Listen To This: "Holiday Hullabaloo" - Hullabaloo

Lots of good holiday music from good kids music artists coming down the pike this season, and here's one more from San Diego's Hullabaloo. It's called Holiday Hullabaloo, and in the spirit of giving, it's free. Gratis. Frei. Stream it below, or download away. It's got the familiar roots-folk Hullabaloo sound -- my favorite track is the Christmas rockabilly "Jolly Old St. Nicholas." <a href="http://holidayhullabaloo.bandcamp.com/album/holiday-hullabaloo">Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer by Hullabaloo</a>

Video: "Dinosaur in My Backyard" - Hullabaloo

San Diego's Hullabaloo have always done a good job making minimal, but effective, videos for their folk-pop songs. This video, for "Dinosaur in My Backyard" off their new album High Roller, owes a debt to the Toy Story movies, but that's not a bad debt to have, no? Hullabaloo - "Dinosuar in My Backyard" [YouTube]

Listen To This: "High Roller" - Hullabaloo (plus a shot at fame if not fortune)

San Diego-area band Hullabaloo has been particularly prolific over the past few years, releasing 3 albums in about 3 years, plus a DVD. Now they're prepping they're latest disk, High Roller, and they've posted the title track at their music page. It's an appealing 2-minute country/folk track with a hint of blues thrown in that includes the phrase "rolling on 3-point-5 inch wheels," which made me laugh. Besides the track itself, you also have the chance to have your wee one's face grace the new album cover. Go here for instructions on how to enter, but the gist of it is that you'll submit a picture of your kid to the band's Facebook page. Then I, along with Warren and Ryan Loyko (Rattle-N-Roll birth announcements), will each pick a semi-finalist face from all the entries, leading to an online vote to pick the winner. Entries are due May 15th. Will it be as iconic as Paul Simonon slamming his guitar on the London Calling cover? We shall see....

KidVid Tournament 2009: Caspar Babypants vs. Hullabaloo

Today is the final day of first round contests, turning our attention to the Pete Seeger Region of KidVid Tournament 2009. In this contest we have the top seed, Chris Ballew's Caspar Babypants project and the video "The Island Hop" from his debut Here I Am! disk matched up against "All of These Things" from Hullabaloo's Sing Along With Sam album. Feel free to leave your thoughts in the comments below, but the official results are based on the poll at the bottom of the page. One vote per person, please. Votes due by midnight tonight (Thursday) East Coast time. And, as always, play nice! Caspar Babypants - "The Island Hop" Hullabaloo - "All of These Things"

Hullabaloo-Tube

It's taken me a little while to mention this, but Southern California band Hullabaloo has been on a video-making (and posting) kick over the past 2-3 months. Most of the videos at their YouTube channel are for tracks off their first two CDs Sing Along With Sam and Hey, Everybody!, but Steve Denyes has also posted a video for the second-best ode to parental coffee ever written, "Sippy Cup," off their latest album Tall as a Tree. Hullabaloo - "Sippy Cup" As for my very favorite, you'll have to go back to their first CD...

Review: Hey, Everybody! - Hullabaloo

HeyEverybody.jpgOne of the advantages of having listened to and reviewed kids and family music for a decent period of time is that you get to see bands and artists grow over time. Take, for instance, the San Diego-based band Hullabaloo. Here's what I said about their first album for kids, Sing Along With Sam: "The downside of the album is that although band members Steve Denyes and Brendan Kremer are talented musicians, it's hard to generate a lot of musical variety with just two musicians, so there's not much to interest the listener on weaker tracks such as 'Mary Ann.'" I said other, nicer stuff, too, but I was definitely thought there was room for improvement. Enter their latest album, the recently-released Hey, Everybody!, which in addition to Denyes and Kremer features some guest musicians providing some backup in the way of bass, electric guitar, banjo, and dobro. All of a sudden, the two-person band sounds like, well, a band. (And a good one. I mean, they were good before, but it was just the two of 'em. It sounds, at points, miles better.) The songs haven't changed so much. You still have songs in a country-tinged folk vein, but a song like the leadoff title track, a country rocker, sounds more... complete. The band couldn't have pulled it off before just as a duo. (The original instrumental "Lucy MacLean" also shows off the band's skills.) Another fun song is "Blah, Blah, Blah," which so completely nails the experience of being a kid and not caring about what the adults are rambling on about that the adults are likely to have flashbacks and possibly feel a little guilty. Denyes, who wrote 8 of the 12 tracks here (the other four are traditional tunes), has a full, distinctive voice that I personally think works better on some songs than others. The two sea-related songs, the amusing original "Polite Pete" and the traditional "John Kanaka," are great fits; other songs, such as "La Bamba," are less so. But, as always, my vocal preferences may not match yours... The songs here are probably most appropriate for kids ages 3 through 7 again. You can hear samples of the 29-minute album at the band's Music page or at the album's CDBaby page. Also, I just want to say that the packaging is a textbook example of how to make inexpensive album packaging look very good. It's a fairly simple cardboard case with lyrics printed inside and the few credits on the back. It's possible to do something more expensive that's nicer, of course, but the band clearly took a little time and effort into making the packaging look good, and it shows. This album isn't perfect, but it's got enough good songs to make it worth further exploration. It's the sound of a band slowly finding their musical niche and using their strengths. I fully expect the next album to be even better, but for now Hey, Everybody! will do fine. Recommended.