Mr. Fred Rogers, Unknown Songwriter

Mister Rogers on set in red cardigan

There’s been lots of press coverage recently about one Fred Rogers, aka Mister Rogers, a name that makes people of a certain age (like, say, mine) immediately think about his classic American TV program Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood. This coverage is prompted primarily by the release this month of A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood, which stars Tom Hanks as Mister Rogers and focuses on Rogers’ friendship with a journalist assigned to write a profile on him. But it’s also true that interest in Rogers has only grown in the years since his death in 2003 and I don’t see it fading much even after the movie leaves theatres.

Even though Rogers is best known for his program for kids, much of the interest is driven by adults, and some of the most affecting material doesn’t necessarily lean on his program to make its emotional or psychological point. For example, Taffy Brodesser-Akner wrote a long, detailed profile of Hanks titled “This Tom Hanks Story Will Help You Feel Less Bad,” a headline that mimicked Rogers in its directness and truthfulness. (It did indeed!) In drawing parallels between Hanks and Rogers as adults and decent people, it doesn’t focus on Rogers’ interaction with kids.

For a look at Rogers’ life that focuses more on kids, give Carvell Wallace’s podcast Finding Fred a listen. It is a very affecting look at Rogers’ career and talks at a pleasingly broad set of people about Rogers’ impact on them, not only close co-workers and associates, but also kids, but those Rogers met, but also those Rogers only affected through the TV screen. Wallace is explicitly trying to figure out how Rogers’ lessons might be relevant today, not only to kids but to adults. (Really, go listen, it’s excellent.)

But I realized in listening to Finding Fred that I hadn’t fully appreciated how important music was to Rogers’ life. Lots of people may know he was a Presbyterian minister, but he wasn’t ordained until he was in his mid-thirties. He graduated with his Bachelor’s degree from Rollins College in Florida more than a decade before. His major? Music composition. (For a fuller exploration of Fred Rogers’ life as an artist, I highly recommend Jeanne Marie Laskas’ long New York Times Magazine article titled “The Mister Rogers No One Saw.”

Compared to Sesame Street, which started in 1969, just a year after Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, I don’t think Rogers’ music has had nearly the cultural impact of that from Sesame Street. There are probably a variety of reasons for that, including the broader musical palette of Street and the use in later years of modern pop and rock hits as the basis for kid-friendly and educational parodies. Instead, what Rogers offered on his program were songs with simple language, sung directly to children.

They weren’t necessarily simple musically, and Johnny Costa’s jazz piano and his trio provided an appropriately cool and calming underlay to Rogers’ singing. But they probably didn’t capture the public imagination in total the way the Street oeuvre did.

All of which is to say that Fred Rogers is a comparatively underused songwriter from my perspective. Are there tribute albums to Rogers using his music? Sure. There’s 2005’s Songs from the Neighborhood, featuring artists like Amy Grant, Donna Summer, and Ricky Scaggs. Just last month, another tribute album, Thank You, Mister Rogers, features similar artists such as Sandi Patty, Vanessa Williams, and Lee Greenwood. (Hats off to Jon Secada, who appears on both albums.) And there are a couple more jazz-inflected albums from individual artists. But Sesame Street or Schoolhouse Rock seem to have had a much bigger footprint in terms of having their songs covered by other artists.

And kids’ musicians? If there’s a cover of a Mister Rogers song on a kindie album somewhere, I’ve missed or it’s escaped my memory. The closest I could find was Lori Henriques’ “Free Ride Everyday” — not a Fred Rogers song, just one inspired by the man:

While of course the title of this post is tongue-in-cheek, it’s not totally tongue-in-cheek. Rogers’ lyrical directness is probably somewhat out of style (it’s not a lyrical style I have always preferred over the years), the emotional empathy of the songs would be a powerful message. (And I am always interested in more songs about emotions.)

Kindie artists, you know what to do.

Video: "Rattlesnake" - Red Yarn

The revival fervor of The Deep Woods, Red Yarn's fabulous debut album, was heard most prominently in its production, which featured a cast of dozens.

So it's not really surprising that there are roughly a dozen puppet animals that make an appearance in Red's (AKA Andy Furgeson's) brand-new video for "Rattlesnake."  Joined by an enthusiastic Furgeson stomping, clapping, and of course singing along, it's very much in the spirit of the rest of the album.  And if the cast of characters puts you in the mind of a TV show, well, the video itself is part of a 22-minute TV pilot or mini-movie which'll get its premiere in December in Portland, Oregon.

Red Yarn - "Rattlesnake" [YouTube]

Monday Morning Smile: "There's a Platypus Controlling Me" (from Phineas & Ferb)

The show Phineas & Ferb is the secret musical weapon of kids' TV.  Oh, sure, Yo Gabba Gabba! and The Wiggles (and others) are musically-oriented, but the Disney Channel show sneaks in musical bits that are as tuneful (and usually funnier) as anything airing on the youngster channels.  Creators Dan Povenmire and Jeff "Swampy" Marsh write in many different styles, composer Danny Jacob brings it all together production-wise, and the result is, well, something like this.

