Interview: Jack Forman (Recess Monkey / Kids Place Live)

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Jack Forman is a very funny guy right.​

He's also a very busy guy.  He already spent a lot of time as the resident bassist and chief jokester of Seattle trio Recess Monkey.​  But earlier this year he started a second gig, as the evening/late afternoon (depending on your time zone) host of "Live from the Monkey House" on Sirius-XM's Kids Place Live channel in the wake of Robbie Schaefer's decision to leave his show to focus on his OneVoice charity.

In spite of that busy schedule, Forman responded to questions via e-mail in less than a day, which leads me to believe the man is a robot.  A funny, funny robot.  Read on for Forman's (non-)drive time memories, similarities between being a DJ and a live performer, and a sneak peek into Recess Monkey's forthcoming Deep Sea Diver​ and Desert Island Disc albums.

Zooglobble: What are your memories of listening to the radio growing up?  Did you have any favorite radio stations?

Jack Forman: I remember, while growing up in Bloomington, Indiana, listening to 97 WBWB all of the time - it’s where I first heard Hall and Oates and god knows how many other great '80s bands. They had that awesome sung call sign between songs, “Niiinety Sevvvven, Double U Beeee!!!!” Later on, I listened to Kent and Allen on 97.3 KPLZ here in Seattle, and loved those guys! My school bus driver would play them in the morning on the way to school, and we’d all sing along with whatever Poison song was playing that day. Their voices seemed so big, and remember this was way pre-internet, so there was no way to even know what they looked like! Lately, I’m a pretty nonstop NPR listener. I still go to the NPR website and trip myself out by matching names to faces and think “no WAY is that Steve Inskeep! He doesn’t look like THAT!” I wonder what kids think I look like!

How did your new gig hosting a show on Sirius-XM's Kids Place Live ("Live from the Monkey House") come about?

Recess Monkey had guest hosted several weekend shows on Kids Place Live over the last few years, and it just became clearer and clearer that we gelled with the energy that Mindy [Thomas], Kenny [Curtis] and Robbie [Schaefer] had cultivated there. Hearing Mindy’s voicemail message after one of the shows, snorting about a bit that we did about a cow licking a squirrel behind the ear and also just getting a sense of the overall vibe at the DC studios made it seem like a really great fit for us. Over time, I took over most of the radio duties as we got busier as a band. Mindy and I were talking about it for maybe as long as a year.

The bittersweet part about how all of it worked out is that the position that I took was Robbie’s - I’m just bummed that I won’t get the chance to collaborate with him the way that I’m getting to work with everyone else at SiriusXM. It really is true that, despite being a huge, international brand, the small team that runs Kids Place Live are some of the scrappiest, least-corporate people out there - Kenny and Mindy run their shows very much the way that we try run our band, with the “kids are smart... and FUNNY” attitude front and center. I’ve already learned a lot.

You had recorded some material for Sirius-XM ("The Tuneiversity") -- how does doing a live show differ?

The TUNEiversity was conceived as a music education show, and that’s really where the rubber hit the road. Each episode was themed around a particular instrument or genre of music, and I got to interview some of the brightest lights in the kindie world who were connected with them (Sugar Free Allstars kicked off the first episode, FUNK 101). Our hope was that the shows would help open kids’ ears up to the eclectic stuff that’s played on KPL. Tons of Hip Hop or Bluegrass songs are in heavy rotation, but kids may not have thought about what makes those songs and styles so unique. By concentrating them all in a power-hour, with experts talking about it, the inspirational non-kindie artists who helped define the genre or perform the instrument, and then current kids’ songs peppered in, I think it was a really unique hour in the KPL week. Totally planned, much like a very carefully-conceived unit in a lesson plan. I hope to at some point make more episodes!

Doing a live radio show is much more akin to what I do in Recess Monkey - so much of the content of the show is guided by the kids who call in, or a daily theme that may not come together until minutes before we go live. Unlike a live music set that my band might play, my amazing producer Courtney and I get to regroup every five minutes and talk about what’s coming up next, how to tweak the content or the format - but once a segment starts and especially once kids are on the line, who KNOWS where it’ll go? I love that feeling!

Not every segment works, but there are these amazing moments where there’s a kid caller who says something really surprising, and I just love following their lead. I wish you could see me celebrating silently with my hands when I’m realizing that a particular kid on the phone has “the goods!” Every show, there are a few calls that could probably last the full three hours. Anyone who knows me as a teacher knows that I stick to the script for about two seconds before moving on to something else. The school where I learned how to be a teacher, UCDS in Seattle, is very much centered around individualizing to each kid- and I love that I get to do that on air. The day’s theme casts a wide net, but each call is a chance to connect with kids on a very individualized level.

What's been the most pleasant surprise about your DJ experience thus far?  What's been more work than you expected?

