Radio Playlist: New Music February 2012

Time again to update the Zooglobble radio station, covering assorted tracks collected in the first couple months or so of 2012. (You can see my January 2012 playlist here.) This playlist airs in the mid-afternoons (West Coast time), but if you can't listen in the afternoon, the tracks are scattered throughout the day, too. The listing below is in alphabetical order; the on-air play order is totally random (due to Internet music restrictions). Whoa Jack! - Andrew Queen (Grow) Gravity - AudraRox (La Bella Stella) Kick Drum Heart - Bari Koral Family Rock Band (Anna And The Cupcakes) Raccoon's Got A Bushy Tail - Ben Bowen (The Bumblebee EP) Why Is Dad So Mad? (Single) - The Board of Education (Why Is Dad So Mad? (Single)) Peanut Butter & Jelly - The Boogers (10 Great Songs About Food) Capybara - Brian Vogan & His Good Buddies (Born To Wiggle) Augustus Jackson - Ellis Paul (The Hero In You) Rocks 'n Sand - Essence (A Dog Named MOO... And His Friend ROO) The Moose Lives Where? - Farmer Jason and Jo Nesbo and Todd Snider (Nature Jams) Everybody Sing - Imagination Movers (Rock-O-Matic) Muscle And Bone - Katherine Dines (Hunk-Ta-Bunk-Ta Hits) States And Capitals - Macho Nacho And Mouth Trumpet (Musical Stew) Syeeda's ABCs (Syeeda's Song Flute) - Matt Wilson (WeBop: A Family Jazz Party) Rollerskate Banana Peel - Mo Phillips (Monster Suit) What Would You Do with a Grumpy Sailor? - Rick Huddle (Arrrr! Pirates Have Feelings Too) Sandbox - Riff Rockit (Riff Rockit) La Familia (The Family) - Sing With Senor (Uno Dos - Songs for Learning Spanish) Nightlight - Spaghetti Eddie! (Spaghetti Eddie! and Other Children's Songs Vol. 2) Se A Alegria Existe - Teresa Cristina (Brazilian Playground) Coconut Trees - Two Of A Kind (Sing Me Your Story)

Radio Playlist: New Music January 2012

Time again to update the Zooglobble radio station, covering assorted tracks collected in the last couple months or so of 2012. (You can see my October 2011 playlist here.) This playlist airs in the mid-afternoons (West Coast time), but if you can't listen in the afternoon, the tracks are scattered throughout the day, too. The listing below is in alphabetical order; the on-air play order is totally random (due to Internet music restrictions). Bill Bailey - The Biscuit Brothers (Get Up & Go) It's Not Fair - The Buzzniks (Bug Out) Goldfinches - The Chickadees (The Froggy Hop) Help - Cloud Cult (Minnesota Beatle Project Vol. 3) Walk Away - Debbie And Friends (All About Bullies...Big And Small) Sacagawea - The Deedle Deedle Dees (Strange Dees, Indeed) Max The Wonder Dog - DidiPop (Everyday Adventure) Samantha the Butterfly - Fox & Branch (Things Are Coming My Way!) I've Been Playing In A Soul Band - Groove Kid Nation (Music In Motion) Sugar Buzz - Jeanie B! And The Jelly Beans (Sugar Buzz) Living Inside Of A Jar - Jim Gill (Jim Gill Presents Music Play For Folks Of All Stripes) The Mixing Bowl - Kira Willey (Kings & Queens of the Forest) Soldier’s Joy - Laura Veirs (Tumble Bee) Sometimes - Little Miss Ann (Walk with Me) Welcome To The Library - Melvil Dewey (Deweylicious! Library Hip Hop) Bambas - Mujeres (Els Transports) Masha And The Rain - Sasha Bondarev (Sand Castle) Wrong Side Of The Bed - Soundzania (Soundzania Elementary School) Stink Bug - We Kids Rock Band (We Kids Rock!)

Interview: Kathy O'Connell (Kids Corner)

KathyOConnell.jpgSometimes the printed page (or screen) isn't enough.  I've admired Kathy O'Connell, the host of the Kids Corner radio show at Philadelphia's WXPN for many reasons.  She is in essence the dean of kids music radio, having hosted Kids Corner for more than 20 years (and other shows before that).  She is also an absolute riot to be around -- meeting her at StinkFest/KindieFest 2009 was definitely a blast.  So I was excited when O'Connell agreed to answer a few questions.  Read on -- even if you live nowhere near Philly -- and find out how O'Connell got her start in radio, what she looks for in putting together Kids Corner, and her connection to Vampire Weekend (really). Zooglobble: What music did you listen to growing up? Kathy O'Connell: My parents had lots of novelty records, like Spike Jones, Stan Freberg, and Betty Hutton, along with a lot of Sinatra and Dean Martin.  When I started buying my own music, I went heavy on the show tunes.  The album that had the biggest influence on me growing up was Carol Burnett Remembers How They Stopped the Show.  I won talent shows lip-synching her version of “Adelaide’s Lament.”  I pretty much had the “novelty” category to myself in the CYO Summer Recreation Talent Shows. Then, the Beatles came, and I never looked back.  I was a British Invasion girl all the way, with a soft spot for novelty tunes.  When the Beatles and Soupy Sales were on  the same Ed Sullivan show, my brains fell out. What radio stations and DJs did you listen to growing up? WABC in New York.  Top 40 radio at its best.  I had a transistor radio to my ear all the time.  The WABC jocks were my first introduction to the possibilities of creative live radio.  I think people look upon radio as a conduit to music instead of an art in itself.  The WABC jocks were entertainers who happened to play records.  A good live radio artist is a like a good jazz musician.  They can roll with anything and make it entertaining.  And the intimacy of radio leaves such an imprint.  I can still sing the theme songs for Scott Muni and “Cousin” Bruce Morrow more than 40 years later. My favorite DJ, then and forever, was Dan Ingram.  He did 2-6 pm on WABC.  He was the most creative voice on the radio.  And when he needed to, when a news story warranted it, he was serious.  Dan Ingram had the mix of funny and serious down perfectly.  Listening to WABC back then, you felt like you were part of a bigger community. So, it was a big deal when Cousin Brucie’s son Dana John (DJ) was born, and we got swept up in the “Principal of the Year Contest” every year.  I even nominated the awful principal we had at St. Hugh’s.  We weren’t successful. When did you first realize that you wanted to work in radio?  When did you start doing kids radio -- it wasn't exactly planned, was it?