Search for song titles, background info on our music, and more:

Monday, December 26, 2011

On Dec. 31st, there's no excuse...

For not joining me and the Deedle Deedle Dees on the radio or in person. Here's what's happening:

(all times Eastern)
At 9am, I'm the guest on The Kids are Alright, Amy Handler's splendid little program on AM1690 in Atlanta. Amy is devoting the whole show to our conversation, my in-studio performances, and tracks by the Deedle Deedle Dees. Stream it here: http://1690wmlb.com/the-kids-are-alright/ The show will repeat Sunday the 1st at noon. 

At 11am, I'm hosting a New Year's Eve Family Sing-a-Long & Jam at the Knitting Factory in Brooklyn. Bring your voices and your instruments. I'll bring chord changes so parents and bigger kids can play along on their guitars, ukes, accordions, etc. And everyone is invited to sing along as we ring in the New Year a little early (we'll be counting down to noon). bk.knittingfactory.com

And the grand finale happens at 11pm:
The Deedle Deedle Dees are playing a complete concert on Sirius XM Kids Place Live. We're going to play a full concert then lead do the old 10-9-8 to midnight. The show will be re-broadcast a couple of times during the daytime hours (on Jan 1st and possibly other dates) for all those who can't stay up late. http://www.siriusxm.com/kidsplacelive

Hope you can join us!
Lloyd

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Music you should try if you like Strange Dees, Indeed

The Deedle Deedle Dees listen to a lot of music and we're always excited to share new stuff we find. Our new record, Strange Dees, Indeed, in many ways represents our wide-ranging listening habits better than any of our previous work and we thought you might like to know where to go to hear more.

Organized by song, here's some music we think you should add to your family music library. As you start listening to this music you'll find that while some of it is a very direct influence on the music we make, much of it is simply part of our music landscape, the greenhouse, if you will, where the Deedle Deedle Dees music sprouts and grows.

1. Ah Ahimsa
This song is the most successful of some of my recent attempts to write a Bollywood song. Bollywood music is very diverse and reflects the era in which a particular movie was made but we tend to gravitate toward what I consider to be the classic era of the musical genre, the 1950s and 60s. Here are some absolute must-haves:

Doob Doob O'Rama: Filmsongs from Bollywood, Vol. 1
Every song a killer. Most famous song here is probably "Jan Pahechan Ho" (AKA "Jaan Pehechaan Ho") because a version of it was on the Ghost World soundtrack. Possibly the ultimate Bollywood compilation. Also check out Volume 2.

The Rough Guide to Bollywood Legends: Asha Bhosle
The most recorded woman of all time? At one time at least I think she held that title. In all those old Bollywood movies, she's almost always the voice of the woman. The Rough Guide compilations are top notch and this is probably my personal favorite. Includes the seminal "Ina Mina Dika."


The Rough Guide to Bollywood by Kishore Kumar and Lata Mangeshkar & Kumar Sanu

The Rough Guide to Bollywood: Lata Mangeshkar
In her better known work (at least as much as I know) Lata does more traditional stuff like wedding and devotional songs while Asha tends toward pop and lively dance-ready numbers. But that's a great generalization. Ignore what I say -- just get all these albums.

And if you've never seen a Bollywood movie, watch this clip. It will change your life.

2. Cool Papa Bell 
Some funky music that got our heads in the space that created this track:
The Meters
We have no illusions that our track sounds like a Meters track. But we did want to make a tune that makes people move the way their music does. Here are some good albums:
The Meters (debut)
Look-Ka Py Py
Good Old Funky Music

Gnarls Barkley
Yes, I'm sure you've heard these albums already. But they're great. Give 'em a re-listen next time you're in the car. I listened to The Odd Couple about seven hundred times while driving around LA one summer.
The Odd Couple
St. Elsewhere



3. a song for Abigail Adams
We weren't trying to sound like Wilco but a few people who have heard this track have asked whether we were. I do think we, like Tweedy & Co., were trying to figure out how to avoid the obvious choices that could be made with a simple ballad like this. At one point, in Dean Jones' living room, Ari and I were talking about how the mandolin part should sound. I expressed a strong desire that it not be "Taylor Swift mandolin," that pretty end-of-phrase arpeggio mando that's all over Nashville productions. Ari agreed but as he improvised it was Nashvillian parts that continued to lend themselves most obviously to the tune. So I said: Why don't we skip the mandolin all together and do something different?

Late that night, Dean helped us figure out what that different thing was. And as a happy accident, it did become a little bit Wilcovian. I don't listen to those guys much anymore, but if I did, I'd definitely spin Summerteeth. Much better than the much-heralded album that followed, I think.

Also try the solo work of Lee Renaldo and Thurston Moore. I invoked their names during the after-midnight explorations that became "a song for Abigail Adams" more than once.

4. The Golem
As you might have figured out by now, the Dees take the various genres that inspire them, try to imitate them, and, most of the time, end up failing horribly -- but making something that we still find kind of interesting. That's certainly the case with my "klezmer" stylings on "The Golem." But if you want the real thing...

Old Brooklyn - Andy Statman
Best album of 2011, one of the best albums I've heard in a very long time. It's blasting as I write this. I saw Andy play in the basement of the Charles Street Synagogue last night with my wife. John Goodman announces the album on track 1, Paul Shaffer (yes, the same) joins on keys for some tunes... Andy's buddy and regular stage guest star Ricky Skaggs shows up. Yes, that would be country idol and Christian Ricky Skaggs moaning like Ralph Stanley while Orthodox Jew Andy wails on the clarinet. Believe. 


You can hear klezmer on this record but also bluegrass and a lot of stuff I'm at a loss to classify. I could write all day about it.

All the Best - Avraham Fried
Another Brooklyn guy, Avraham plays a very different kind of klezmer. Lots of ear-searing horns. One of the Dees once said his music would be a great soundtrack for a cop show. As not subtle as Andy is subtle, Avraham is the party music you should be playing. Seriously, dump the Lady Gaga and the Pitbull and the get with the Fried.



5. Marie Curie 
Astor Piazzolla - The Soul of Tango, Greatest Hits 
Something about the mood he creates made him come to mind. Famous for the brilliant "Libertango." I'm partial to "Resurreccion del Angel." Just buy the catalog.

Django Reinhardt - Quintette Du Hot Club De France

"The Third Man Theme" - There's the original played by Anton Karas on the zither. There's also The Band's version on Moonlight Matinee. For a while this song was hot amongst high school kids I was giving guitar and bass lessons. 

Gypsy Rumble - The Stephane Wrembel Trio with David Grisman
Stephane is a guy you can see almost any night in the NYC area. He used to teach former (and always) Dee Anand Mukherjee gypsy guitar. The closest we have to a living Django.

6. Sojourner Truth
Why, yes, that is mastermind Dean Jones on the trombone. And, yes, you should get some of his records he makes for families. His group Dog on Fleas has this album Cranberry Sauce Flotilla that's kind of perfect for playing at any time of day. His solo + lots of guest stars disc Rock Paper Scissors is terrific. Get your credit card and head to www.dogonfleas.com and make your own choices.

7. River of Blood
If your kids like the sound of this tune -- and you don't have any Johnny Cash records in the house already -- quick get At Folsom Prison and one of the greatest hits compilations. I've never met a kid who didn't love the Man in Black.


Then, try The Lonesome Fugitive: The Merle Haggard Anthology (1963-1977). This is more for you, parents, but the kids will like some of the tunes. I instructed Dean and the Dees to sing like the female back-up singers on a Haggard track on "River of Blood." (they sound nothing like them, of course. and I like that)

Lastly, when was the last time you heard the Twin Peaks soundtrack? If there's ever a chord change or a passage of melody that hints at the theme that plays during the opening credits, all Dees immediately start playing it (listen for it if you're around for one of our sound checks). And in "River of Blood," you can hear Booker Dee just barely resisting the urge to go full on into the music of waterfalls and log mills and scary owls.