Though this is my first radio job, I’m finding that 13 years in the classroom has really prepared me for the kinds of conversations I get to have with kids. That’s really the job, after all - sure, it’s playing music and getting to advocate for artists that I really believe in and love. But when it all comes down to it, the job is about making real, albeit quick, connections with kids, and honoring them every step of the way. They’re hysterical to talk to, especially knowing that thousands of other people are listening in to our conversations about the hazards of lactose intolerance. The skills of how to ask an open-ended question and how to follow a kid’s lead have proven invaluable so far.

Does playing live music and playing music live require the same set of skills, audience-wise, or are you using different parts of your brain when you're on air versus on stage?

I was nervous about starting my show on KPL because I can’t see the people listening. That might seem like a no-brainer, duh... but it was a big perceived obstacle for me. So much of how I read and communicate with a live crowd is by noticing what they’re doing physically, and the chance to supplement the noise I’m making with eye contact, smiles, shrugs, and all that. Just like playing a Recess Monkey show where no one’s paying attention, I think I’d go crazy if I had to do this show without kid-contact. I’m an extrovert in general, but also thrive in contact with kids- it’s what got me into teaching to begin with, and what made Recess Monkey such an immediate joy. Luckily, the calls come in fast and furious and we usually can’t keep up with the kids who want to connect. How lucky to get to kick off a radio show and already have tons of dedicated listeners!

In a live band show, we know instantly whether what we’re doing is working, but on Live From the Monkey House there’s always a moment after saying something where I wonder “is that going to work? Are the phone lines going to light up?” There’s a great early Saturday Night Live episode where Buck Henry is doing a radio call-in show and no one’s calling in, so he has to get more and more edgy with his topic until he starts saying “KILLING PUPPIES! Sounds good to me- how ‘bout you?” and still the phones don’t ring. Luckily, it hasn’t come to that!

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Speaking of Recess Monkey, you have 2 albums with Recess Monkey coming out this year -- Deep Sea Diver and, later on, Desert Island Disc.  Those sound like a double concept album, with just a reaaaaaally big gap between playing the first and second album.  Can you tell me a little bit more about what to expect?  Maybe a giant inflatable Mayor Monkey floating outside the concert venue for the live shows?

You hit the nail on the head! The records are very much linked, even by the time between them. The first record, Deep Sea Diver, was conceived to be the “Recess Monkeyest Recess Monkey Album Ever!” Super goofy, high energy songs with a lot of synth, funk and everything in between. After the woodier, more eclectic sound of In Tents, we really wanted to come charging out of the gate with a really electric collection of songs. They’re all set in a submarine that explores the depths of the ocean and finds crazy things before ultimately getting shipwrecked at the end of the album with the song “Stranded.”

Knowing our basic timeline for release, we decided to open the curtain on disc two by imagining what a record would sound like recorded on an island that we’d lived on for 4 months (the amount of time between releases).  Desert Island Disc is a much woodier, acoustic album with smaller songs- but it also features the orchestrations of Jherek Bischoff on several songs to add texture. It’s a really unique album for us! Getting the “Recess Monkeyest” album out in the open freed us up to do something truly experimental for us... I honestly can’t say which one I like better!

You and Drew had played with [drummer] Daron [Henry] for a long time -- what was it like for the two of you to adjust to playing with Korum [Bischoff] full time?

Korum Bischoff, our amazing drummer, subbed for Daron a couple of summers ago and he was astonishingly prepared. Drew and I went over to his house to rehearse through a quick 8-song set that we were playing a few days later, and we had assumed we’d be there for a few hours working through the songs until Korum felt comfortable... Which tuned out to be a seriously flawed assumption! Korum had done his homework. He knew the songs inside and out- every time we finished a song, Drew and I would look at each other as if to say “who IS this guy!?” Little did we know that a few short months later, he’d be jumping at the chance to join the band. How lucky were we!? It’s been a total joy- and hard to believe that we’ve only played 20 shows with him so far. (I should amend that to say 20 shows AND 2 albums!) I don’t know how we got so lucky - to find a guy so in-tune with kids and our band’s energy, who’s also a teacher, who’s as talented as he is. It’s been a real honor to have him!

HOW IN THE WORLD DO YOU FIND TIME TO DO ALL THIS STUFF???!!?

Coffee.

No, seriously.  How do you do it?  (Or, alternately, how do you decide what great ideas you follow up on and which ones you let drift away like dandelion seeds?)

I’m really a “systems guy,” which is the only way that I can keep from getting stressed out. I think stress is an enormous time suck, and it runs me down, so I’ve just decided not to feel it! Our band is really just a series of systems - from the workflow of how to make an album, to how to make a video, how to go on a tour, etc. I work really hard to build working systems from the ground up, and maintain them to make sure everything’s up to snuff, everyone’s happy and that we’re always growing. The beauty of that kind of thinking is if the system’s working, it frees you up to be creative and in the moment. We never get stressed as a band. Nothing ruins a record like walking into the session and freaking out that you’re burning through money and time and it’s going to be awful...  Nothing ruins a gig like not having the extension cord you need, or not budgeting enough time for traffic. If the system’s in place and is working, you get to just sit back and enjoy it!

