Audio Collection
My 'Magination
Pobba
In his songs for clever kids (ages 3-9)...and grown-ups who can keep up, Pobba (he's like a treasured grandpa) combines really funny, imaginative lyrics with music by Grammy Award winner Doug Cotler.
Collection Contents
| # | Title | Length | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
My 'Magination | 4:11 | Play |
| 2 |
|
I'm Making Dinner | 3:15 | Play |
| 3 |
|
The Worst Day of My Life | 4:05 | Play |
| 4 |
|
Marshmallows | 3:25 | Play |
| 5 |
|
I See What I See at the Sea | 3:03 | Play |
| 6 |
|
Pb+j | 2:33 | Play |
| 7 |
|
I'm Proud to Be Me | 2:00 | Play |
| 8 |
|
Buttering Bread | 2:39 | Play |
| 9 |
|
If I Had a Pet | 3:21 | Play |
| 10 |
|
Wonderful World | 2:19 | Play |
| 11 |
|
I Don't Sleep Anymore | 4:00 | Play |
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Description
Pobba is an energetic, exciting grandfather who has never forgotten what it was like to be a kid. His songs, stories, and concert performances connect to kids...and their parents. Pobba captures the way kids think and talk...and challenges them to imagine!
Pobba was recently interviewed by his alter-ego, Steve Cotler, retired educator, scientist, screenwriter, and banker.
Steve Cotler: Why do you write and sing children's songs?
Pobba: As a kid, and still today, I love those "discovery" moments when children find something new. I put those moments in every song and then watch the faces open up with surprise and laughter.
SC: How did you get started singing?
Pobba: I grew up around music. My father was a cantor. He couldn't walk from one room to another without breaking into song. He'd pass Mom in the hall, sing out, "I'll be loving you always..." and then make a sandwich.
SC: You're a grandfather...and "My 'Magination" is your first album. What took so long?
Pobba: I started writing rhyming stories for my own children in 1975. My brother Doug, a Grammy Award-winning composer, put music to some of them, but we were just too busy on other projects. The children's songs stayed within my family...in a file drawer. Years passed. I continued to write songs. Then I became a grandfather...that should explain it.
SC: Where did the name "Pobba" come from?
Pobba: My kids call me Dad, Pop, and Poppa. Then the last name morphed into "Pobba"...and I liked it. I hope the name "Pobba" connotes warmth and a good sense of humor, because that's who I am.
SC: Whom do you admire?
Pobba: Shel Silverstein and Dr. Seuss for their writing and art, Frank Loesser for his words and music (is there a better Broadway show than "Guys and Dolls"?), Danny Kaye for his antic performance, Maury Wills for base stealing excellence, and my five children for letting me express myself as a parent.
SC: How do you say your name?
Pobba: "Pobba" should be pronounced to rhyme with Jabba the Hutt. Say PA-Bah, not POOH-Bah or POE-Bah. If you're from Boston, however, I guess it's okay to say Pa-Ber.
SC: Tell us about your music.
Pobba: I consider it a privilege and an obligation when parents invite my music into their children's lives. For that reason (and because I remember how much fun being a kid can be), these songs do not talk down to kids. All the songs on "My 'Magination" were originally written to be picture books or videos. Every song tells a story from a child's point of view. Funny, stimulating, and different, these tunes, as the CD title announces, encourage imagination, visualization, and participation.
--The title song, "My 'Magination," sets the tone. It encourages listeners to explore imaginary possibilities.
--"Making Dinner" is a child's desire for culinary self-actualization...and a parent's worst nightmare.
--"The Worst Day of My Life" lets kids see that even if "every single thing went wrong, wrong, wrong," the day can still turn out great if a little love is added.
--"Marshmallows" is a participatory counting song, with an irresistible opportunity to yell "yuk!"
--"I See What I See at the Sea" is a trip to the beach...interpreted as only a child could.
--"PB&J" makes the inevitability of stickiness synonymous with being a kid. Mothers know all about this.
--"I'm Proud to Be Me" was a song I first heard when I was four. It was on an album entitled "Little Songs on Big Subjects" (out-of-print for decades). Its title says it all.
--"Buttering Bread" celebrates all those kids who like what they do even if it doesn't look like what everyone else expects.
--"If I Had a Pet" tests parents with a child's request for a primate, an insect, a marsupial, and a fish.
--"Wonderful World" is a medley of two tunes that celebrate how great life can be. Snippets from the song Louis Armstrong made famous are wrapped around another song from "Little Songs on Big Subjects."
--Every parent has heard why kids don't want to go to bed. "I Don't Sleep Anymore" takes the explanations to imaginative heights...and ends the CD on a restful note.
SC: One last question--Has anyone actually prepared the meals described in "I'm Making Dinner"?
Pobba: I hope not!