaplan approach of mixing standards and buried classics with original songs that tell stories in Kaplan's unique style. It also features some really cool cover art, about which Kaplan reports:
I did all the drawings of the faces and my designer in Paris, Laurent Rivelaygue, created the overlapping collage. The cover was originally yellow but my friend Michelle said it was too close to Five Cent Piece. So I asked for orange and teal and I chose the orange one.
Anyway, I dig it. If you want to read more, Jeff over at Out With the Kids talked with Randy a little while back. And while you'll have an opportunity to see Randy on the east coast a few times, I'm happy to report that he's coming back to Phoenix again next month, this time at my series at the Children's Museum of Phoenix. He'll be playing a couple of sets on June 13 at 10:30 and 11:30 AM. Track listing and a sneak preview of one track after the jump...

Kindiefest 2010: Justin Roberts and the Not Ready For Naptime Players

JustinRoberts_KF_1.jpgFor the most part, I only caught brief glimpses of Justin Roberts at Kindiefest this year. When I did see him there, it seemed like he always had a crowd around him. After many patient years diligently practicing his craft, Roberts seems poised to finally make the leap to the (relative) mainstream awareness (hello, New York Times!, hello, other magazines who were around last weekend!) enjoyed by folks like Dan Zanes, Laurie Berkner, and Ralph Covert. To those of us in the industry who have been thinking of Roberts as being at that level for a while now, it's just the rest of the world catching up. Still, I think even the most devoted and dialed-in observer of the scene couldn't help but be a little bit bowled over by the Roberts' showcase-concluding set Saturday night. I chose to title this post "... and the Not Ready For Naptime Players" deliberately. Sure, Roberts' popularity starts off with his sharp songwriting skills, but there's no doubt that the full 5-piece NR4NP is an essential part of Roberts' success, both on record and live. Liam Davis brings a keen producer's ear to Roberts' albums and is only slightly less energetic on stage than Gerald Dowd is on drums. Jacqueline Schimmel on bass and Dave Winer on trumpet, laptop, and court jester play no less important roles. They're loose (Winer's "Little Dave" riff on "Kidniefest" -- spelling intentional -- nearly brought the show to a comedic halt) but when they play, they are tight. JustinRoberts_KF_NR4NP.jpgAs I noted before, Roberts and his band were so great, at least a couple other performing artists said it inspired them to improve their own performances. Audience members shed tears. The brief 23-minute set was like watching a Super Bowl halftime show except the band wasn't dialing it in and the new stuff was every bit as good as the classics. Yeah, the new stuff is great, too. The two tracks they performed from the Jungle Gym -- "Trick or Treat" and "New Haircut" (were there more? "Gym Class Parachute," maybe?) -- weren't quite as orchestrated as on record (I wanted somebody to cue the flutes -- a reference which will be clearer once everyone hears the disk). But the band already sounded very polished on the new tracks (and Roberts already had hand/arm motions worked out for audience participation). As for "Trick or Treat" (excerpted below with Roberts' permission), which is a Halloween song that the New Pornographers would be proud to include in their collection, I had a conversation with a radio person afterwards who said, "I don't think I can wait that long to play that on the air." We decided Labor Day would be OK. That's going to be a huge song in concert for Roberts in the fall. In other words, win. Justin Roberts - "Trick or Treat" (Excerpt from Kindiefest 2010) [YouTube] More pictures after the jump.

Video: "What We Got" (Live) - The Okee Dokee Brothers with Bunny Clogs

As noted before, the Twin Cities' Okee Dokee Brothers have a new album coming out in early August -- Take It Outside -- and so they're starting to road-test the material, most recently at this weekend's Bunny Clogs concert. Adam Levy helps 'em out here on a soulful, organ-drenched track called "What We Got." And by "organ-drenched," I don't mean there were Hammond B-3's falling from the sky. 'Cause that would probably hurt. This, though, is nice. The Okee Dokee Brothers - "What We Got" (Live) [YouTube]