Category Archives: Music

CD Review: Caspar Babypants, “This Is Fun!”

If you had told me 15 years ago that I’d be listening to a children’s album from the guy who sang “Peaches” — and really liking it — I would have called you crazy. And yet here we are with This Is Fun!, the latest kindie gem from Chris Ballew, a.k.a. Caspar Babypants: 20 tracks of bouncy, gently madcap fun for the whole family.

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Ballew has always taken the spraygun approach to recording music, loading his albums with lots of bite-sized songs, and that’s still true now that he’s making music for little people: This Is Fun!‘s longest track is 3:21, but most of them clock in around the two-minute mark, which is just enough time to burrow into your brain. This is Ballew’s third Babypants outing since 2009, and if you’ve heard his earlier stuff, you know what to expect: multitracked vocals, minimalist arrangements, and bubbly tempos, with plenty of chorus repetitions. Ballew’s approach to song selection remains the same, too — This Is Fun! includes an assortment of covers (“Shoo Fly,” “Mister Rabbit,” “Buckeye Jim,” and, um, Nirvana’s “Sliver”) sprinkled between like-minded originals.

The list of rockers-turned-Pied Pipers is as long as your arm, but Ballew’s songwriting has always been fundamentally childish in the best sense of the word, and with Caspar Babypants, he’s found a natural outlet for all that goofy energy.

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Like the album title says, This Is Fun!

Blu-ray Review: The Sound of Music (45th Anniversary Edition)

The Sound of Music (20th Century Fox, 2010)

One of the most enduring musicals and family films of all time, The Sound of Music celebrates its 45th anniversary by making its Blu-ray debut — and not just any ol’ debut, either: Fox has pulled out all the stops with this transfer, adding a new 7.1 DTS-HD soundtrack and tons of bonus material to go with the meticulously remastered footage. They might be middle-aged now, but the hills are still alive, and they’ve never looked or sounded better.

Synopsis: One of the most popular movie musicals of all time, The Sound of Music is based on the true story of the Trapp Family Singers. Julie Andrews stars as Maria, a young nun in an Austrian convent who regularly misses her morning prayers because she enjoys going to the hills to sing the title song. Deciding that Maria needs to learn something about the real world before she can take her vows, the Mother Superior (Peggy Wood) sends her off to be governess for the children of the widowed Captain Von Trapp (Christopher Plummer). Continue reading

CD Review: Frances England, “Mind of My Own”

Bright, catchy, and adorable, Frances England’s Mind of My Own is a slow pitch down the middle for grown-up fans of marshmallow-soft pop acts like Rabbit!, Lisa Loeb, Kaiser Cartel, and Mates of State (who pop in for a cameo on the sixth track, “Place in Your Heart”).

Having listened to more than my share of albums by female singers who wear vintage frocks, play quirky instruments, and wish they were Zooey Deschanel or Jenny Lewis, I hear warning sirens when I open a CD and see a woman holding a tiny keyboard and wearing thick glasses and a thrift-store outfit. And honestly, if you have a low tolerance for cute, Mind of My Own may test your limits — but then, you’ve probably had those limits trampled by plenty of kids’ acts, and this album steps around them more cleverly than most. It’s the family music equivalent of a curtsy and a smile: It might be a little much, but it’s too charming to resist.

Aided by kindie producer du jour Tor Hyams, England lays out a musical landscape that’s all sunshine and flowers; even when she’s grumpily protesting parental tyranny on the title track, she sounds more like she’s scrunching her nose than throwing a tantrum, and the names of the other songs — including “Ladybug,” “Cookies and Milk,” “Red Balloon,” “Do You Hear the Birds Singing?” and “Big Heart” — give you a pretty good idea of her overall perspective. And even if you don’t normally go for this sort of thing (or if, like me, you’re suffering from an overdose of the Zooey Effect), you have to admit it plays perfectly to England’s strengths — she’s good at conveying childlike innocence, and she’s got the perfect cotton candy voice for this stuff.

Like cotton candy, Mind of My Own may trigger sugar shock in large doses, but at a breezy 37 minutes and change, it doesn’t overstay its welcome; in fact, a couple of songs clock in under two minutes. Consider it a gateway drug for the Apple ad-approved bands on your iPod and heed England’s call for a living room dance in your underpants.