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- MUSIC, Page 82More Than Child's Play
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- By JANICE C. SIMPSON
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- PERFORMERS: UNEXPECTED POP STARS
- ALBUMS: Tunes for Tots
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- THE BOTTOM LINE: There's a whole lot of shaking going on
- as Little Richard and others move into children's music.
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- Back in the quaint days when rock 'n' roll was young,
- parents used to get all shook up over the hip-swiveling antics
- and soulful squeals of Elvis Presley, Little Richard and other
- rock pioneers. Now Graceland is a venerable tourist attraction,
- and good golly, Miss Molly, Little Richard is whooping his way
- through an album of children's songs.
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- The original wild man of rock 'n' roll struck a chord with
- the tiny-bopper set last year with a rambunctious rendition of
- Itsy Bitsy Spider that appeared on For Our Children, a benefit
- album for pediatric AIDS victims. Now he's back with Shake It
- All About, a collection of 12 children's classics all done up
- in Little Richard's flagrantly flamboyant style. He turns On
- Top of Spaghetti into a rhythm-and-blues lament, raps his way
- through If You're Happy and You Know It and performs a funky,
- fanny-wiggling version of The Hokey Pokey.
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- This time, though, Little Richard isn't boogieing into new
- musical territory but following in some unlikely footsteps:
- those of a rebel named Raffi. Raffi is the Canadian troubadour
- whose frisky tunes and kid-comfy lyrics sold 7 million copies
- of albums and videotapes during the early 1980s and transformed
- children's music from a back water populated mainly by folk
- singers and people who performed preachy songs in funny voices
- into a booming business. Raffi has since retired from
- entertaining the peanut-butter-and-jelly crowd, but major record
- labels and musicians of every persuasion, from rock to reggae
- and from country to cabaret, have picked up on Raffi's riff.
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- Tunes for tots are hot, thanks largely to a rise in U.S.
- births, which reached a 24-year high of 4 million in 1989.
- Record companies "are reading the demographics and realizing
- that there are going to be a lot more children around," says
- Leib Ostrow, president of Music for Little People, a
- seven-year-old California-based company.
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- The phenomenon also reflects the fact that today's parents
- worry about the increasingly violent or sexually provocative
- lyrics that currently flood mainstream music. The grownups are
- more comfortable, says Mark Jaffe, vice president of Walt
- Disney Records, with material "that has a contemporary sound but
- lyrics that can relate to things that kids can relate to."
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- Thus traditional children's tales are being set to a
- contemporary beat. "I been rapping with kids for a long, long
- time/ Even your parents know my rhymes," chirps a character
- called Mama Goose on MCA's Nursery Rhymes Rap. And although many
- new songs continue to deal with subjects like eating vegetables
- or coping with siblings, some grapple with difficult family
- issues. "You see, Timmy's dad was married/ To his mom a while
- ago/ But now they are divorced/ Sometimes that's the way things
- go," sings Craig Taubman, who also records for Disney.
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- Movie sound tracks remain the best sellers. Disney's
- Beauty and the Beast album has sold more than 1.9 million copies
- and has been on the pop charts for the past 49 weeks. MCA has
- tried to tap into the Nintendo craze with White Knuckle Scorin',
- an album about the video game that echoes the Who's celebration
- of a pinball wizard in the 1969 rock opera Tommy.
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- Attentive parents can find other reminders of the glory
- days of their own youth. A&M Records' Tim Noah belts out a
- Springsteen-style anthem: "I was raised on rock 'n' roll/ Bo
- Diddley, Fats Domino/ Mama rocked me by the radio/ Raised on
- rock 'n' roll." Rory, who records for Sony, does a
- tongue-in-cheek imitation of Diana Ross in a cut from her album
- I'm Just a Kid. This Saturday, Radio AAHS, a 24-hour children's
- station in Minneapolis, will sponsor a concert featuring
- well-known kids' performers like Joanie Bartels and Bob McGrath.
- They're calling the event Kidstock.
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- Still, the clearest sign that kiddie music has arrived is
- the presence of performers like Little Richard, who are more
- familiar on the adult circuit. Cabaret singer Michael Feinstein
- recorded Pure Imagination, 19 children's songs from musicals and
- films. Last summer, Disney released Country Music for Kids,
- featuring Mary-Chapin Carpenter, Emmylou Harris and the Oak
- Ridge Boys. However they play it, this music isn't just kid
- stuff anymore.
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