Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Tuesday Storytime AND Summer Reading!

Two-fer posts all summer long, aren't you lucky!

Last week started off with a literal bang, with a great SRP performance by a local magician and musician who did a delightful and very well choreographed performance using a lot of classic music cues. Very clever and thoughtful and the music was integrated into every part of the performance except perhaps the magic rabbit that turned into a real rabbit for the kids to pet, but I'm going to overlook that because soft cuddly rabbit. But enough about him, this blog is about the books.

For the storytime earlier in the day, I focused on general music books to set the mood: later programs have more specific themes (dance, jazz, biographies) so I wanted to keep any of those back to make a connection between those programs.

I ended up with an old favorite, a new classic, and a fun little cutie. 

New Classic:
88 Instruments
Chris Barton
ISBN: maybe later
So this kid goes into a music shop and there are 88 instruments for him to choose from; which one does he want to take lessons with? We wander past the strings, triangles, electric guitar, are dreadfully tempted by the drum set, but then he discovers the piano, which (amazing coincidence not at all contrived by the writer) has 88 keys ALSO! And once he masters them all, he's going to play beautiful music, and then perhaps pick another new instrument to learn after all.

New Cutie:
Rock and Roll Soul
Author: hmmmm
ISBN: reply hazy
I don't normally like "scribbly" art, but I do want to give all different art styles and approaches a fighting chance, and the bubbly happy beat of this book was too much to pass up. I feel like there was a bit of a story (girl is going to perform in her school's talent show) but there really isn't any urgency or flow to that, just a set of spreads of her bopping and rocking out with her bad self and her amazing self esteem. Really fun.

Old Favorite:
My Family Plays Music
Author: I should know this but it's summer reading and a tuesday so I can barely remember I need to buy cat food tonight.
ISBN: not a chance
This is my "platonic ideal" book when I want to show people what diversity in picture books looks like. All these people are family, and they are all different, and all different-looking, and they all love each other and NOTHING in the story references their color or their nationality AT ALL. It's beautiful and I love it and it's nearly perfect. The narrator is a young girl, and she plays along with a VERY large musical family in lots of venues, picking just the right percussion instrument to fit in with a dizzying array of differing musical styles and traditions. Clean, clear, crisp, straightforward, no explanations or apologies. Just a family who loves music.

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