The radio show feels like having a band gig four days a week, and it’s a very similar balance of systems and creativity - I set aside daily prep time before each show, and finish just as Mindy and I do our crosstalk 15 minutes before I start. I don’t purport to be a man of Steve Jobs’ stature in the slightest, but I really identify with his concept of the “Reality Distortion Field.” There really does seem to be something to the fact where when you say “it’ll take an hour” and you believe it, it will - even if everyone tells you it’ll take three.

I see a distinction between urgency and stress, and I think you start learning from experience what needs to be done urgently in advance and what you can figure out in the moment. For me, the creativity is always the last thing that I think about, but it always seems to be there when I need it. Preparing for creative moments is, in itself, an act of creativity, but I find that I’m at my creative best when I have nothing else on my mind. Step into the shower, turn on the water, and I just get this amazing cascade of ideas - I try to organize the rest of my life like that. These little pockets where nothing else is going on, everything’s still, and I just get to be in the moment. I’m supremely lucky to have an increasing number of places like that on stage, in the studio and now on the air!

At the same time, I seem to have a pretty good internal-commitment-meter, and always can feel when my plate is emptying up. Now that Deep Sea Diver is off to press, my mind is starting to open up to videos and the second album- it just sort of happens without thinking too much about it. I’ve been tempted to call myself a workaholic in the past, but a lot of what I do doesn’t feel like work- is "playaholic" a word? I’m that.

Band photo credit: Kevin Fry

Interview: Bill Harley & Keith Munslow

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Are they musicians who tell stories or story-tellers who play music?  Whichever the case, Bill Harley and Keith Munslow are of my favorites.  Inspired by a Sirius-XM Kids Place Live contest which challenged them to write a song with the title "It's Not Fair To Me," the duo recorded a whole album of songs (titled It's Not Fair To Me​) filled with rivalries and humor, sibling and otherwise.

​I called them up in New York last week to talk about the new album just before they were heading off on a road trip down the Eastern Seaboard to play a handful of shows.  After some good-natured ribbing as they figured out the mechanics of the 3 of us talking (Harley suggested that Munslow go to another room so they could both conference in on their individual phones, then joked, "who wants to hear two of him [Munslow]?  That's too much"), we got down to talking about their own sibling histories, the process of recording the new album, and finding time to make music even as you're about to become a parent for the first time.

Zooglobble: What are your first musical memories?

Bill Harley (BH): My dad was a classical and jazz musician, so it was listening to him.  I played music.  My mom wanted to make sure I had lessons -- I thought I was playing music until they gave me lessons.

Keith Munslow (KM): I remember the piano.  My 3 older sisters took lessons, so I remember them playing showtunes, pop music of the time.  My grandmother would come over and play.  I didn't take lessons on the piano at all -- I wanted to play drums, which is ironic since I primarily play piano now.​

Did you get along with your siblings?

KM: I got along with my sisters.  I was the youngest -- my sisters are 6, 11, and 12 years older.  My rivalry was with my brother.

BH: I was in the middle -- 3 boys within four, five years of each other.  We were squabbling constantly.  My older brother is a mild, gentle soul; I had more of a rivalry with my younger brother.  But, you know, I was on a plane recently, and I could some siblings fighting with each other ahead of me, and they were across the aisle from each other​.

KM: Yeah, brothers definitely fight more.​

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Are the songs on It's Not Fair To Me​ based on your own families or observations of others?

KM: Both.  If it wasn't your family who was fighting, it was your friends who had families.  The culture of squabbling has not evolved at all​.

BH: Families are the basis of how people begin to relate to one another.  There is an endless amount of material, but it all has the same basic theme.  The subtext, of course, is that squabbling doesn't work, but people laugh because they recognize themselves in the stories.​

KM: It feels real comfortable.​

BH: In some ways, [the album] comes out of us performing on stage.  There is a storyline out ​of having 2 people on stage.  At the beginning of us performing on stage, there was a lot of Keith trying to disrupt me.

KM: There were some shows where Bill had some broken fingers as a result of a basketball injury, and I had to play more of the [backing] music, and it was too tempting for me not to do something with that.​

BH: In clowning, there's the theory of the high status/low status clown.  "High status" is someone like John Cleese.  We used that some.​

You recorded some (most?) of the album separately -- how did you get the interplay between the two of you to work?

KM: Actually, we did a good amount of the record in the same room.​

BH: We shared some tracks via Dropbox -- Keith was the engineer for the albm.​

KM: We did a lot of the arguments more than once.  In the process, those arguments may have gotten better, tighter.​

BH: In some ways, it would have been nice to have a separate producer to focus more on that.​

KM: But can I just say that a huge part of the fun of making this album was that we had to play everything.​

BH: We actually had to practice...​

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It sounds like you enjoyed making the album.