I've told you about my secret appreciation for all things platypus, right?

Dr. Doofenshmirtz - "There's a Platypus Controlling Me" (from Phineas & Ferb episode "Brain Drain") [YouTube]

Review: Lishy Lou and Lucky Too - Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band

It is fun to see artists who initially just dip their toes into the family music pond dive in as they get more comfortable in their new waters. 

To extend the metaphor a little bit, when it comes to family music, Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band have plunged in with scuba gear and a new houseboat.   Since releasing his debut EP Luckiest Adventure a little more than 3 years ago, Diaz has acquired a full-blown band, married dynamo Alisha Gaddis, and barely stopped to take a breath.

On their fifth and latest album, Lishy Lou and Lucky Too , the couple's energy is used to enliven the record's conceit, loosely structured around the "Lishy and Lucky Radio Show," which may soon be transitioning to a TV show.  The album features a cast of wacky characters (a time traveler, a traveling salesman, a nosy neighbor) united in their taste for bad puns.  The jokes told in the interstitial sketches may amuse your local kindergartner, but will likely generate groans in the adult set.

They sit somewhat uneasily here because they interrupt the true stars, the songs themselves.  Co-written by Diaz, Gaddis, and Michael Farkas, many of them are irrepressible pop hits.  "Thingamajig" is a top contender for the year's best kindie pop song, while "Pockets," about Farkas' character who only communicates via instrument, has a strutting feel.  (The theme song is pretty darn catchy, too.)  It's not solely uptempo -- "Goodnight My Love" is a tender lullaby with nifty guitar work from Diaz. 

The 35-minute album is most appropriate for kids ages 4 through 8.  On one level, the album is an introduction to an actual TV show Diaz and Gaddis hope to make featuring all the characters on the album, and I think that concept will work better there than it does here.  But on another level, with songs about Jackie Robinson and Amelia Earhart, along with the fabulous album closer "When I Grow Up," ("When I grow up / I won't close my ears / to things I may not want to hear"... "When I grow up / I'm gonna dream / farther than my eyes can see") the album is also a celebration of dreamers and doers, of taking chances like Diaz and Gaddis are doing.  On that level, the album succeeds fabulously.  Definitely recommended.

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

World Premiere: "Lishy Lou and Lucky Too" Theme Song

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It's been a very busy year for Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band.  Not only did they release the Spanish-language album Fantastico! earlier this year, they've got a second album, Lishy Lou and Lucky Too , set for release next week.

Oh, did I mention that the album is the aural, radio show analogue to a hoped-for Lishy Lou and Lucky Too TV show?

Like I said, very busy.

But although it's all coming out now, Alisha Gaddis -- AKA "Lishy Lou" -- says that she and Lucky "were quietly and crazily working on all this for over a year."

Although Gaddis that she does most of the funny writing in the family ("Lucky is always the head of songwriting and all things musical"), they had some help for the new album.  In addition to having Michael Farkas help Gaddis and Diaz out with songs for the album, writer Chris McGowan wrote the Laugh-In   bits for the album.  McGowan and write Rebecca Leib also wrote a lot of writing for their other project (the TV show).

LLLT Cast.jpg

As for the TV show, Gaddis says they "really want to expose kids to the classic live action television that we grew up with - I Love Lucy, Pee Wee's Playhouse, The Monkees - but with a modern twist."  (The fantastical characters in the picture above are all introduced on the Lishy Lou and Lucky Too website.)  One reason for the TV show, she says, is that "We want to entertain the kids in the Midwest or the far Pacific Northwest (and all those places in between) that we don't get to see face to face otherwise."

Asked whether it's easier or harder to write comedy for children, Gaddis says: 

I think it is just as difficult to write comedy for children as it is for adults.  You must always play to an audience's strengths, integrity and intelligence (at least that is what we believe).  Kids are clever sponges who deserve the best.  That is what we really try to give them.

So here, then, is the world premiere of the video for the Lishy Lou and Lucky Too TV show.

Video: "Thingamajig" - Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band

Everyone who's heard "Thingamajig" off Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band's upcoming Lishy Lou and Lucky Too!  disk out October 1 has gone gaga, nutso, flipperteejiberty over the song celebrating words real and just off the tip of our tongues.

There is now a brand-spankin' new video to go along with the song, and it's just as bright and spangly as the song itself.  Not only is it a fine introduction to the album, it also appears that it's a fine introduction to a new TV show featuring Lucky and Alisha and the rest of the band.  Lishy Lou and Lucky Too has its own website, and the Google cache of the site reveals that it's a live-action TV show where they "live together in a magical treehouse with all sorts of friends and guests that visit them from time to time."  Consider me intrigued.  Feel free to spin the song (and download for free for the price of a tweet or a link until Aug. 24) here.

Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band - "Thingamajig" [YouTube]