Video: "I Eat Kids" (Barry Louis Polisar) - The Radioactive Chicken Heads
Nothing like a little Barry Louis Polisar to scrape the warm and fuzzy edges off kind and gentle kids music. This is a reasonably straightforward telling of Polisar's "I Eat Kids," as performed by the Radioactive Chicken Heads from the 2-CD tribute album We're Not Kidding!. Well, except for the actual eating of kids. Right?
The Radioactive Chicken Heads - "I Eat Kids" (Barry Louis Polisar cover) [YouTube]
The Barry Louis Polisar Tribute Album: Potentially Awesome
No, that's not the name -- it's my verdict.
I've known for awhile of the tribute album consisting of Barry Louis Polisar covers, produced by Polisar's son Evan Aaron Cohen of the Radioactive Chicken Heads. But now it's got a name -- We're Not Kidding -- and, more importantly for the purposes of this website, songs for your listening pleasure.
I use that phrase "listening pleasure" advisedly, because the songs I've spun thus far have been uniformly winning. I started out with the familiar names -- Key Wilde & Mr. Clarke, Elizabeth Street, Tor Hyams, Ham & Burger, The Boogers -- and all of those tunes worth the time. (Check out the electric guitar on Key Wilde and Mr. Clarke track.) And then I moved to the unfamliar, the top of the page. After 4 songs, some fabulous, none less than interesting, that's when I realized that this could be, well, potentially awesome.
A 2-CD set could be too much Barry Lou, but the combination of Polisar's songwriting with the varied musical approaches and high quality production (never Polisar's strength) make me very eager to hear the final product, set to be released this year.
Teenage Pregnancy and Kids Music
I have not spoken enough (OK, at all) of Barry Louis Polisar, who's been writing and performing songs for kids (and, really, just for kids) for 30 years now. Despite the occasional foray into songs about commercial zoning (republished here from a Washington Post article last year), his songs have been pinpointed at the interests of youth (typical title -- Polisar's classic "Underwear").
So now, as if the boundaries of kids' music haven't expanded enough comes news that the opening credits from the new movie Juno, about a teenager who becomes pregnant, will be run under a song from Polisar's 30-year-old album My Brother Thinks He's a Banana. That's right, "All I Want Is You" is Polisar's own work. (If you want to hear a sample, go here and listen to the sample from track #10 on Old Dogs, New Tricks at the top.)
A sweet song, really, unlike most of Polisar's work. (Which isn't to say the rest of his work is bad. But "sweet" is not an adjective often applied there...)