BH: The crafting of a song is work​.  You find yourself beating your head against the wall a lot.  Sometimes Keith would bring a couplet and we'd just work it.

One of the best parts was being in our recording studio.  If you're paying, you might feel guilty about it, but in this case, we had no deadlines.​

KM: Sometimes in the studio you're basic decisions on the fact you're paying $100 per hour.  There was one track for the new album where, when we both listened to it a week later, ​we both said, no, that's not working.  The playfulness is more easily accessed.

What's next -- will you be playing more shows together?

BH: We don't have a whole lot scheduled right now.  This week we're going down to record a show for Kids Place Live, play just outside DC, then some shows here in New York.​

KM: We're trying to schedule more stuff.​

BH: I'm excited that my son Dylan's going to play drums for us on some shows.​

Oh, yes, he just finished up his Kickstarter pitch.​

BH: He's very excited about that.​

OK - final question. You both have lots of different things going on at any particular time. How do you keep it all straight?

BH: Keith?​

KM: [laughs]​

BH: He's about to have a kid.​

Congratulations!

KM: Thanks.  My wife's due in a couple weeks.  You have to have somebody keeping things straight for you.  You have a balance of jobs that pay and others you do for fun.​

BH: Anytime you do one thing, something else suffers.  I work in crisis mode.  For example, there's this book deadline that just spring upon me.​

Being an artist is a hustle -- there are many things in the air at any given point.​

KM: I am surprised at the things that catch on, that gets an audience.​

Photo credits: Ears - Erin K. Smithers; Ice Cream - Pam Murray

Interview: Billy Kelly

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Billy Kelly often signs his e-mails and newsletters, "Billy Kelly, Actual Person."  I think it's just a jibe at the tendency for impersonal and robotic e-mails, but if the robots' e-mails and newsletters were as amusing and perceptive as Kelly's, then I for one would welcome our new robot overlords.

Kelly's fourth album for kids, AGAIN!!!, is a deft blend of the sincere and absurd ("sinburd?" "abscere?"), a great kindie treat.  Kelly recently responded to some questions via e-mail.  Read on for his views on when something is too over the top, the purpose of cover songs, and the relative importance of kids music to wrapping the George Washington bridge in cellophane.

Also: you can stream an unreleased track from Kelly below.  One with a ROBOT MIX.  (Maybe I shouldn't actually believe him when Kelly says he's an actual person, hm?)

Zooglobble: What are your earliest musical memories?

Billy Kelly: I remember taking a wicked sax solo in the delivery room a few minutes after I was born, but for the life of me I cannot remember what song we were playing. Great groove; that much I recall!

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Exactly how many different musical projects are you a part of?

It's hard to say exactly, but it's certainly at least 3 musical projects, and perhaps as many as 3.25. In addition to recording and performing for kids & families with "Billy Kelly & The Blahblahblahs", I play banjo and sing in an alt-country band called "Earl Pickens & Family". I also play guitar and sing in a roots-rock/Americana band called The Sweetbriars. I have reason to believe my left leg is in an all-leg band called "LëG" but as yet I cannot prove this. Anyway, that's where the .25 I alluded to comes from.

What made you decide to write (and record) music for families?

My brain.

When you're writing songs for families, how do you balance your sense of humor and earnestness in choosing what to record?  Do you ever write a song and think, "that's way too ironic [or earnest] for my audience?"

This is a constant debate for me. I like the spot I claimed for myself in the kindie universe with my first album Thank You For Joining The Happy Club — as kind of an absurdist musical Seinfeld for kids. The "Seinfeld for kids" thing was mentioned in one of the first reviews that came in for Happy Club, but I had already been alluding to Seinfeld while we were recording. I kept telling people in the studio that my album was going to be "Jerry Seinfeld, not Jerry Lewis." So I was glad to see that my intention came across to others that way when the reviews came in.

The drawback to the whole "I am completely absurd and I have no sincere sentiment to impart" thing, as I found out, is that unsuspecting audiences don't know what to make of you. People were bringing their kids out to hear a nice family show, but they often ended up scratching their heads wondering what was going on. Happy Club had some moments of sincerity on it, but I really started running with the absurdist football in my live shows. ("Absurdist Football" is a great name for a band btw.) 

I went in 100% on the absurd vibe for my second disc, but ultimately felt that it wasn't entirely me when I played the songs live. I had cut the sentimental stuff from the live set entirely I was performing AT people more than I was performing FOR them. It was an interesting experiment, but not personally rewarding — 10-minute-long live versions of "The Ballad of Johnny Box" notwithstanding.