8. Penny Farthing
Like that crazy guy singing? So do we. That's Booker Dee AKA Chris Johnson. He plays banjo and piano with a New Orleans-style jazz group called the Red Hook Ramblers. Both their albums shake the walls of our house frequently. The self-titled first one features their versions of standards like "Bourbon Street Parade" and "Four or Five Times" while the recently-release Something More Sinister is all originals. I, like all good Americans, adore Chris' vocal on "That Extreme." 


I hope Chris doesn't mind me saying this: I think Fats Waller had no small influence on his vocal style. No Fats in your house? Get the Complete Recorded Works, the Best of Fats Waller, everything he ever recorded is worth having. Warning: it will ruin all current music for you. But who needs it? 


to be continued...


































 

Friday, November 18, 2011

Strange Dees, Indeed: The Reading List

Here's a first draft of the official Strange Dees, Indeed reading list, a collection of books related to the songs on the album.

I'll continue to add to this. Get started on these books and by the time you finish them all I'll have added some more to the list.

Books are organized by song title. I've included books for kids and grown-ups.

Have books you like related to these topics? Please let me know. I'll add them.


1. Ah Ahimsa

FOR KIDS
Gandhi by Demi
a gorgeous picture book

FOR GROWN-UPS
Gandhi An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth 
by Mohandas Karamchand (Mahatma) Gandhi, translated by Mahadev H. Desai 








2. Cool Papa Bell
                                                                                                                                                 FOR KIDS
We Are the Ship by Kadir Nelson 

Kadir Nelson makes Negro League stars look like superheroes. This book rules.

FOR GROWN-UPS
Only the Ball Was White by Robert Peterson
I'm forever recommending this one. Peterson's book was the first major history of the Negro Leagues to fully utilize stats and historical research. Previous histories had relied primarily on anecdotes.





3. a song for Abigail Adams

FOR KIDS
Servant to Abigail Adams: The Early Colonial Adventures of Hannah Cooper by Kate Connell
Solid YA historical fiction about the life of a servant who followed the Adams family to the White House

A Picture Book of John and Abigail Adams by David Adler
Adler's books aren't exciting, but they are well done. Worth a read or two.

FOR GROWN-UPS
John Adams by David McCullough
It's hard to beat McCullough for highly-readable history books. He has a particular knack for even making everything cinematic -- even dry policy discussions.



My Dearest Friend: Letters of Abigail and John Adams by Abigail Adams, John Adams, edited by Margaret A. Hogan and C. James Taylor
And if you'd like to read the real letters...










4. The Golem 


FOR KIDS
Golem by David Wisniewski
Cool, creepy picture book good for advanced kindergarteners or elementary-aged kids. For younger kids, try Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins by Eric A. Kimmel, illustrated by John Ed. Mayer and Trina Schart Hyman. It's not about the Golem but it's another eerie Jewish tale with scary creatures. My son loved this book when he was two. 

FOR GROWN-UPS AND POSSIBLY OLDER KIDS
The Golem and the Wondrous Deeds of the Maharal of Prague
by Yudi Rosenberg, translated by Curt Leviant
A book for grown-ups that tells a detailed version of the Golem of Prague story and digs deep into the cultural and religious history of the character

The Golem by Isaac Bashevis Singer, illustrated by Uri Shulevitz
out of print, but available online-- looks awesome

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon
The best first 100 pages of a novel I've read in a while features an escape from Prague inside a Golem. Don't want to say anymore and ruin the fun.



5. Marie Curie

FOR KIDS AND GROWN-UPS
Radioactive: Marie & Pierre Curie: A Tale of Love and Fallout by 
Lauren Redniss
A collage biography. Sort of a graphic novel but different. Totally unique. Must must read. 






6. Sojourner Truth 


FOR KIDS
Only Passing Through by Anne Rockwell and R. Gregory Gregory Christie
Lovely picture book. When I imagine Sojourner, I often see her the way she's drawn here.

FOR GROWN-UPS
Narrative of Sojourner Truth by Sojourner Truth and Nell Irvin Painter
Her story in her words. Yeah.







7. River of Blood 


FOR KIDS
The Heart: Our Circulatory System by Seymour Simon
Simon has a whole series of books about the body with great pictures and explanations. 


FOR GROWN-UPS

Overcoming Medical Phobias: How to Conquer Fear of Blood, Needles, Doctors, and Dentists 
by Martin Antony Ph.D. and Mark Watling MD
Whenever I intro this song at shows -- which requires me to say the word "blood" -- at least one grown-up looks queasy. I thought this book might help.







8. Penny Farthing 


FOR KIDS
The Bicycle Man by Allen Say
Elegant picture book about Japan after WWII.

FOR GROWN-UPS
Around the World on a Penny Farthing: From San Francisco to Yokohama by Thomas Stevens
Out of print but available online various places. This dude went all over the place on a penny farthing in the 1880s. 



Bicycle: The History by David V. Herlihy
Imagine if Mark Kurlansky wrote a book about bikes. 








9. Mayor LaGuardia's Stomach

FOR KIDS
Amelia Bedelia 4 Mayor by Herman Parish, illustrated by Lynn Sweat
Couldn't find a children's book on LaGuardia and I love Amelia Bedelia. This one is by Herman Parish, nephew of original author Peggy Parish. Peggy's books are pure genius and difficult to mimic, but Herman gets the basic idea. A little Amelia B. is better than none. 


FOR GROWN-UPS
The Napoleon of New York: Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia by 
H. Paul Jeffers 









10. Sacagawea
11. Sacagawea (Sock It To 'Em Disco Addendum) 



FOR KIDS
A Picture Book of Sacagawea
by David A. Adler and Dan Brown
Yeah another Adler book. They're good for what they are.

FOR KIDS AND GROWN-UPS
Sacagawea Speaks: Beyond the Shining Mountains with Lewis and Clark 
by Joyce Badgley Hunsaker
Sort of an encyclopedia of Sacagawea featuring artwork, photos, historical documents, all sorts of stuff. Get it from the library and keep it in your bathroom for a couple of weeks. 

FOR GROWN-UPS



Great Plains by Ian Frazier
Got this after reading and loving Frazier's Travels in Siberia. A grand tour of the beautiful states in the middle of country that weaves Frazier's own travels with histories of many people who went before him: Crazy Horse, Billy the Kid, Lewis, Clark, Sacagawea, and many others.

The Last Stand by Nathaniel Philbrick
Not about Sacagawea. But this new examination of the Battle of Little Bighorn taught me a lot about Native American history I didn't know.

Ceremony by Leslie Marmon Silko
If you didn't read it in college, now's the time.

The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven by Sherman Alexie
He's gimmicky but he's really the only major author writing about Indians (he prefers "Indian" to "Native American") in this way. Funny, irreverent, good for reading on the plane.









12. Camperdown Elm

FOR KIDS
A Little Guide to Trees by Charlotte Voake, Kate Petty, Jo Elworthy
Adorable and info-packed at the same time. 

FOR GROWN-UPS
Complete Poems by Marianne Moore
"The Camperdown Elm" is in here. So is a lot of other stuff. Difficult stuff. Worth your time, though.




13. Birds of America Don't Care-Oh 


FOR KIDS
Audubon's Birds of America Coloring Book by John James Audubon
You could also buy a first edition of Birds of America itself. But those pictures have already been colored in. 

The Boy Who Drew Birds: A Story of John James Audubon
by Jacqueline Davies, illustrated by Melissa Sweet

FOR GROWN-UPS

John James Audubon: The Making of an American by Richard Rhodes
Recent bio. You can finish it in 7 or 8 subway rides.  







