Christmas & Holiday Music 2014

Every year there's an outpouring of holiday-related music spanning all genres, and while kindie's participation in holiday music is down a bit from, say, 2-3 years ago, there are still a handful of new entries.  Time's a ticking -- we're in the middle of Hanukkah and Christmas is but 4 days away, so let's jump in.

Albums

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Bobs and LoloWave Your Antlers -- My favorite kindie Christmas album of 2014, this is a solid collection of pop originals ("Festive Time of Year" and the catchy-in-spite-of-all-attempts-to-stop-it "Chris Moose") and Christmas classics, including some songs you don't typically get on kids' Christmas albums (I'm looking at you "Dona Nobis Pacem").  Fans of the British Columbia duo will definitely want to pick this up, and most fans of kindie pop will find this a pleasant addition to their holiday rotation.

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Farmer JasonChristmas on the Farm with Farmer Jason -- Jason Ringenberg's kids' music as Farmer Jason has often had the energy of his Jason and the Scorchers work, but totally wholesome.  Songs like "All I Want for Christmas (Is a Punk Rock Skunk)" and "Eat Your Fruitcake" blast through the stereo speakers, to be sure.  I am usually a big fan of diverse musical approaches on albums, but to me, those songs sat a little uneasily next very sincere renditions of a religious Christmas classic like "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing" or a Ringenberg original, "The Animals Sang."  Farmer Jason fans will probably like the album, but non-fans may want to give the album samples a few spins to see if the bifurcated approach appeals before committing to the album

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Mighty Magic Pants: It Must Be Christmas -- Mike Mennard and his crew offer a mostly irreverent take on Christmas -- titles like "Santa's Stuck in the Chimney," "Rudolph on the Barbecue," and "Grandpa Ate Too Much Again This Christmas" will give you a pretty good sense of the attitude.  It's respectful irreverence, to be sure -- "Lay Down Your Drum, Little Drummer Boy" is sung from the point of view of Mary, gently pleading with the Little Drummer Boy to stop his rum-pa-bum-bum-ming so Baby Jesus can get some sleep.  There's nothing particularly memorable about the musical settings, but with short poems serving as interstitials between many songs, this is essentially an hour-long Christmas revue musical that will likely provide some chuckles of recognition.

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Idina MenzelHoliday Wishes -- It's not a kindie album, but it's new this year.  No, she does not sing "Let It Go," because even though Frozen was released last Christmas, that song -- the song her obituary many years hence will no doubt reference -- has nothing to do with Christmas.  She does, however, sing a dozen Christmas-related songs in a perfectly tasteful and enjoyable way.  I could do without her duet with Michael Buble' on "Baby It's Cold Outside" (I've come to actively dislike the song for lyrical reasons), but the rest is well-chosen and produced.  If it sounds like I'm lukewarm, it's only because there's little here to distinguish it from dozens (hundreds? thousands?) of other Christmas albums from singers with beautiful voices.  I'm sure I'll listen in future years, but I doubt it'll become a treasured favorite.

Other Stuff

This year Hanukkah runs almost concurrently with Christmas, and Alison Faith Levy offers up a fun new song titled "All I Want for Chanukah is a Ukulele," strumming on a uke (natch) with fellow Bay Area musician Karla Kane from the Corner Laughers.  If only I knew eight chords on my uke.

Speaking of Hanukkah-related duets, Lisa Loeb also has one.  Hers, "Light," is a little more serious, but very pretty, and features vocals from Renee Stahl (half of Renee and Jeremy).  I can definitely see this becoming part of Chanukah-related playlists in years to come.

With "Got the Spirit," Mista Cookie Jar offers up a super-positive holiday jam (does MCJ do any other kind?) for your favorite nondenominational (or denominational or multidenominational) kid, again infusing his '50s soul with a thoroughly modern attitude.  Or is it vice versa?

Here's a Spotify playlist of kindie holiday songs from this year (including some songs referenced above (go here for link, here if you're in Spotify):

Danny Weinkauf – Wonderful Christmas Day
Farmer Jason – All I Want for Christmas (Is a Punk Rock Skunk)
Bobs & Lolo – Chris Moose
Mista Cookie Jar & the Chocolate Chips – Got the Spirit
The Wanna Bees – Party On the Rooftop
The Mighty Magic Pants – Pirate's Christmas Eve
The Wanna Bees – Snow Ball Fight

Previously on Zooglobble

The Pop Ups - "Favorite Cousin"

Bobs and LoLo - "Chris Moose"

Note: I received copies of the Bobs & LoLo, Farmer Jason, and Mighty Magic Pants albums for possible review.

