Listen To This - "What Is a Leader?" - Alastair Moock (feat. Rani Arbo & some smart kids) [World Premiere!]

Massachusetts-based musician Alastair Moock couldn’t have imagined the sort of world he’d be releasing Be a Pain: An Album for Young (and Old) Leaders into. I mean, sure, the year 2020 will feature a United States Presidential election, not to mention many other down-ballot elections — questions of leadership would have been front-of-mind for many adults and probably not a few kids as well.

Alastair and a group of kids

But [practicing physical distancing, gesturing broadly from his home office] this?

Yeah. Not the way most musicians would want to introduce their brand new album to the world.

As I think about it, though, we’re probably thinking even more about leadership and grappling with how a society decides what’s best for all of us. They’re not easy questions — if they were, elected officials and the public wouldn’t be having so many discussions about the best way forward.

In putting together his last album, Singing Our Way Through: Songs for the World’s Bravest Kids, recorded in the wake of his 5-year-old daughter Clio being diagnosed with cancer, Moock says that although he loves putting “words and music together in a harmonious way… you can’t solve every puzzle for every listener.” Moock goes on to say:

When it came to difficult subject matter like life and death, and dealing with fear, my natural instinct to try to offer solutions fell short time and time again. I wanted to tell kids, "everything will be OK." But I knew I couldn't honestly offer that assurance. Instead, I had to learn how to let things lie: ask questions, plant seeds, let the listener meet me halfway with their own experience.

I brought that experience to the also-challenging political material on Be a Pain. This time I went into the project knowing that I wouldn't be able to provide all the answers. I would need to frame songs in a way that kids and parents could do some of the problem-solving on their own –– and, hopefully, also together.

That openness is heard most directly on the album’s opening track, “What Is a Leader?,” which is given its world premiere here. For obvious reasons, a lot of kids music answers questions, but this track mostly just poses questions. Moock comments:

I wondered if, rather than telling kids what it means to be a leader, I could ask them to tell me. I wrote a bunch of musical questions about what a leader might look like, talk like, and do. I thought I might leave the song there, but then it occurred to me: why not ask actual kids to tell me what a leader is and record their responses? That's what my producer, Anand Nayak, and I spent a few months doing. Eventually we ended up with a stockpile of fantastic, varying answers from kids aged 4 to 14 which we were able to weave into the song.

I’m glad I get the chance to share this song right now. In times of great uncertainty, asking the questions and thinking about the answers is one of the most important things we can all do, young and old. Be a Pain is released on April 3; you can also watch Moock live weekly on Facebook and YouTube.

Kids' Songs for Elections

I do my best to stay apolitical 'round here.  That doesn't mean that there aren't some societal assumptions underlying this entire venture, but you're not going to find anything remotely resembling an endorsement.

Which isn't to say I'm not interested in government and elections -- that's very far from the truth. And so, with an election coming up next week, I thought it was high time that I put together a list of political and civic songs for kids.

I will note that I've tried not to make this a list of history songs.  If I did that, after all, half the songs on the list could be from the Deedle Deedle Dees.  I was as interested in the political process, citizens participating, and the category of Presidents as I was in specific "historic" individuals.

As with all of these types of lists, it's a work in progress, so if I've left your favorite (or, if you're a musician, your own) song off the list, let me know in the comments.  (And if They Might Be Giants ever release Here Comes Political Science, you'll hear about it here first.)

Albums

Schoolhouse Rock - America Rocks [lyrics]

Various Artists - We Stood Up [stream/download]

Songs

Jim Gill - "Vote for Jim Gill" [video]

The Galactic Heroes - "George Washington" [stream/download]

Dan Zanes - "Washington at Valley Forge" [stream]

The Not-Its - "Washington, D.C." [video]

Brian Vogan and his Good Buddies - "Presidents' Day" [stream]

Schoolhouse Rock - "I'm Just a Bill" [video]

The Deedle Deedle Dees - "Si Se Puede!" [stream]

The Deedle Deedle Dees - "Teddy Days" [notes]

They Might Be Giants - "James K. Polk" [stream]

They Might Be Giants - "Tippecanoe and Tyler Too" [stream]

They Might Be Giants - "Vote or Don't" [stream]

Danny Weinkauf - "Cast My Vote" [video]

Video: "Washington, D.C." - The Not-Its!

It's easy to make green screen technology look kinda good, but not really.  Or I don't know, maybe it's hard.  In any case, I often look at kindie-budget-level green screen technology and think, "meh."  (Maybe I've been spoiled by one two Marvel movies.)

That's why I think "Washington, D.C.," the brand new video from Seattle's The Not-Its! from their Are You Listening? album, works deceptively well.  It takes all those almost-but-not-quite settings and jettisons them for silly backgrounds.  Want to see the band be there, Forrest Gump-like, at the meeting of President Nixon and Elvis Presley?  Or be chased by a bunch of kid-CIA agents through the Oval Office as President Obama calmly reads?  Then this video, celebrating our nation's capitol and citizens' role in the political process, is for your family.  (They'll probably miss the President (Bill) Clinton joke, but that's probably for the best.)  It's slightly cheesy, but in the context of the video's script, it's pitch-perfect.

And if you dig the song -- I think you will -- grab a free download of the track below...

The Not-Its! - "Washington, D.C." [YouTube]

Monday Morning Smile: "Vote for Jim Gill" - Jim Gill

Vote for Jim Gill cover

As you're aware, usually these Monday Morning Smiles are not kid-music-specific, but when I saw this video from Jim Gill, I knew that this movement-based song would be perfect for this morning of the first presidential debate of 2016.  It's a bit of "Vote for Jim Gill," the title track from his brand-new album, and it's tailor-made for playing during the ad breaks in tonight's debate.

It even includes a baby-kissing politician.  Seriously -- couldn't be more appropriate for this evening's event.

Jim Gill - "Vote for Jim Gill" [YouTube]

Listen To This: "Washington, DC" - The Not-Its! (World Premiere / Free Download!)

The Not-Its - Washington, DC single cover

The Not-Its - Washington, DC single cover

Sure, some of you may be thinking about Valentine's Day, but the more politically minded among us have already moved on to my favorite holiday in February: Presidents' Day.

It celebrates Presidents Washington and Lincoln, and I guess every president, and besides the 3-day weekend it gives many workers, it's also an opportunity to think about the nation's political process, leaders, and the people's role in self-governance.

The Not-Its! brand new album Are You Listening? is released this Friday, February 19th, and their latest single is titled "Washington, DC."  And while it starts out as a travelogue, it segues into about as nuanced a discussion of the political process as you'd expect from a pop-punk song targeted at 6-year-olds.  Are you listening?  Well, I'm making it as easy as I can -- for a limited time you can not only stream but also download the track below.

(Art by Not-Its! drummer Michael Welke)

The Not-Its - "Washington, DC" [Soundcloud]