My third album The Family Garden swung heavily towards sincerity, and since then I've been more comfortable allowing that side of me to show through in my songs. The new disc is the first one I've done where I feel that sincerity and absurdism are given their due in parts more or less proportionate to my personality. I enjoy relaying the odd thoughts that occur to me in song, but I really do want to connect with the kids & parents on a personal level.

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Have you ever recorded something and thought, "no, that's too over the top, even for me?" -- after all you wrote a rockin' song in honor of bonsai, an ode to butter, and an epic song in honor of a box, so that bar, if it exists, seems somewhat high.

Often it goes the other way, where I decide a song isn't weird enough. I only recall rejecting a song for being TOO weird one time. There was a song I recorded for AGAIN!!! called "Might it Be Love?", but it took some strange turns in the studio that rendered it unusable. We recorded the backing tracks in a key that was too high for me to sing in my normal voice so I tried singing it an octave lower. My voice ended up sounding like the robot from "Lost In Space" so we started adding these totally incongruous outer space sounds to the track. Laser beams, explosions, "DESTROY THE HUMAN!" voiceovers and stuff like that. It made sense to me because I was watching the music video in my head — space commander and his brilliant female assistant, who is secretly in love with him, explore a hostile alien robot world — but I realized to people who lacked access to the TV screen in my brain it was just total weirdness. I ended up dropping the track from the album because it was too over the top, as you said.

Here's "Might It Be Love" — perfectly preserved at the exact moment when I abandoned it...

The falsetto voice was going to be sung by a female vocalist. There was also a wedding-march theme at the end, which you can sort of hear on the guitar in this mix. I had a narrated introduction planned — something along the lines of "When we last joined our heroes, Captain Strong-Good and his brilliant copilot, Lieutenant Dr. Smartz, they had safely landed on planet XPL-MNOJ-7. But DANGER loomed outside their spacecraft as they prepared to explore the hostile, alien world..." and so on. They escape on their spaceship at the end. Too much, even for me. Also: Why?

To be fair, while all of this was going on, my "Ode to Butter" song was called "Theme from Butter! The Musical" and I was considering recording it with the local high school musical theater department. So there was a lot of "idea down-sizing" going on at that point.

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What's your criteria for picking cover songs ("Don't Worry 'Bout the Government," "Mr. Blue Sky")?  What song would you have given your right (or left) arm to have written?

I like well known "grown up" songs that blend in perfectly on a children's album. Not the obvious ones like "Yellow Submarine" or "Octopus's Garden" but the songs that people don't realize are kids music in disguise. "Our House" by Madness, "Rock Lobster" by B52's, "Mr. Blue Sky" by ELO etc. I enjoy the shift in perception that takes place when you present these songs to an audience of kids and adults. Adults hear this song that they know so well, and suddenly find it cast in a different light while the kids, who have probably never even heard the song before, are accepting it at face value... He DOES see the clouds that move across the sky! He DOES see the wind that moves the clouds away! Of course he does.

In turn, I like how placing these songs in a new context alongside my original songs challenges the listener to think of what I do as more than generic "kids music." If that Talking Heads song blends in well, then all the other songs benefit by association. 

Like most musical artists, I find cover songs useful but I have a strict rule about only playing covers that are very well known. I don't do obscure B-sides or unreleased tracks. The cover songs are there to re-capture people's attention and to prop up my own songs by showing them hanging out in good company. Plus I like to put my own spin on cover songs — changing them in a way that makes them mine.

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Are you an artist who also makes music, a musician who also makes art?  Or just a Renaissance man generally?

"Renaissance Man" is too often substituted for "jack of all trades, master of none", but in this case the substitution is apropos. Life is short and I want to try as many different things as I can, so "Jack of all trades etc." is fine with me. I'm always turning my attention to some new project but this, and coffee, is what keeps me going. This is why I have a manager — I need someone to remind me of things I've started in earnest that deserve to be completed. Otherwise I'd be on a new project every week.

As to the whole artist/musician thing, I went to art school (Cooper Union, NYC) and I thought of myself as a visual artist for the first 25 years or so of my life. My 'visual arts' brain was rewired to serve as a musical brain at some point, but I still consider what I do to be Art, capital A. I believe that if you create something with the goal of making the world a better or even simply a more interesting place then it qualifies as Art. I'm proud to be creating art for family-consumption and I think it's as valid and important as painting a portrait or choreographing a ballet or wrapping the George Washington bridge in cellophane.

What's next for Billy Kelly, Actual Person?

I have a bunch of music videos I want to make and I've been writing a collection of songs about trees for an album to be called, you guessed it, Trees. "Bonsai" (from my new CD) was yanked from Trees because I just couldn't wait to get that particular song out into the world. My plan is to keep writing the Trees album, rehearse the heck out of it with my band and maybe head up to Dean Jones' "No Parking Studio" for a few days and record it there.

