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Radical Aardvark
(reprinted from Time Magazine)
Rocker
David Weinstone is music to the ears
of toddlers and their grateful parents
by
Harriet Barovick
IN
A SPARE ROOM ON THE LOWER EAST Side of New York City
on a Wednesday morning, a disheveled music teacher multitasks
in front of his audience of 10 toddlers and their parents.
As he sings Bagel, he wiggles his hips goofily, preens,
then pretends to be a bread product inhabited by the
spirit of Mae West: "I'm big and round, I got a
hole in the middle/ And I'm lumpy and I'm bumpy and
they call me pumpernickel/I'm good in the morning, I'm
good at night/ A little bit of butter and I taste just
right/ Come on and gobble me up, gobble me up/ Gobble
gobble gobble me up."
In
this somewhat radical alternative-music class for toddlers-part
of a four-year-old New York City-based program called
Music for Aardvarks and Other Mammals-much is free-spirited
and unpredictable. But one thing is certain: there will
be no renditions of Itsy Bitsy Spider or I'm a Little
Teapot, thank you very much. Most programs that aim
to introduce toddlers to music rely heavily on traditional
folk songs, many of which have been around for centuries,
but the music in Aardvarks classes (and sold on CDs)
springs entirely from the brain of its punk-rocker founder
and lead instructor, David Weinstone. With its topical
song subjects and dizzying range of musical styles,
Aardvarks has become something of a cult phenomenon
among New York City hipsters. And the one-man operation,
along with the 10 CDs of music it is based on, is gaining
converts across the country.
With
no promotion or advertising ("I'm not very business-minded,"
Weinstone says), Aardvarks has grown from one class
with six kids in 1997 to 65 classes with 1,000 kids
a week in New York, and 100 on waiting lists each semester.
Clients of his $185 courses-in which toddlers listen
to, dance to and accompany songs with shakers, sticks
and tambourines-include some high-profile artists like
members of the bands Phish and Sonic Youth. Just last
year Weinstone was duping homemade tapes of his songs
out of his Brooklyn apartment (sales last year: 1,000).
This year he has mass-produced his 160 songs on CDs,
and through grass-roots sources-classes, a new website
(www.musicforaardvarks.com) and local merchants who
have asked to sell the album in their stores-he has
sold some 7,000 in just three months.
A
third of Weinstone's CD sales this year have come from
families who live well beyond the Big Apple-parents
who were not even aware that Weinstone teaches Aardvarks
but have heard about his music from friends. (He knows
this because he is the one who puts the CDs in the mail.)
Two years ago, Weinstone began to license the program
out to a few interested instructors. Now a dozen teachers
in New York teach Aardvarks under his watch, and classes
are under way in Chicago and Santa Monica, Calif.
In
the insular world of children's music, say experts,
this grass-roots popularity is unheard of. "Lots
of kids' music, like Barney or Sesame Street, is marketed
through TV or film," says David Wolin, a music-industry
veteran who takes the classes. "No one is doing
what David's doing. He has sort of grown at the pace
he's been comfortable with. He's like a commercial boom
waiting to hit. His numbers, small by label standards,
are astonishing if you consider he's doing this all
himself."
Since
even the most pleasant kids' music can rankle-fast-an
important part of Aardvarks' appeal to adults is that
they too can appreciate the tunes. "It's real music-the
songs are so good," says Phish keyboardist Page
McConnell, who has taken Aardvarks with his daughter.
"We listen to it all the time." The classically
trained Weinstone, 40, who attended Berklee College
of Music and once wrote a book of classical minuets
for the piano without ever having played that instrument,
writes songs that are alternately silly, loud and beautiful,
in styles including Delta blues, hip-hop and thrashing
rock'n'roll. There are references to '70s and '80s rock
that engage the parents. There are sitars and bongos,
and hints of the Beatles, Bowie and Brazilian pop.
And
if you think kids' music is just about talking teapots,
think again. Weinstone addresses such disparate themes
as spending the day alone with Dad, fighting with a
best friend, toilet training, going to visit the museum,
prejudice, old age and death. "I find kids get
the joke and can appreciate some sophisticated content
if the vehicle is correct for delivering it," He
says. "Other arts for kids, like literature or
theater, are of a different quality-any adult can enjoy
Charlotte's Web-but in kids' music, so much of what's
out there is gooey, badly written, condescending."
Kids
get the difference. In his classes, where the comedic
and unpretentious Weinstone skillfully puts even the
shyest children at ease, it's not unusual to see a toddler
rocking her head in perfect rhythm, or dancing a limbo,
say, with a laughing parent. Temple St. Clair Carr,
a jewelry designer, says her son Alexander, 4, likes
Weinstone so much he has begun to compose ditties of
his own on his ukulele. After Mollie Fox, a former client,
moved to Chicago last year, the songs helped ease her
son's transition to his new neighborhood. "He would
refer to Superman, about people looking different, as
a way of talking about the fact that our new neighborhood
was less diverse than our old one." Indeed, local
schools have used the music to inspire discussions on
tolerance.
And
for city dwellers, songs with names like Taxi, Modern
Art, Avenue A and Swing Town are groovy alternatives
to what Weinstone calls the "cute wiggly-bunny
and pony songs" at which he takes gentle jabs in
songs like New McDonald ("Old McDonald had a farm/
E-I-E-I-O/ But I live in a walk-up/Ready, set, go!")
and Little Bunny, about a rabbit who hops a train and
spends a night in jail. Raves Jesse Solomon, 4, who
treks to Manhattan from Brooklyn every Saturday with
his dad for classes: "The Subway song is great!"
Of
course, bunnies in jail don't work for everyone. "I've
had to return checks for songs that talk about old age
and bodily functions like pooping," Weinstone says.
"One woman told me she didn't like the Bagel song
because it had sexual undertones." Others have
attacked songs like I Like Your Toys, a hard-rock tribute
to Weinstone idol Lou Reed, for being too, well, adult
sounding. Yet, says Chicagoan Fox, "Toys is my
four-year-old's favorite song. People forget what kids
are like. Before you judge, watch the kids."
That's
something Weinstone has a gift for-especially after
1994, when his wife Nicole gave birth to their son Ezra,
7 (who figures in some of Weinstone's most poignant
tunes). Yet for a guy who thought he would make his
mark in punk bands-most recently Mozart's Grave, which
didn't take off-getting kudos as a kid's songwriter
has been a bit bewildering. After taking a day job in
1996 teaching Music Together, a traditional toddler
program, he realized, "I could write better songs."
Whether
Aardvarks' growing numbers of licensees will successfully
transmit Weinstone's quirky vision remains to be seen.
But Nanette DeCillis, who runs ArtsCetera, a kids' center
in Brooklyn, says her Aardvarks classes have grown eightfold
since she started offering them in 1998. "Not every
teacher feels able to do it," she says. "But
it works very well with the right personality."
Next
up for Weinstone: hiring office help, putting out his
11th CD and preparing for his and Nicole's second child,
due this summer. In the meantime, he's getting more
comfortable in his own skin. "For a long time I
almost didn't want the kids' stuff to be a hit, because
I wanted my band to be the hit," he says. Something
shifted when he was recording a CD with his producer
earlier this year. "We were mixing [the blaring
hip-hop] Avenue A, and there was this moment where we
looked at each other and just started laughing hysterically
that we were unloading this music on kids. But kids
are a great audience, and I accept that. I'm really
having a lot of fun."
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