14. Whaleship Essex

FOR KIDS
Revenge of the Whale by Nathaniel Philbrick
The YA version of one of my top 5 nonfiction books of all time: 


In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick
If you haven't read this yet I don't know what to say. Please?

FOR KIDS AND GROWN-UPS
Moby Dick by Herman Melville
Obviously.
If your kid isn't quite ready for the whole thing, get one of the many illustrated or other abridged versions. 





15. Skating in Old Bryant Park

 

FOR KIDS
Top Cats: The Life and Times of the New York Public Library Lions by 
Susan G. Larkin

FOR GROWN-UPS
William Cullen Bryant: Author of America by Gilbert H. Muller 







16. Phineas Gage Has Something to Tell These People 

FOR KIDS AND GROWN-UPS
Phineas Gage: A Gruesome but True Story About Brain Science by John Fleischman 







17. Dead Horse Bay

FOR KIDS
Kids Making a Difference for Animals by Sheryl L. Pipe
Some of the stuff that washes up on Dead Horse Bay in NYC is from a glue factory that used to be in the area. I thought a book about kids helping animals would be a good follow-up to any discussions you might have about what actually happened in a glue factory.

FOR KIDS AND GROWN-UPS
Forgotten New York: Views of a Lost Metropolis by Kevin Walsh
And if you like Dead Horse Bay and other little-know odd places in the city...










18. Henry (Hudson), How Ya Gonna Find a Way?

FOR KIDS
Beyond the Sea of Ice: The Voyages of Henry Hudson by Joan Elizabeth Goodman and Fernando Rangel
Hudson's adventures in exciting kid-ready form.


FOR GROWN-UPS AND POSSIBLY OLDER KIDS
River of Dreams: The Story of the Hudson River by Hudson Talbott
Hokey cover hides a thorough and fascinating book. 


FOR GROWN-UPS
Half Moon: Henry Hudson and the Voyage That Redrew the Map of the New World by Douglas Hunter 







19. Bluebird > Redbird, Redbird > Reef

FOR KIDS
Subway Story
 by Julia Sarcone-Roach
Thanks to our librarian friend Joanna Nigrelli for telling us about this one, a book that seems made to be read with our song. 


FOR GROWN-UPS AND KIDS
The City Beneath Us: Building the New York Subway by the New York Transit Museum and Vivian Heller
Highly-detailed history that focuses on the materials and the machines.

The 1964 World's Fair: Creation and Legacy (Images of America) by Bill Cotter and Bill Young.
Yet another in that sepia-toned series they have everywhere. Although the image quality could be a little higher (do they print these books on the cheap?) these volumes do collect a lot of nice images. 





Thursday, November 17, 2011

Join the Dees in the Rumpus Room

The Deedle Deedle Dees are playing the Sirius XM Kids Place Live Rumpus Room on December 12th. Want to come? It's free, but you have to RSVP. Details:

 
When: Monday, December 12, 2011, 4- 5 pm
 
Where:
Sirius/XM Radio
1500 Eckington Place NE
Washington, DC 20002 
 
RSVP: mindy@siriusxm.com by December 6, 2011
 
 
Hope to see you there!
Lloyd (AKA Ulysses S. Dee)

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Help us get the word out about Strange Dees, Indeed

Strange Dees, Indeed, is now available as a physical package and as a digital download at CDBaby, Amazon, iTunes, and many other outlets. We really need your help to get the word out. Here are two things you can do right now:

1. Send your family and friends to our website, www.thedeedledeedledees.com.
Tell them how much you like the album and how much they'll like it also.

2. Request us on Kids Place Live on Sirius XM. They just started playing us a couple of weeks ago and we'd really like them to keep playing us. Visit their blog or their Facebook page to request a tune. Right now they're playing "Ah Ahimsa," the opening track of Strange Dees, Indeed -- that's probably the best one to ask for.


And if you have friends in education or the media who you think should hear the album, let us know. We'll get them a free copy.

Strangely yours, 
Lloyd (AKA Ulysses S. Dee)

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Costume ideas

Every weekday next week is part of

the Strange Dees, Indeed CD Release Pre-Party!!!

At all my sing-a-longs, any kid who comes dressed as someone or something from a Deedle Deedle Dees song will get a special prize. And if you come to our CD release concert at the Eric Carle (the CD release party itself) in a Dees-themed costume, you'll get a special special prize (seriously -- the Carle prize is a step up from the sing-a-long prize. it's worth trying for).

To help you earn your prize, we thought it would nice to give you some costume ideas. In the rare event that you haven't heard the Dees complete discography. Here are some people (+ one animal and one mythical superhero creature) of whom we've sung who would qualify you for an award should you choose to dress as one of them:

Harriet Tubman
Nellie Bly
Anne Bonney
Marie Curie
Satchel Paige
Cool Papa Bell
Mahatma Gandhi
Baldy
Aaron Burr
Abigail Adams
Babe Ruth
John Wilkes Booth
John Brown
John Henry
Henry "Box" Brown
The Golem
Amelia Earhart
Harriet Hanson Robinson
John James Audubon
Frederick Law Olmstead
Calvert Vaux
Sojourner Truth
George Washington
Sacagawea
Henry Hudson
Phineas Gage
Zora Neale Hurston
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Marianne Moore
Nathaniel Philbrick
Fannie Lou Hamer
Lucy Stone
Susan B. Anthony
Harriet Jacobs
Thomas Edison
Cornelia Hancock
Abraham Lincoln
Barack Obama


Most of these people are historical figures. A couple are characters from folklore (John Henry, The Golem).

If you see a name on that list above and would like to hear the song in which they appear but can't find it, please send me a note. I'll send you a link to the album if the song appears on one of ours. We have written and performed a bunch of tunes that have never shown up on any of our albums. If you want one of these tunes, I'll dig up a demo recording, video, or other version for you. If I've got nothing, I'll just make a YouTube video of me sitting in my kitchen singing the song.

The list above is not complete. It's just what I came up with off the top of my head.

Hope to see you -- in costume -- somewhere this week.

Lloyd

Monday, September 12, 2011

Three shows and a bunch of sing-a-longs

I've got a lot to tell you about so I'll be brief...

Tuesday, Sept 13th, I'll be doing a free sing-a-long concert at the Lot, located under the High Line at 30th Street. http://www.thehighline.org/the-lot

Saturday, Sept 17th, three Dees will be doing acoustic sets at The Brooklyn Local, an event to benefit City Harvest. Sets at 1 and 2pm. Kids under 5 are free. http://www.cityharvest.org/thebrooklynlocal

Sunday, Sept. 18th, I'll be doing a free solo show in the Tot Lot at the corner of Argyle and Cortelyou in Brooklyn as part of the annual Flatbush Frolic. 4:30pm.

And then there's my regular weekly sing-a-longs! For a schedule, check out the sidebar at http://thedeedledeedledees.blogspot.com/.

All these impromptu events are basically public rehearsals for our big CD release shows coming up in Kentucky, Western Massachusetts, Brooklyn, and elsewhere (TBA). Don't miss your chance to see me mess up some new songs!

Lloyd

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Here are the songs we were going to play Saturday

 Our surprise free show in Red Hook this Saturday, August 27th, has been canceled due to hurricane precautions by the city. But in case you'd like to imagine the show that might have been, here's the set list Otto von Dee and I ran through tonight in my basement. We wouldn't necessarily have played it in this order. Make up your own, why don't ya?



