Imagine That! The Sesame Street Music of Joe Raposo & Jeff Moss. Performed by Rena Strober. CD. Approx. 39 min. Rena Strober. 2020. CD: $14.99 ; Digital: $9.99. Pre-school – Gr 3, and their parents
Award-winning
actress, singer and advocate for the blind Rena Strober wanted to introduce a
selection of Sesame Street songs that exemplify human kindness to a new
generation of children. With her special guests, Jason Alexander, French
Stewart, Michael-Leon Wooley, Deborah Grausman, and opera singer Cristina Jones,
she accomplishes this goal. A small band of excellent musicians perform on piano,
synth, guitars—acoustic and electric, drums, percussion , bass, upright bass,
fiddle, mandolin, musical saw, washboard, banjo, and tuba. A special children’s
choir, DOTZ, is made up of children who are blind. Strober’s clear and light vocals
soar in these pop and jazz songs with a Broadway show flair. The album opens
with an invitation for “Somebody [to] Come and Play.” Next, listeners are
encouraged to “Sing” out loud, out strong, and of things happy not sad; this
songs includes some lyrics in Spanish. The narrator wants to “Imagine That” she
is a knight fighting a dragon, then on to other adventures. Sesame Street fans
will remember that it’s not easy “Being Green.” Beauty is in the eye of the
beholder in “I’m Pretty/I’m an Aardvark.” Even though “I Don’t Want to Live on
the Moon,” I would like to visit and look down at the Earth. “What Makes Music”
may be things as diverse as a flat tire’s hiss, a slurpy kiss, or a string you
plink. “Candy Hearts & Paper Flowers” will always keep me close to you. My “Imagination”
is right in the middle of my head. If you “Believe in Yourself,” you can be
what your want to be, learn what you want to learn, and try what you need to
try. A smile, laughter, a hug and a kiss is what it takes “To Love a Child.” “High
Middle Low” showcases soprano, alto, and bass voices separately, then together
in harmony. And “One Small Voice” can teach the world a song. “What Is Braille”
is a spoken explanation of Braille—using one’s fingers to see. This outstanding
album will give parents or grandparents who grew up with Sesame Street to share
their favorite songs with their children and grandchildren.
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