Lots of shows on the road are being planned as well. Really the best part of the job — visiting new places, seeing new sights, meeting new people and trying to make them smile, dance and laugh.

I also have plans to type a period at the end of this sentence and send these interview answers to you.

Photo credit: BK with guitar, Johnny Box photos by Amy Hsu Lin.

Interview: Aaron Nigel Smith

Aaron Nigel Smith features a lot of guest stars on his album Welcome to the Village -- Dan Zanes, Laurie Berkner, Secret Agent 23 Skidoo, Lucky Diaz -- but the guest artists featured most prominently are the kids of his One World Chorus, a multi-national choral group.

Smith chatted with us earlier this month about his experiences growing up at a choral boarding school, his long route back to kids' choral groups, and the benefits of singing in groups, not to mention his future plans (hint: Bob Marley has something to do with it.)

Zooglobble:What was your first musical memory?

Aaron Nigel Smith: I think it was my elementary school music class with Mrs. Gibson.  We played the xylophones; she was using the Orff/Kodaly method.  I really enjoyed that above and beyond the rest of school.  It opened me up.

And at age 11, you went to study music away from home?

Yes, at the American Boychoir School.  I was at Camp Albermarle, a summer camp, and while there they picked a few kids to audition.  I passed the audition, and soon I was at the school.

It was an incredibly life-changing experience.  From day one, people knew that you wanted to be a musician.  There was choir practice several hours a day on top of class.  We toured every state, we went to Europe, we sang with people like Jessye Norman -- it was incredibly high-quality.

What did you want to do as a musician?

I wanted to be a singer, specifically a classical singer doing light opera, oratorio, choral music, that was my main thought, anyway.

And so what was the path from that career to children's musician?

I went to Interlochen, the music camp, which is where I met my wife.  I attended the Manhattan School of Music and performed with the Albert McNeil Choral Singers.  I toured internationally, I was touring rigorously.  But with with kids, it was a little rough -- literally the day after the birth of our first son Zion, I had to fly to Japan for two weeks.  I did it, because that's what I had to do to earn money for our family, but it was heart-wrenching.

The first hour I spent teaching music was another life-defining moment for me.  I went into the class and immediately threw out the plan I had -- I spent time with the kids with honesty and integrity, I improvised.

That was ten or eleven years ago now.  It's great to see families engaged together.

What was the inspiration for the One World Children's Chorus?

That's really coming full circle for me.  I had been exploring ideas for working with a non-profit.  And I'd been touring and working with my children's music program FUNdamentals.

The choir started in California as the Palisades Choir, but if you're familiar with that area, you know that there's not much need for outreach in that area.  When we decided to move from Los Angeles to Oregon, we expanded that vision to Oregon, then to New York City with some kids I'd been working with there for a few years, and then to Nairobi, Kenya.

We started working with the Cura Orphanage there.  We were able to send proceeds to the orphanage.  And I wanted to have these groups of children singing together.

Do you have particular memories from the sessions?

With Los Angeles, it's the memory of the inception of the recording in my home studio, with my sons, goofing around.  In New York, it was the opportunity to collaborate with Antonio Dangerfield, who was my high school roommate and now works with the Achievement First Academy.

As for Kenya, I'd never been there before.  I'd see the state the kids were existing in, then see them sing with such joy -- they had joy in their eyes as they sang together, even though they had no shoes and were singing in a mud hut.

And in Portland, I finally feel at home.  There's been such openness and kindness -- help with with recording, appearances on TV, and parents jumping with enthusiasm.  We had auditions yesterday and the day before and had 50 kids.

What do you see as the benefits of choral singing for kids?

Well, the voice is a pure instrument, it's inside us.  Beyond that, we all come out of preschool together, but by the time you hit fourth or fifth grade people can be tool cool for someone.  Choir has you standing next to someone, blending your voices together.  Those values of cooperation are useful.  Not even 20% of these kids will become musicians, but they'll learn you can accomplish a lot if you sing together.

There aren't many opportunities to have kids sing together, particularly outside of a church setting -- what advice do you have for getting a group together?

Well, to start off with, just sing with your kids -- it's OK!  We spend so much time telling then not to sing, right?  It doesn't have to be from a hymnal, of course -- sing Bob Marley, the Beatles, general sing-along.

Once kids start singing, they want to sing together, to write music.  And there are so many audiences if you want to perform in front of audiences -- schools, nursing homes.

Singing is coming back into vogue now with Glee and American Idol and the rest (not that I'd push Idol and those shows).  That shows cool high school singing.

What's next for you?

I'm excited about the next season with One World.  We've picked out our next location -- in February we're going to Jamaica.  We're going to be working at Bob Marley's elementary school.  There's also a possibility of working in Haiti in 2013.  That's a little more unstable, and we're trying to find the right partner.

Our next CD is going to be a holiday CD, and we're also doing a holiday concert.