The Golem
Cool Papa Bell
Marie Curie
a song for Abigail Adams
Sojourner Truth
Birds of America Don't Care-Oh
Penny Farthing
Whaleship Essex
Dead Horse Bay
Henry (Hudson), How Ya Gonna Find a Way?
Battle of Brooklyn
Bluebird > Redbird, Redbird > Reef
River of Blood
Sacagawea
Henry Box Brown
Tub-Tub-Ma-Ma-Ga-Ga

Thursday, August 18, 2011

a song for Abigail Adams

a song for Abigail Adams
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c) (p) 2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

abbie abbie abbie
said she didn't get my letter
but oh sweet baby
i like nothing better

i like nothing better
than getting a letter from you

abbie abbie abbie
i'm way across the ocean
18th century mail
tends to get lost

i never stopped writing
i just wrote a letter to you

sent it through braintree, massachusetts
care of the shark-filled sea

write me here i'm still in paris
abbie write a letter to me

abbie abbie abbie
said she didn't get my letter
but oh sweet baby
i like nothing better

i like nothing better
than getting a letter from you

abbie abbie abbie
i'm always with franklin
he lets the cold air in
but i like the window closed
i've heard a lot from him
now i need to hear a little from you

sent it through braintree, massachusetts
care of the shark-filled sea

write me here i'm still in paris
abbie write a letter to me


Abigail and John Adams were famous for the letters they wrote throughout their life. But in the late 1700s and early 1800s when they lived, the mail service was far less sophisticated than it is now and many letters got lost. One time Abigail complained that John had written enough and he protested -- not in the pleading romantic manner of this song, but in the same vigorous manner he used in courtrooms and legal documents. In this song, I give John a different voice from the one we read in his letters, one closer to my own. 


Who does what on "a song for Abigail Adams"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): organ
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric bass
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): electric guitar, vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing

Marie Curie

Marie Curie
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c) (p) 2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller
French translation by Rosalie Fisher, French singing coach: Dana Loev


appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

ULYSSES
Marie Curie
left Paris
with a suitcase full of radium

"Excuse me...
Are you Marie Curie?"
was the soldier's question.

"That's not me.
I'm not Marie Curie.
No, sir, that's not me.
That's not me.
I'm not Marie Curie.
No, sir, that's not me."

"Leave Paris,
Marie Curie..."
The president told her to go.

"Excuse me,
are you the famous Marie Curie?"
The soldier wanted to know

"That's not me.
I'm not Marie Curie.
No, sir, that's not me.
That's not me.
I'm not Marie Curie.
No, sir, that's not me."


MOBY
Marie Curie
quitta Paris
sa valise remplie de radium

- Excusez-moi,
demanda le soldat.
Êtes-vous Marie Curie?

- Sûrement pas!
Non, [non], ce n'est pas moi,
lui a dit Marie Curie.
Non, monsieur,
Je vous le dis, je n'suis
pas Marie Curie.

But, oui...
I do have a sandwich
and I will share it with you

Mais, oui... Yes!
J'ai bien un bon sandwich
pour nous deux, si ça vous dit.

This year I did a songwriting project with Tom Weiner's class at Smith Campus School in Northampton, MA. Ella Childs (daughter of Bill Childs, host of the radio show Spare the Rock, Spoil the Child) was in the class and during our classroom discussions made a strong case for a song about Marie Curie.

The class song ended up being about Helen Keller, Wilma Rudolph, Rosa Parks, and other important innovators and activists but I still wanted to write the Curie song. The next morning -- before the Dees played at the River's Meltdown -- Ella and I brainstormed. She told me some of her favorite Marie Curie stories and this one seemed to best lend itself to song.

Who does what on "Marie Curie"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): accordion
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric guitar, vocals
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): upright bass, vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing






Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Skating in Old Bryant Park

Skating in Old Bryant Park
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c)(p)2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

I see you...
skating
in old Bryant Park

round and round we go
You poet!
You're skating
in old Bryant Park
named for you so long ago

A potter's field became Reservoir Square
The lions came in
they built a library over there

You sit there at night
thinking Thanatoptical thoughts

But who knew you came out in the day?
Who knew you knew how to skate?

You're
skating
in old Bryant Park

round and round we go
You poet!
You're skating
in old Bryant Park
named for you so long ago

A potter's field became Reservoir Square
The lions came in
they built a library over there

You sit there at night
thinking abolitiionist thoughts

But who knew you came out in the day?
Who knew you knew how to skate?

You're
skating
in old Bryant Park

round and round we go
You poet!
You're skating
in old Bryant Park
named for you so long ago


We played at the skating rink they set up at Bryant Park, located behind the main branch of the New York Public Library, last year. I wrote this song to play that day.

William Cullen Bryant, an editor, poet, and abolitionist from the 1800s, watches over the park in statue form. In this song he gets up and skates with everyone else.



the lions = you know those big lions in front of the NYPL?

And what are "Thanatoptical thoughts?"
Bryant's most famous poem, the one you probably read in high school, is called "Thanatopsis"

Who does what on "Skating in Old Bryant Park"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): organ
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric guitar
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): vocals
David Winograd: tuba
Dean Jones: recording, mixing

Bluebird > Redbird, Redbird > Reef

Bluebird > Redbird, Redbird > Reef
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c)(p)2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

Bluebird flies tonight
Climb the stairs it's time to say goodbye
goodbye Dinoland
Goodbye brontosaurus
Real cool meeting you
Will you wait here for us?

Bluebird flies tonight
Our crowded train rides on  the 7 line
Goodbye giant rockets pointed up at space and
Goodbye giant globe
Do you see me waving?

Bluebird painted red
A fast train taking us to see the Mets
I see you, giant Globe
Globe, do you remember
How cold it gets out here
In November?

Gb Db Bbm Cb
Bluebird turned to silver blue
they wrote their names all  over you
They hid those tags in white then red
The red changed shades
We met again
My bluebird was a redbird now
Headed west
Manhattan bound

Redbird takes a dive
The ocean floor is where you'll end your ride
You went in with a splash
And now you're slowly sinking
I should get a scuba mask
And come ask what you are thinking

Bluebird redbird redbird reef
A subway car beneath the sea
Goodbye bluebird
Can you see
The sun in the waves
Up here?


Inspired by a trip my daughter and I took to the NYC Transit Museum. In the 1960s, the World's Fair came to Queens and the Bluebirds --painted light blue -- were the cars of a special express train that took you right to it. These cars remained in service after the World's Fair and continued to run along the 7 line -- the line that takes you to Shea Stadium / now Citi Field.

In the 80s, these cars were painted a graffiti-resistant red and started being called Redbirds.

These cars were finally retired starting in the late 90s. Many of them were then submerged to be used as artificial reefs off the coasts of New Jersey, Delaware, and elsewhere.




Dinoland, giant rockets = exhibits at the World's Fair
giant globe = that globe that was built for the World's Fair but still lives in Flushing Meadows Park and shows up in lots of movies

Gb Db Bbm Cb = the chords for this section. I always forget them so I decided to just leave them there so I can always find them on this blog.


Who does what on "Bluebird > Redbird, Redbird > Reef"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): electric bass, stylophone, toy piano
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): acoustic lead guitar
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): acoustic rhythm guitar, vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing


Henry (Hudson), How Ya Gonna Find a Way?

Henry (Hudson), How Ya Gonna Find a Way?
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c)(p)2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

He tried to find a Northwest Passage
a way from Africa to India
Henry, how ya gonna find a way?

He found an island and a river
and sailed around what we call New York City
Henry, how ya gonna find a way?

Hi-yi-ya
Hi-yi-ya-ya-ya
Henry, how ya gonna find a way?

If you believe Rip Van Winkle
Henry retired to the Catskills
Henry, how ya gonna find a way?

Henry and crew, they all got smaller
At night they make nine-pin thunder
Henry, how ya gonna find a way?


I wrote this in my head while driving to a school show in White Plains / Westchester / somewhere in that netherworld between NYC and upstate. The school was doing a curriculum about Henry Hudson and the 400th anniversary of his arrival. I taught the other Dees the tune while we plugged everything in and we performed it that morning.

