(A  rare posting by Todd)
One  of my pet peeves as a father and as someone who values the arts is  the  way that so much pablum and nonsense gets waived in front of our  faces  in the name of entertainment. As our society has become  increasingly  driven by consumption - that is, everything has become  commodified so  that it is pushed to be bought or sold - we have had our  senses dulled  for quality art and we have learned to settle for a rather  low bar for  what passes as art. What’s worse is that we have become  more accustomed  to accept "art" as entertainment instead of something that  we  participate in, learn from, and get inspired by. It’s as if we were  all  sedated and our minds were re-wired to swallow the shallow and   mindless poor quality art as a means for turning off our minds and   especially our own creative imagination. Of course, this dulls the  emotions as well. Thus, entertainment has  replaced art, where  entertainment equals passive, mindless emotional  appeasement.
For  this reason and a few others, I have a  nauseous reaction to almost all  forms of children’s music that I hear  these days. There’s something deep  in me that acknowledges that while  children’s ears might perk up to  different style of music, there ought  to be some level in which really  good children’s music also appeals to  the adult imagination as well.  However, this adult appeal isn’t my main  issue. My bigger concern is how  something called children’s music  might have the capacity to enhance my  kids’ lives. Does it have the  ability not to merely entertain, but more  importantly, to draw my child  in and open up her mind to creativity and  reflection in a way that  causes both wonder and enrichment? I know, I  know, it’s a whole lot to  ask of something as simple as children’s  music. And the truth is there  is almost none of this happening in the  mainstream these days. But  every once in a while something comes along  that bucks the system, and  we get something that is truly wondrous and  engaging and, yes, fun.
That  has happened recently with a new double  CD by Natalie Merchant called Leave  the Sleep - click READ in lower  left to learn about the project. (I’ve been a fan of N.M. since her   days with the 10,000 Maniacs, so I was already predisposed, you might   say.) When Holli’s mom was visiting a couple of weeks ago, she brought   us a copy of Leave  the Sleep,  and we haven’t stopped listening to it.  According to the liner notes,  Merchant decided to draw on the classical  children’s poetry that her  daughter has enjoyed in her first several  years. Additionally, the  recordings cover a range of ethnic styles of  music giving you an Americana-immigrant feel. And these tunes tap into   the lyrically rich poetry in a way that makes you want to listen to the   music more intently and to dig up the poetry itself. But perhaps the  most compelling thing about Merchant's creative artistic concept is that  it’s simply very good music that makes  the ears and the mind happy. 
In  addition to the CD itself, Natalie  Merchant’s website  has a nice interactive framework for learning about  the project,  listening to selections from the CD, and even for reading  the poems  themselves which inspired the songs (click READ, WATCH, LISTEN). We  highly recommend this CD.  Oh, and I should also say that our daughter’s  favorite tune is “The  Dancing Bear” - she would want you to know that.