Finally, we're going to put on a children's music festival here in Lake Oswego in the Portland area -- we have a year to pull it off.

Photo credits: Dove Rudman (ANS), Melissa Heinonin (OWC Portland), Michael Kilmurray (Cura school)

 

Interview: Greg Attonito & Shanti Wintergate (Play Date)

It was only last year that one-time Skankin' Pickle member Mike Park released his foray into kids music, the album SMILE.
And now he's got a whole kids music label, Fun Fun Records.  One of the two debut releases from the label is Imagination from the band Play Date.  The band consists of husband-and-wife team Greg Attonito (of punk band The Bouncing Souls) and Shanti Wintergate.  They dipped their toes in creating art for kids with the publication some years back of the book I Went for a Walk.  They took some time last month from their summer touring schedule to talk about laying down under pianos, positive energy, and Imagination's inspiration.
Zooglobble: What are your first musical memories?
 
Greg Attonito: Listening to my Mom playing piano at our house. I would lay down on the floor under the piano keyboard at my Mom's feet and feel the sounds of the piano. I really loved that... and sometimes singing along when my Grandmother would play piano and sing at her house. 

Shanti Wintergate: I've been surrounded by music since I was in the womb.  My musician parents have always been performing and playing music throughout my life, so it's hard to pinpoint a specific moment...it was just always there.  Our whole family was always singing and harmonizing together as long as I can remember.  My brother and I used to lay down by the side of our pool and sing the same note into the water. We would watch the water move and listen to the reverberations and echoes of our voices. We would sometimes do this for hours. 
 
When did you decide you wanted to be a professional musician?
 
I thought it might be possible when I was in high school learning our favorite punk rock songs with friends.  We played shows in our hometown and talked about rock 'n' roll dreams.  Miraculously we made them come true.  It has been an amazing adventure. I have learned so much through the experience of making music with those same high school friends over the course of 23 years.  I'm excited to be bringing all I've learned from being in a rock band into making music for kids.
 
The idea first occurred to me, when I started learning how to play guitar to accompany lyrics and melodies I had always written.  There was a freedom in being a self-contained musical creator.  I was asked to perform one of my songs in a local summer music festival, which I did and I've been hooked ever since.
 
When did you first start thinking about recording an album of family music?  Was it around the time of publication of I Went For a Walk or was it later than that?
 
We had talked about it a bit before that. I think the first time might have been when we played for our nephew's 2nd grade class.. That was the initial spark. We continued talking about it during and after the "I Went For A Walk" tours but we were so busy with pre-existing projects there wasn't time for it. 
 

What was your guiding philosophy in writing the songs for the album?

Our main focus was creating music that parents would enjoy as much as the kids and to infuse some positivity and fun into the world.  We were also really careful about the energy we put into the entire creative process.  We wanted it to feel effortless, and naturally uplifting so we committed to only working on this project when we were in the right frame of mind.  We found that usually just working on this music in and of itself put us in a great mood so it wasn't really a problem.  I know this might sound silly but, our hope is that anyone listening to the record will feel like they had a blast hanging out with us singing songs and getting silly for forty-five minutes or so..... and maybe even feel a little more loved and cared about through the experience.  :)

What has surprised you (positively or negatively) as you wrote/recorded/started to promote and tour the album?
 
I was surprised at how much fun we had recording the record.  I knew it would be fun but it was way more fun than I expected!

I can't think of anything negative, but there have been lots of positives.  I also had a feeling we were going to have fun creating this music, but I hadn't expected the fun to be so contagious.   It seems everyone who has been around or part of the recording process has been influenced positively by the experience.... it's just too fun to resist!  Writing and recording this record, I allowed myself to explore musical boundaries that I didn't even know I had.  We also played all the instruments on this record except drums, so there has been a great satisfaction in that.
 
What's your impression of other music being recorded for kids -- any favorites, or have you tended to stay away?  Has that impression changed at all over time or as you've been recording/finishing the album?

I have just recently had my ears open to the world of kids music so I don't know many of the artists.  I like They Might Be Giants.  Their kids music is really good.  Our friend Kepi's new kids record is great, too. It's called Kepi For Kids and it will also be coming out on Fun Fun Records.

In the past I think it was a little more challenging to find music for kids that wasn't too "dumbed down" and obviously "children's music"... but it seems like today it's becoming easier to find good music for kids. MORE musicians are putting MORE effort into making quality music for kids.  It's so important!!  The music that kids are exposed to early on influence their musical tastes as they grow and there's plenty of evidence of music influencing emotional and mental states.  The importance of music in child development is finally gaining some well deserved ground.  Kids need a wholesome diet for their EARS as well as their BODIES!  

How much touring do you plan to do as Play Date? What have your experiences been playing for kids thus far as compared to playing in the Bouncing Souls or as a duo?

We just did a show last week in Montreal that was a blast! It was the first year the PouzzaFest hosted a kids stage at their big rock festival.  They did a great job and a lot of families came out and had a great time. 