The second verse is inspired by Washington Irving's short story, "Rip Van Winkle." Everybody knows about how Rip fell asleep then woke up to find everything changed (most notably the British are no longer in charge of the colonies in which he lives). But do you remember the whole bit about Henrik Hudson and his crew bowling in the mountains? They've become gnomes or something and all have long beards. I remember reading the actual "Rip Van Winkle" (rather than a kid's adaptation) as an adult and being like "What? I don't remember this!"

Who does what on "Henry (Hudson), How Ya Gonna Find a Way?"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): organ, vocals
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric guitar, vocals
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums, vocals
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): electric bass, lead vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing, vocals

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

The Golem

The Golem
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c)(p) 2010, 2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Ely Levin, Chris Johnson, and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

OTTO
The Golem is a superhero made out of mud
It can follow simple commands
But be careful what you ask it to do
Join us as we lift our big feet and walk like the Golem!

DEES
Listen to the big feet go bum! bum!
That's the sound of the Golem when he comes

OTTO
A long time ago
in Prague
Jews were being persecuted
A rabbi used mud from the river
to make a Golem
and brought it to life
to defend the people
The Golem fought for the Jews of Prague
but eventually got out of control
killing and destroying
The Holy Roman Emperor begged the rabbi to stop the Golem
and promised to end the persecuting of the Jews
The rabbi agreed.
He erased the first letter of the Hebrew word "emet" on the Golem's forehead
changing it from "truth" to "dead"

DEES
Listen to the big feet go bum! bum!
That's the sound of the Golem when he comes

ULYSSES
If you had your own Golem, a big creature that was big and strong, what would you ask it to do?

ROSIE
Uh... save people.

ULYSSES
Save people?

HAZEL
If I had a Golem, I would ask it to make me a mansion and make me candy.

RHYS
If I had a Golem, I'd have it play me a guitar and... sing me a song and... play drums to me.

GRANT
If I had a Golem, I would tell it to give me attention.

DEES
Listen to the big feet go bum! bum!
That's the sound of the Golem when he comes

ANNABELLE
If I had a Golem, I would ask it to save dogs.

GRANT
If I had a Golem, I would tell him to save people.

ROSIE
If I had a Golem, I would save bad guys.

HAZEL
Save bad guys?!

ROSIE
Yes!

GRANT
I wish the Golem was really real. Why are we really real?

ULYSSES
Why are we really real?

HAZEL
If I had a Golem, I would ask it to... uh... bonk my dad on the head!

It was reading Michael Chabon's The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay that first got me excited about the Golem. In that book, one of the characters smuggles himself out of Prague inside a Golem, a statue made of clay, just before World War II. This is one of many tales of the Golem, a creature some call the world's first superhero. Scholars have put him / it in the long line of possible ancestors to Superman and our modern-day comic book heroes that also includes American strongman John Henry, Hercules, Atlas, and many others. People also point to the similarities between the Golem and Frankenstein.

In this song, Otto gives us a short version of one of the variations of the "Golem of Prague" story, possibly the most famous Golem narrative, and some kids -- including my kids Hazel and Grant and Dean Jones' son, Rhys -- say what they would do if they had their own Golems to command.

Google "golem" and check out these books to find out more about the folklore and history related to this fascinating character:

Golem by David Wisniewski
cool, creepy picture book good for advanced kindergarteners or elementary-aged kids. For younger kids, try Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins by Eric A. Kimmel, illustrated by John Ed. Mayer and Trina Schart Hyman. It's not about the Golem but it's another eerie Jewish tale with scary creatures. My son loved this book when he was two.

The Golem and the Wondrous Deeds of the Maharal of Prague

by Yudi Rosenberg, translated by Curt Leviant
a book for grown-ups that tells a detailed version of the Golem of Prague story and digs deep into the cultural and religious history of the character

The Golem by Isaac Bashevis Singer, illustrated by Uri Shulevitz
out of print, but available online-- looks awesome

Many many other fascinating books about the Golem are out there. Fantasy books, plays, a retelling by Elie Wiesel... Tell us what you find.

Note on the music: In addition to our family shows, the Deedle Deedle Dees do a lot of music for grown-ups. We play swing, blues, bluegrass, soul, R&B, old rock-n-roll and, most pertinent to this song, klezmer.

Klezmer, in brief, is Jewish jazz, traditional and spiritual music that has roots in Jewish culture and religion and is played in an improvisational style. Ari Dolegowski AKA Moby Dee has been largely responsible for introducing the band to this music and getting us gigs where we can play it.  It's really fun -- everyone should play klezmer.

This song is my attempt to write a klezmer tune. I originally wrote it as an instrumental. We regularly perform klezmer at bar and bat mitzvahs, other synagogue functions, private parties and other events. Traditional tunes, some of them really really old, make up most of our repertoire but we added this original to the set after it just came to me one day. It's one of our favorite songs to play so I adapted it with lyrics for this album.

Who does what on "The Golem"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): banjo, vocals
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): mandolin, vocals
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums, spoken narration, vocals
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): upright bass, interview, vocals, stomping
Dean Jones: recording, mixing, vocals, stomping
Rhys William Jones Ellis, Hazel Phipps-Miller, Grant Phipps-Miller, Annabelle (last name), Rose Lorenzo: commentary














Whaleship Essex

Whaleship Essex
Words by Lloyd Miller
Music by Ely Levin and Lloyd Miller
(c)(p) 2011

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

BOOKER (pretending to be a PBS voice-over guy)
Once there was a ship
It was a real ship
It was a whaleship

DEES and DEAN (pretending to be dead sailors)
Whaleship Essex!

BOOKER
The ship met a whale
It was a real whale
It was a sperm whale

DEES and DEAN
Sperm whale in the Pacific!

ULYSSES
When that whale drove its head right into the ship
The Essex sank to the bottom

BOOKER
But before it did, survivors gathered what they could from the wreckage...

That's when the real adventure began

There were three boats
small boats
whale boats

DEES and DEAN
Escaped from the Essex!

BOOKER
Their Food and stuff
Weren't nearly enough
And they took to
the Open Pacific!

ULYSSES
One thousand miles west
Were  islands that
some said
Were home to, yes,
cannibal civilization
A vote by surviving crew
Capt Pollard overruled
The boats set course for South America

Boat 1: Owen Chase and his sailors separated in a squall
Boat 2: In Pollard's boat all the food was gone before long
Boat 3: Hendricks and co were never seen again
But somebody came back to tell us bout the whole thing
No water no food for days what would you do?
Sailors baking in the sun, son, what would you do?
And how's the story end for the poor Essex crew?
Well go read a book by Philbrick cos I don't think I can tell you

And just like Moby Dick
What this whale did was sick
He picked up speed and rammed the Essex

When Melville heard this tale
Of a whaleship and a whale
He was sailing in the South Pacific

BOOKER
On a whaleship...

Not far from where the Essex sank...

Dean = Dean Jones, producer of our record, leader of Dog on Fleas

If you're a regular reader of this blog then you know I'm obsessed with whales, whaleships, Moby Dick, Herman Melville, and the nonfiction books of Nathaniel Philbrick. Rather than post yet again about these important topics, I'll just say, yet again, read these books:

In the Heart of the Sea - Nathaniel Philbrick (short, breathtaking account of the Essex. You'll read it in an afternoon. This afternoon!)

Revenge of the Whale
- Nathaniel Philbrick (same story re-written for YA audience)

Moby Dick - Herman Melville
People always joke about Moby Dick and War and Peace and how they're so long and they say things like "I'd read Moby Dick before I'd do that" and... this makes me really mad. Read Moby Dick. It's not that long. Then read War and Peace. It's somewhat longer but not that long. Both books are well worth your time. Both are better than "Mad Men," better than "The Wire," better than any of the stuff people hear I haven't seen and say "YOU HAVE TO WATCH IT RIGHT NOW." Yeah yeah yeah. READ MOBY DICK!