Interview: Rick Dobbis (myKaZoo)

Richard and Rick 3_low.jpgRick Dobbis' resume is a lengthy one, with many stops in the music and record business, including a stint as president of Sony Music International. His latest effort targets a younger audience than one he's spent much of his career focusing on -- preschoolers and elementary school-aged kids. Along with business partner Richard Ellis (that's him on the right, Dobbis on the left), myKaZootv and myKaZoo Music are attempting to bring a wide variety of music videos in one centralized (and curated) place as well as seeing if the idea of a kids' record label can be saved. Their label's first release, Farmer Jason's Nature Jams, comes out February 7, and the myKaZoo website will be up and running this month. They've got ambitious plans in a field that has seen many ambitious plans -- and seen many of those fail. Dobbins chatted with me this week about his introduction to kids music, why he thinks myKaZoo is good for the genre and not just his artists, and one inspiration for the site's name. Zooglobble: What are your earliest musical memories? Rick Dobbis: I grew up with a sister six years older than me. She was a huge, huge rock 'n' roll fan. This was the early '50s, so folks like Elvis Presley, Connie Francis. My sister was a huge Connie Francis fan -- my father once brought her an autographed picture of Francis and she just about died. My father... the name "myKaZoo" isn't specifically named for my father, but he was an amateur kazoo player. He opened for Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes at an annual show three years in a row. My first kids record was the theme from Davy Crockett. My first album was "A Taste of Honey" by Jimmy Rodgers. How did you get into kids music? Well, Rick Chertoff, who's a distinguished producer, he and his wife and others formed Dream Jam Productions to do stuff related to music and movement. It'd primarily been focused on books. We were sitting talking one day, and we asked, "why don't we create our own music -- good music that shares the values we're trying to convey?" That struck a chord with me, so I worked with them and that's when the Dream Jam Band came into being. I worked with every genre over my career, and internationally at a particularly good point, a great time to open my mind. It was new, and new is healthy. There's some wonderfully creative content in the genre. It's also under-resourced and underrepresented in the marketplace.

Please Release Me: January 2012 Edition

It's 2012, and time again for an updated list of new and upcoming releases, many of which were on last month's list. Additions to the list are noted with a "++"; changes to previously-mentioned items are indicated with italics. As always, if I've listed you on here and gotten something wrong (or something not ready for primetime), let me know and I'll edit or delete it. And if you're not on here and think you should be, drop me a line, too, and I'll get you added for the next iteration. ++ Little Miss Ann: Walk With Me (Jan. 15) ++ Kidz Bop: Kidz Bop 21 (Jan. 17) ++ Two of a Kind: Sing Me Your Story (Jan. 24) ++ Tom's Fun Band: Macaroni and Cheese (Jan. 27) Princess Katie and Racer Steve: Love, Cake & Monsters (January?) Central Services Board of Education: Binary [tentative] (January?) The Good Ms. Padgett: ... Tells The Little Red Hen and Other Stories (January?) RhymeZwell: Robots on the Dance Floor (January?) Big Don: Big Don's Brand New Beat (January?) Riff Rockit: Riff Rockit (CD, DVD, Jan. 24) Katherine Dines: Hunk-Ta-Bunk-Ta HITS (Jan. 31) Ellis Paul: The Hero in You (January) The Fresh Beat Band: Soundtrack (January) ++ Rockabye Baby: Lullaby Renditions of Depeche Mode (Feb. 7) ++ Farmer Jason: Nature Jams (Feb. 7) The Bari Koral Family Rock Band: Anna And The Cupcakes (Feb. 14) Putumayo Kids: Instrumental Dreamland (Feb. 28) Tim and the Space Cadets: Anthems for Adventure (February) Bill Harley: High Dives and Other Things That Could Have Happened (February) Doctor Noize: Grammaropolis (March 4) Recess Music: La Bella Stella (March 27) Gustafer Yellowgold: Gustafer Yellowgold’s Year in The Day (April 3) Mo Phillips: Title TBA (April 10) Caspar Babypants: HOT DOG! (April 17) ++ Sukey Molloy: I Am Happy (April 24) Orange Sherbet: Delicious (May 1) Hope Harris: Picasso, That's Who (May 8) Okee Dokee Brothers: Mississippi River CD/DVD (May) Randy Kaplan: Mr. Diddie Wah Diddie (spring?) The Funky Mamas and Friends: Pickin’ In The Garden (spring) Elena Moon Park: Rabbit Days and Dumplings (spring) ++ The Pop Ups: Radio Jungle (spring) ++ Alison Faith Levy: World of Wonder (spring) The Dirty Sock Funtime Band: Dirty Socks Come Clean (June 26) Charity and the JAMband: Family Values (July 3) ++ Recess Music: Someone Else’s Shoes (September 25) Andy Z: The Grand Scream of Things (Halloween 2012) Other expected 2012 albums: Ah-Choo, Peter Apel, Ratboy, Jr., Sugar Free Allstars, Renee & Jeremy, The Bramble Jam, Secret Agent 23 Skidoo (Make Believers), Bobby Susser (Wo), Eric Herman (2 albums: one music, one comedy skits), Keith Munslow (2 albums: one solo, one with Bill Harley), Wayne Potash, Alex and the Kaleidoscope Band, Lori Henriques, Shine and the Moonbeams, Yumza! ++