We may do some dates this fall in Southern California. We intend to submit for more festivals with kids stages for next year and we are exchanging ideas right now about setting up a package tour with all of the artists releasing kids music on Fun Fun Records... so that is what is in the works at the moment. 

I have really enjoyed the new experience of playing for the kids in a more family friendly environment. The shows are earlier in the day..HAHA! It's broadening my musical horizons and challenging me to be more free with music in writing and performing.
 
What's next for you (kid-wise or otherwise)?

The Bouncing Souls released a new record on June 12th so I will be on tour in the U.S. all summer supporting that.  Play Date's record is coming out on October 9th.  We are really looking forward to getting the new Play Date record out in the world and supporting its release.  It's going to be really fun to see how it impacts the world.
 
Photo credit: Mike McLaughlin

Interview: Ulises Bella (Ozomatli)

For more than 15 years, the Los Angeles-based band Ozomatli have been mixing musical styles from around the globe (LA is the globe writ small), moving people's feet while sometimes addressing some pretty serious topics.  Now, with their latest album OzoKidz, out this week on iTunes and out everywhere else late September, they're bringing their mashup of styles to some younger fans.  I talked last week with saxophonist and keyboardist Ulises ("Uli") Bella (sitting, center, with the uke) about OzoKidz's origins, the difference in structuring their live gigs, and the old Tower Records on Sunset Boulevard.  (And, for a limited time -- i.e., Monday -- pick up a free download of the song "Trees" from the new album at the widget at the bottom of the page.)

Zooglobble: What are your first musical memories?

Ulises Bella: I think... my dad was a classical violinist -- he didn't make it into the Paris Conservatory, but he loved classical music.  So Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Vivaldi, those artists.  But also my mom's poppy Mexican music and Spanish music, which my dad likes.  They encouraged setting up my own stereo system.

I remember my dad driving me to Tower Records to buy the new Blondie album.

The famous one with the actual tower?

Yeah, the one on Sunset.  It was quite a trek, about 40-50 minutes drive.  In fact, they had their annex with the classical music section right across the street, so I'd go into the main one and my dad would go to the annex and I'd meet him there afterwards.

You had done some kid-friendly things before this, songs for PBS and the Happy Feet Two videogame, but how did you fall into this album in particular?

There are some songs of ours that resonated with young kids.  "My kids love 'Chango,' gets so energetic in the car," fans would tell us.  We'd do outreach, and some songs just resonated with the kids.

Then Mario Calire, our drummer, just threw it out there -- "have you ever thought about a kids music album?"  Among Mexican Americans, there's this well-loved musician, Cri-Cri, who's this super-iconic Mexican children's artist.  We wanted to make that sort of album, specifically for kids, but for parents, too.

Did you have specific goals in mind when writing the songs for the album?

We did a lot of brainstorming -- should it be themed?  Like "animals" -- everybody writes a song about a different animal.  But in the end it ended up being an eclectic collection, lots of energy, always dacing.  Some of the songs are educational - "Trees," "Germs" -- and some celebratory.  We ended up being ourselves.

Did recording it have a different feel from recording an "adult" album?

Totally.  We try to focus on our audience, and tried to remember the energy of childhood.  Adults have to be intoxicated or really let their walls down.  We'd have kids in there with us with the percussion -- they brought a light energy to the room.  There were different subjects, too, more lighthearted as opposed to Ozomatli, which deals with more global issues, heavier subjects.  It really was like kids play.

What are the differences between playing live for adults and for kids?

Again, it's about presentation and the energy level.  A regular Ozomatli set is 90 minutes long and features a lot of solos.  The OzoKidz shows are a lot more concise, have a lot more energy.  We involve the kids in every song, as opposed to the adult shows.

Do you like playing 45 minutes as opposed to 90 minutes?

A little bit?  Sometimes I'm just getting warmed up and then I have to come offstage!? [Laughs.]

Are you willing to mix in kids tunes in your adult shows?

That's actually a hotly debated issue in the band.  We'll play it by ear.  We want to keep the energies separate.  But if one of those songs really penetrates on radio or with an audience, who knows?

What preconceptions about kids music music were changed? Any proven true?

One thing that surprised me was the group of artists that have done this.  Why don't more bands do it?  Might not fit their image, maybe.  We're always down for the kids, it's part of what we do.  We all had mentors growing up who said you can do it too and so we're bringing it to the next generation.  I always think it's cool.

Did anybody think it wasn't cool when word got around you were doing a kids album?

Not one negative response -- they all said, "That's awesome."

What's next for the band?

We're hooking up with producer Matt Wallace for the next straight-up Ozomatli album.  We're on the road every weekend, doing both adult and kid shows.  Touring Australia, too.  We're really excited to see how people digest the album.

Photo credits: Christian Lantry