Who does what on "Whaleship Essex"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): harpsichord, marching band bass drum, narration, dead sailor vocals
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): mandolin
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums, scary piano
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): lead vocals, dead sailor vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing, rhumba box, dead sailor vocals

River of Blood

River of Blood
a song about the circulatory system

words and music by Lloyd Miller
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller
(c) (p) 2008, 2010

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011)


The River of Blood keeps on flowin'
The River of Blood keeps on goin'
Oh, the River of Blood
it flows to your toes
It's the River of Blood
That doggone River of Blood

Oh, the River of Blood you can't put your bike in it
But the River of Blood -- lots of things to like in it
Amino acids and gases
blood cells and hormones
Veins bring blood back to the heart
And the arteries are how it goes

The River of Blood keeps on flowin'
The River of Blood keeps on goin'
Oh, ride the River of Blood
round the bend of your elbows
It's the River of Blood
That doggone River of Blood

Oh, the River of Blood the heart keeps pumping
that's why it flows
it pumps oxygenated blood to the body
deoxygenated blood to the lungs
2000 gallons a day
60,000 miles
The River of Blood could go around the world
two and a half times


I wrote this song with my daughter Hazel in Vermont one summer. I would push her in the swings every day and sing songs, often songs I made up on the spot. The one that really captured her imagination was "River of Blood." I think I started it just as a fake Johnny Cash / "Blood on the Saddle" / "Ghost Riders in the Sky" kind of song but then changed it into this info-heavy tune about the circulatory system. Hazel helped me come up with some of the best lines, the very best being: "You can't put your bike in it."

Who does what on "River of Blood"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): organ, vocals
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric guitar, vocals
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums, vocals
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): electric bass, lead vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing, vocals

Mayor LaGuardia's Stomach

Mayor LaGuardia's Stomach
music by Chris Johnson
story by Esther Levine (grandma of Ari Dolegowski AKA Moby Dee)
interview by Lloyd Miller and Ari Dolegowski

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

ESTHER
You want to hear about me bouncing off the stomach of Mayor LaGuardia?

ULYSSES and MOBY
Yes! Yes!

ESTHER
I was looking for an apartment. And I don't know why I was looking for an apartment on Mott Street! I must have seen an advertisement. And I wasn't looking... I was looking this way. I wasn't looking where I was going. And I bounced off this man's stomach... he wasn't much taller than I am. He was short! But I thought I was seven feet tall.

ULYSSES and MOBY laugh.


ESTHER
And he was walking with a guard. And they never stopped me! I bounced right off his stomach. And I said, "Mayor LaGuardia!" And he walked on and I walked on.

ULYSSES
He didn't acknowledge you in any way?

ESTHER
I... we weren't having a conversation! I just bounced off his stomach. And he had a stomach.

musical interlude

ESTHER
I'm on TV?!

MOBY
Not live.

ESTHER
Is my hair combed? Okay, my right side of my profile is my better side. (to Ulysses) You're good.


Esther, Ari's grandma, is a big part of our life. Her apartment is near the school where my wife teaches second grade and where I teach lots of lessons and do songwriting projects so it's a convenient spot for acoustic rehearsals during the week. She loves our visits and treats them as her own private concerts. She always spreads out far too much food and asks whether we would like her to order us a pizza -- an offer we always turn down. I'm usually on my way to swim laps after our rehearsal and everyone else... well, they're just not in the mood for pizza, I guess. Someday we'll say yes.

The story she tells here is one of her classics, one she has retold many times in many different ways. We spent an afternoon with Esther talking about her varied adventures and got most of it recorded. Maybe we'll post the complete interview on this blog sometime.

Who does what on "Mayor LaGuardia's Stomach"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): baritone ukulele, melodica, piano, electric bass
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): interview
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): interview
Esther Levine: storytelling
Dean Jones: recording, mixing

Sojourner Truth

Sojourner Truth
words by Charlotte Banigan-White and Lloyd Miller
music by Lloyd Miller
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller
(c) (p) 2008, 2011

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

Sojourner Truth traveled up the mountain
the moon was right behind her
she looked down the mountain
at those who tried to stop her

The moon looked like a light
and shined on Sojourner Truth
Where she's going
you're invited too

An angry mob broke up the tent meeting
Sojourner's first thought was hiding
She fled to the top of a small rise of ground
It turned into a mountain when she turned around

And sang a song
Sojourner told 'em all
'Bout being born a slave
They heard her out and then they went away

She was good on her feet, I guess
Kind of like you, Moby Dee

I wrote this with the help of some kids in Western Massachusetts. Charlotte, credited at top, wrote most of the lyrics and I came with the chords, tune, etc.  I worked with her and a bunch of other kids at First Churches of Northampton on a whole original musical show about the history of the church and the Northampton area called Journey On. The show was performed at the church at Christmas time in 2008. Lots of other adults (Cynthia and Chris!) collaborated on this show -- I'll get your names up here soon.

Who does what on "Sojourner Truth"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): piano
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): mandolin, electric guitar
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): upright bass, lead vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing, trombone

Penny Farthing

Penny Farthing
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c)(p)2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

The little little wheel is called Penny
The big big wheel is called Mr Farthing
Riding through the countryside
Penny
farthing
We sit way on top

Ridin' through the countryside
Penny
Farthing!
We push the pedals and sit way on top
Careful of a sudden stop
Over the handlebars
Come a cropper
Fall on your head
Start all over again

Written for our bicycle-themed variety show in November 2010 at the Knitting Factory. The penny farthing is a dangerous cousin of the bicycle, a vehicle likely to send its rider over the handlebars.

Who does what on "Penny Farthing"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): piano, lead vocals
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric guitar
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums, bicycle sound effects
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): upright bass
Dean Jones: recording, mixing

Phineas Gage Has Something to Tell These People

Phineas Gage Has Something to Tell These People
music by Ely Levin, words by Lloyd Miller (c) (p) 2011

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

PHINEAS PRE-ACCIDENT:
Phineas Gage
I'm on the railroad work gang
boring rock for roadbeds
that's my game
foreman of the crew
i put the powder, fuse and sand
tamp it down with the iron rod  in my hand
September in Vermont
doing what I always do
load it up, stand back
b-boom boom boom
Iron flies through my cheek
out the back of my head
they found it 30 yds from the accident

PHINEAS POST-ACCIDENT:
Aw... what's up?
I feel all right
Yeah man I can ride in an oxcart to the boarding house
Anybody see that rod go through my head?  Wow.

Phineas Gage
I'm my own stunt double
crow bar through my head
c-cause me no trouble
i do what i want   
what I want I do is... um...
what was it I wanted to do?
hey, I know you

so they told me i can't do what I did before
i'm gonna take this tamping iron and go on tour
Barnum will take a handsome dude like me
put me up on the stage, folks'll pay to see      

Phineas Gage
I'm my own stunt double
crow bar through my head
c-cause me no trouble
i do what i want   
what I want I do is... eat
no, take that food away, I'm tired
I need to sleep
Where's my hat?
I'm hungry!
I'm ready for my bath
take me to the river
is it raining?
i wish it would snow...

DR. JOHN MARTYN HARLOW:
[The tamping iron] entered the cranium, passing through the anterior left lobe of the cerebrum, and made its exit in the medial line, at the junction of the coronal and sagittal sutures, lacerating the longitudinal sinus, fracturing the parietal and frontal bones extensively, breaking up considerable portions of the brain, and protruding the globe of the left eye from its socket, by nearly half its diameter.

Phineas Gage
I'm my own stunt double
crow bar through my head
c-cause me no trouble
i do what i want   
and what I want what I want what I want...



If you've never heard the story of Phineas Gage, Google him or read the book Phineas Gage: A Gruesome But True Story About Brain Science by John Fleischman. After you do, write us with any questions you have about our dramatization of his ordeal.

