RPM KidSpin
By Whitney Lou
Sing Like the Earth Depends On It
African
Dreamland
putumayokids.com
Hayes
Greenfield Music for a Green Planet
musicforagreenplanet.com
Kermit had it right—it’s not that easy bein’ green. But jazz great Hayes
Greenfield’s new CD can help teach your children that “our Earth’s like a
mother with so much to give, we have to protect her because that’s where we
live.”
Having been to the Blue Note and done CBGB’s in New York City, Greenfield
turned his attention to children. His mission was to open up the world of
improvisation to children. His first release, “Jazz-A-Ma-Tazz,” was met with
critical acclaim.
Greenfield’s newest venture, to help bring environmental awareness to
children, is equally successful. I listen to quite a few CDs and this is the
first I’ve heard with sustainability and the environment as its focus.
Spinning children’s standards into environmentally conscious songs could
have produced contrived, pedantic lectures set to music, but Music for a
Green Planet makes you want to go buy a hybrid vehicle and plant a pine,
dancing all the while.
Not only are the lyrics original and engaging, the musicianship is
especially noteworthy. A legend in the jazz world, Joe Lee Wilson’s voice on
“Turbines” is as soothing as the water he sings about.
The emotion in 8-year-old Carly Sonenclar’s voice singing “The Things We
Throw Away”—a reworked “Oh My Darling Clementine”—makes her seem years
older, and the message she delivers is poignant: “In a world that is so
fragile, let’s not throw it all away.”
“The Greenable Rap” is a terrific example of call-and-response with kids and
is one of the few songs in which Greenfield himself sings. The song
demonstrates his playfulness with words and emphasizes the fact that “we’re
savable, behavable, our power use is shaveable.”
The exuberant New Orleans feel of “This Little World of Ours” joyfully
reminds us “We‘re not the first ones here to walk upon this earth.”
Continuing with the global awareness theme, African Dreamland is the fourth
world music lullaby CD from Putumayo. A collection of songs from Cameroon,
Mali, Zimbabwe and a half dozen other countries, this CD is filled with
peaceful voices and calming music.
Ladysmith Black Mambazo, a well-known South African group, sings “Nomathemba,”
which means “hope” in Zulu. It’s the first song that Joseph Shabalala,
founder and leader of the group, ever wrote. And if you have never heard a
kora, a stringed instrument made out of half a calabash, you’re in for a
treat: Toumani Diabate and Ballake Sissoko perform a beautiful duet.
These two CDs are sure to convey Greenfield’s point, “Our planet is a
treasure box, our minds can open up the locks.
Whitney Lou’s 4- year-old daughter Sophie loves to
sing outside except when Mother Nature makes too much pollen. They live in
Richmond’s West End.
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