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.

Video: "The Adventure Song" - Ben Rudnick and Friends

Ben Rudnick - A Frog Named Sam: Musical for Children cover

Ben Rudnick - A Frog Named Sam: Musical for Children cover

Musicals are the new TV pilots, or so it seemed over the past couple years, as kids music stars no less bright than Laurie Berkner, Justin Roberts, Recess Monkey, and Lunch Money all had (and, I believe, are continuing to have) major roles in new musicals for young audience.

I don't think the trend is stopping, either, as Ben Rudnick is going where the lights are bright... ON BROADWAY!

OK, not really, but his newest album, A Frog Named Sam: A Musical for Children, is released next month, and as you might be able to gather from the album title, it's from a brand-new musical. For children.

Does this musical involve an adventure, a journey?  Judging by the album cover (an alien in a spaceship) and this first song, "The Adventure Song," I think that's a safe bet...

Ben Rudnick and Friends - "The Adventure Song" [YouTube]

Review: Rocksteady - Josh and the Jamtones

Josh and the Jamtones Rocksteady album cover

Josh and the Jamtones Rocksteady album cover

Kids music is generally not a field for the low-energy musician.  Maybe it's the coffee right before the 10 AM gig, maybe it's the bright morning sunlight, maybe it's the incredible bundles of energy that are your favorite 4- or 7-year-old, but whatever the reason, artists with calm approaches like Elizabeth Mitchell or Raffi stand out for their comparative rarity.

Still, in a field of high energy performers, Boston's Josh and the Jamtones stand out.  Live, they bring it on like few kids' musicians do, mixed with a lot of stage banter and interplay between leader Josh Shriber, drummer Patrick Hanlin, and the rest of the band.  On record, their music had captured some of the energy and some of the humor, but hadn't fully translated their live concert experience to the home listener.

Until now.

The band's new album Rocksteady takes that energy and humor, wraps it in a ska-pop package, and sends it out into the world, ready to sweep up everyone in its path and deposit them gently on the living room rug, worn out from forty minutes of dancing (with occasional comedic skit breaks).  This is an album, after all, whose first full song, "Race U," almost literally ends with the singers pantomiming that they're out of breath.  There are a dozen or so songs here, mostly revved up ska tracks, with very little purpose other than to move the feet and bodies of whoever can hear the music.  Sure, there's some call-and-response on the title track and some shouts-out to classic tracks like "Sloop John B" and Toots and the Maytals' "Monkeyman" (both of them featuring Jesse Wagner from the Aggrolites).  But really this is just a straight-ahead piece of entertainment, no learning necessary.  (Other songs of note: Secret Agent 23 Skidoo joining in on the AutoTune-d "I Love You" and the totally rocking "Tailfeather.")

The album will be most appropriate for kids ages 4 through 8.  You watch videos for a number of their songs at the band's YouTube channel.

Have I made it clear enough that Rocksteady is a party, through and through?  Because it is, enough so that your kids probably won't even need that lullaby album to fall asleep to after dancing like crazy.  Definitely recommended.

Note: I received a copy of this album for possible review.

Video: "Tailfeather" - Josh and the Jamtones

Josh and the Jamtones Rocksteady cover

Josh and the Jamtones Rocksteady cover

Anyone who's seen Josh and the Jamtones' live show knows they are ten-ton bundle of energy.  The Boston-based ska-punk-pop band's latest album, Rocksteady, is formally released August 21, but I can say that the album very much captures that live energy in the studio setting.

One of the most revved up songs from that album gets the honor of lead single and a brand-new video to go with it.  It's for "Tailfeather," and I feel like there should be a seizure warning before it because MAN, is there a lot going on.

But the song's a bunch of fun, and the video, which basically animates a bunch of clips of the band performing in concert, pretty much nails their live energy.  I think it's great.

Josh and the Jamtones - "Tailfeather" [YouTube]

Video: "Spring Day" - Karen K and the Jitterbugs

I know, I already featured the stream of "Spring Day" from Karen K and the Jitterbugs, but since the Boston area is in the low 50s today, it's clear that they need all the spring-affirming good vibes in the song and video.

But clearly, any time you take out your frustrations on a homemade reproduction of Olaf from Frozen, as one kid does in the video, it's time for winter to end.

Karen K and the Jitterbugs - "Spring Day" [YouTube]