Who does what on "Phineas Gage Has Something to Tell These People"
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): keyboards, programming, medical report reading
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): vocals
Emily Dooley: questions
Dean Jones: recording, mixing, programming

And the title of our new album is...

We've decided to go with the top vote-getter in our Facebook poll, but this wasn't the only factor in our decision. A number of people expressed their preference for this title independently of Facebook. Also, our designer Greg Bunch said it was the one that worked best with his graphic ideas for the album cover (which you'll see soon).

Chris Johnson (AKA Booker Dee) came up with this title. Thanks to him, Dees Otto and Moby, and everyone else who sent us their suggestions.

The title of our new album is:

Strange Dees, Indeed

All 18 tracks on Strange Dees, Indeed will be available for reviewers, radio folks, and other media types to download by the end of August. The album will officially be released to the public on October 31st. You'll be able to buy a hard copy on CDBaby or a digital version on iTunes and other services.

I'm in the process of posting lyrics to all the songs on Strange Dees, Indeed on this blog. I'm also including some brief background on each song: what inspired it, what it's about, etc.  When I finish this project today or tomorrow you'll be able to find everything simply by searching for the song title(s) you want. And I'll continue to add these entries: related books for kids and grown-ups, your suggestions for where to learn more about the subjects of our songs and more. So check back here frequently -- you'll always find something new and worthwhile.

L




Dead Horse Bay

Dead Horse Bay
words and music by Lloyd Miller
(c) (p) 2010, 2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 

Broken baby dolls and animal bones
that's what I found at Dead Horse Bay
Pets used to come here
and leave as glue
So if you hear a bark or neigh...

Put your Leopard-skin pocketbook on your shoulder... now sashay
Fill up your wooden pipe even though it's far decayed
Shake your silver rattle, don't listen to the sound
Pour your tea before the spout falls to the ground

Dead Horse Bay
Can Sitar Boy sing without a head?
Dead Horse Bay
Can a heel from a shoe walk without a leg?

These are the things we found while walking one day
along the beach at Dead Horse Bay
I'd like to come here,
leave as glue
hold together the next thing you make

I wrote this song for our Underwater Halloween variety show at the Knitting Factory in October 2010. The show was a collaboration with Underwater New York. This song was inspired by an exhibit on their site, a place I'd highly advise you to visit: http://underwaternewyork.com/category/body-of-water/dead-horse-bay-body-of-water/




Who does what on "Dead Horse Bay"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): electric bass, banjo, vocals
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): mandolin, vocals
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums, vocals
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): lead vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing

Sacagawea

Sacagawea
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c)(p) 2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees

She swaddles her  baby
Tucks him in a paddleboard
Climbs into the pirogue
as the wild Missouri roars

SUH- KAH - GA - WEE - AH!

Charbonneau lets the tiller go
screams prayers to the sky
baby in one arm, a Momma
saves our supplies

You gave us words, Janey
Tomorrow we climb to the sea
No map and no road
Hungry sick and cold
And so far from home...

Only 33 of us
went all the way and back
Only one
She's the one
baby on her back



Yes, Sacagawea is the same as the person we called "Sacajawea" when I was a kid. Most of the current books and documentaries use this new spelling and pronunciation in a attempt to be truer to how she might have said it herself. In Lewis and Clark's journals they spell her name many different ways -- her language was all verbal so English speakers like them could only approximate how words were spelled. Sacagawea is the current politically correct way to spell her name -- this will probably change by the time the album actually comes out.


At a party years ago, a friend of Anand Mukherjee (AKA Innocent Dee who founded the band with me) told me that we should write a song called "Sacajawea, Sock It To 'Em!" (she used the old pronunciation). I tried for a while but just couldn't come up with anything that wasn't stupid.



But then during the recording of this album I saw some footage of Queen at Live Aid. I realized -- I'm not saying this in jest -- all that ROCK can truly be. I attempted to write a Queen song about Sacagawea. It's not up to the level of what Freddie Mercury was doing during that concert -- and certainly not all that rock can truly be -- but we like it. We perform this song and feel sort of like Freddie and that's not such a bad feeling.

Janey = William Clark's pet name for Sacagawea. This song is sung from his imagined point of view.

Who does what on Sacagawea (Sock It To 'Em!)
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): piano, electric bass, vocals
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric guitar, vocals
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums, vocals
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): lead vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing

Birds of America Don't Care-Oh

Birds of America Don't Care-Oh
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c)(p) 2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 


Birds of America don't care-oh
How they look in pictures
Well maybe sparrows
the coot is vain
so's the black cap titmouse
Creeping warblers complain
but not like the screech owl

If they'd been alive to see themselves drawn
what would they have to say about John James Audubon?

Other creatures would be flattered
to see themselves in handsome books,
postcards and calendars
But birds are fickle, fancy fellows
a canary'll take you to court over a shade of yellow

If they'd been allowed to critique his work
Would his name still be synonymous with birds?

Would the Grey-Crowned Purple Finch take offense?
Or the Least Peewee Flycatcher be incensed?
Can't you see Bonaparte's gull now, hand to his breast?
And we've all seen bob-o-links and vireos bothered by less

Never a man to hunt birds for sport
Audubon still ate some Birds of America
after he finished up their portraits



Written after I read the book Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel. At one point in this historical novel, Thomas Cromwell and others critique their portraits by Hans Holbein. These paintings of course are part of every art history slide show for the period, definitive works that are studied by most aspiring art scholars or artists. I really liked imagining these works when they were brand-new and people were looking at them saying things we might say: "Do I really look like that?"

So, my mind working the way that it does, this caused me to wonder: What if Audbuon's birds saw themselves as depicted by the name who, in many ways, is "synonymous with birds?" What would they have to say about paintings, which, in the world of bird and animal art, are just as definitive as Holbein's portraits.

Um, yeah. That's the nutty story of how this nutty song came about.

Who does what on "Birds of America Don't Care-Oh"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): piano
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric guitar, crow, pigeon and other bird calls
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): upright bass, vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing, trombone, bird orchestration


Cool Papa Bell

Cool Papa Bell
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c)(p) 2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller

appears on Strange Dees, Indeed by the Deedle Deedle Dees (release date: October 31, 2011) 


Cool Papa
Cool cool Papa
Cool Papa
Cool Papa Bell

Swing, Papa
Swing swing, Papa
Swing, Papa
Swing, Papa Bell

Ring, Papa
Ring ring, Papa
Ring, Papa
Ring ring the bell

Cool Papa
Cool cool Papa
Cool Papa
Cool Papa Bell

Cheetah cheetah
When your feetah
Go round and round
Go round and round

Cheetah cheetah
When your feetah
Go round and round
Go round and round

RAP:
Scored from first on a sac bunt
Hit by his own hit slidin into second
So many stories, some of 'em true
Like the day he said to Satchel,
"I'll bet you
I can turn off the light
and get in my bed
before that bulb goes dark overhead.
Satch didn't know there was a short in the lightswitch
Found out later...
He was like "aw..."


I wrote this song with my son when he was 2. I originally planned to add more words that described, in my typical information overload form, all about the Negro Leagues and Cool Papa's career. When my son responded to the simple chorus and began to sing it with me, though, I decided just to leave the song as a simple sing-song tune that even our youngest fans could join us in singing. I added the rap later because I love that story about Satchel Paige and James Thomas "Cool Papa" Bell.

Who does what on "Cool Papa Bell"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): keyboards, electric bass, vocals
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric guitar, vocals
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums, vocals
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): lead vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing, synth, vocals









 























s

Ah Ahimsa

Ah Ahimsa
words and music by Lloyd Miller (c) (p) 2011
arrangement by Ari Dolegowski, Chris Johnson, Ely Levin, and Lloyd Miller

CHORUS
Ah... ahimsa
Shake out your limbsa
Drift to the ground, yeah
Make a lotus flower, yeah
Mahatma Gandhi
He's the one who told me
He fought the British Army
Without a gun

ULYSSES
I say "ahimsa" and I mean "do no harm"

BOOKER
"himsa" - harm in Sanskrit
"a" - "no" or  "non"

ULYSSES
I read about nonviolence and I'm like yeah that's my philosophy
But as soon as I leave the house I feel differently
Why can't people be nice to me?

BOOKER
Have you wanted to punch somebody... But then walked away? That's ahimsa... Sort of.

Gandhi's idea of ahimsa was that you didn't even think about punching the person in the first place...

ULYSSES
Ahimsa, it's easy, man
When you read what the Swamis said
But not so easy when someone hits you on the head
I'm all about ahimsa when I'm standing on my head...
But not so much when I see a kid push my kid
I'm like, yo, is anyone else practicing ahimsa around here?

How did you do it, I'd like to know
When the cops came out with the riot hose?

How did you do it, I'd like to know
When they whipped out the clubs and started whacking you?

Ahimsa... I know what you're going through
Ahimsa... It's hard to do
Ahimsa


I wrote a first draft of this song while working at a wild school in the South Bronx. I was working with four fourth grades, each studying a different country. The class studying India had an especially difficult time practicing nonviolence. Kids punched, pinned, choked, and generally battered each other just as a matter of course, the classroom teacher unable to stop them and I, armed with my guitar and my jokes, only able to distract them from their brawls. One day, in an attempt to rein in this one kid who was always throwing himself on the floor to do push-ups or roll around, I suggested that we do some yoga. The kids loved it and it became immediately the only thing they ever wanted to do. I decided to work it into our songwriting activities and in the performance of our song itself.

"Ah Ahimsa," in its original form ("Do the Ahimsa") began with a sun salutation and then each line was accompanied by a different yoga move (or pseudo yoga move). Honestly, it was the only way I could get the class through the whole song without someone being injured.

I always liked the idea of the song but the music not so much. It was a standard 12-bar blues that I wrote on the spot as I stood in front of a chaotic classroom searching for something that would quickly get them singing along. When I began to consider reviving the tune for this new album I rewrote the melody over some more interesting -- and Bollywoodish -- chords, added a B section, and changed the point of view of the song to my own. The spirit of the kids is still there, though. Nonviolence is a great idea but a hard thing to put into practice, especially when no one around you is practicing ahimsa.


Who does what on "Ah-Ahimsa"
Booker Dee (Chris Johnson): keyboards, vocals
Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski): electric guitar, vocals
Otto von Dee (Ely Levin): drums, professional Bollywood drum machine, vocals
Ulysses S. Dee (Lloyd Miller): electric bass, lead vocals
Dean Jones: recording, mixing, vocals

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Track listing for the new record

These titles aren't all final. We're just posting them to help you if you're participating in our Facebook poll to name the record.

Sacagawea (Sock It to 'Em)
we reach for Queen levels of rock pomposity on this tune sung from the POV of William Clark

River of Blood
a song about the circulatory system

Marie Curie
featuring Moby Dee's first singing on record -- in French!

Sojourner Truth
written for a show about the history of the Northampton area

Dead Horse Bay
written for our "Underwater Halloween" show, a collaboration with Underwater New York. http://underwaternewyork.com/category/body-of-water/dead-horse-bay-body-of-water/

Bluebird > Redbird, Redbird > Reef
a ballad for the subway cars that originally took passengers to the World's Fair then were painted graffiti-proof red, then were eventually sunk to become reefs

Cool Papa Bell
about the Negro League star

A Song for Abigail Adams
a love song sung by an idealized John Adams

Skating in Old Bryant Park
What if the statue of William Cullen Bryant behind the New York Public Library got up and started ice skating?

Birds of America Don't Care-Oh
Audubon's birds talk back. They don't like those paintings as much as everyone else does.

Whaleship Essex
The tale that inspired Moby Dick retold with a fake PBS narrator, rapping, singing sailor ghosts and other weirdness.

Camperdown Elm
an ode to my favorite Brooklyn tree

Ah-Ahimsa
Ahimsa, the philosophy of non-violence practice by Gandhi, is harder to put into practice than you think. I wrote an original draft of this Bollywood send-up while working with a wild class in the South Bronx studying India.

Henry (Hudson), How Ya Gonna Find a Way?
original draft written for a school show in Westchester. They were doing a Hudson 400 curriculum.

Penny Farthing
about those dangerous cousins to bicycles with one giant wheel and one tiny one.

Bo Obama
a story song about allergies, hypo-allergenic dogs, and one dog's rise to the White House

Phineas Gage
A hip hop account of the famous neurological case

The Day I Ran into Mayor LaGuardia's Belly
Esther, grandma of Moby Dee (Ari Dolegowski) tells one of her famous stories over a swinging tune written by Chris (Booker Dee)

The Golem
A marching / dancing tune about the mythical creature / superhero made of mud.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Family project: Little House

When I was in fourth or fifth grade, we had to read one of the Little House books for school. I can't remember which one. I dutifully plowed through it but considered it a horrible waste of my time. I had biographies of baseball and football legends, eyewitness accounts of WWII battles and other important boy books to read and was greatly annoyed that I was required to use valuable reading time on a book about girls. The only part of the book I can even vaguely remember was an account of a Indian encounter that hinted at being violent but disappointingly ended with little or no bloodshed.

Now, father of a 5-year-old-year daughter, I find myself re-visiting the world of Laura Ingalls Wilder. My wife started reading Little House in the Big Woods on a long family car ride last week and suddenly, after nearly falling asleep as she read the shockingly bad first volume of the Ivy + Bean series(chosen by my daughter at the bookstore), I found myself listening intently to descriptions of pig butchering, maple candy making, and rifle cleaning. How did I miss all this wonderful minutiae when I was a kid? I've now joined the reading tag team as we -- at my daughter's request -- set out to read the entire series. At night Little House by flashlight is the one thing that will entice my kids away from the still-light outdoors to their beds...

Want to join our Little House project? In addition to reading all the books we're also -- dork that I am -- studying up on the clothes they wore, the tools they used, and, most importantly for me, the music they loved. My 3-year-old son is now obsessed with "Arkansas Traveler," one of the tunes Laura's father plays on his fiddle. This morning we watched three different versions on YouTube. Please feel free to post on the Deedle Deedle Dees Facebook wall any suggestions you have for enriching a family reading project like this. Or just let us know you're reading too!



L

Monday, June 20, 2011

Set list for International Festival of Arts & Ideas, New Haven CT 6/19/11

Below is our set list from the International Festival of Arts & Ideas in New Haven, CT, yesterday.

Special thanks to:
- The great festival staff and sound crew. Not just friendly, these folks went out of their way constantly to make sure we had a good show and a comfortable festival experience. Bravo!

- Tim H. Thanks for lending us your beautiful guitar!

- The Ebony Hillbillies -- We got to open up for this wonderful string band. The grown-up version of the Dees used to play swing and klezmer at the same venue as the Hillbillies: Stan's, a New Orleans-style restaurant in Brooklyn that sadly closed down. We never got to see the EHs there (our shows were always on different nights) but it was awesome to finally hear them last night. They killed it! http://www.ebonyhillbillies.com/

As always, if you have questions about any of these songs, write me at thedeedledeedledees AT yahoo DOT com.

1. Sojourner Truth
2. Little Red Airplane
3. Nellie Bly
4. The Golem
5. Dead Horse Bay
6. Baldy
7. A Song for Abigail Adams
8. Henry, How Ya Gonna Find a Way? (a tune about Henry Hudson)
9. Henry Box Brown
10. Skating in Old Bryant Park
11. Cool Papa Bell
12. ¡Sí Se Puede!
13. Tub-Tub-Ma-Ma-Ga-Ga

Read more about the festival here: http://www.artidea.org/event.php?id=402

L