Some Assembly Required

RELEASE
September 27, 2005
LABEL
Razor & Tie
GENRES
Children, Children's Folk, Contemporary Folk

Album Review

Tom Chapin has been writing and singing songs professionally for some 30 years now, and his greatest success has come as a children's entertainer, where his penchant for writing songs that detail the minutiae of being a kid, with just enough extra added to make them interesting to parents as well, has earned him several awards. Some Assembly Required from Razor & Tie offers up another batch of these literate family tunes, opening with the loping "Puppy at the Pound," complete with fiddles, and moving on to cover such topics as losing a shoe ("Only One Shoe," a variant on the old it's-always-in-the-last-place-you-look joke), composting ("Brown Gold"), and individuality ("I'm the Only Me"). He also retools Hughie Cannon's "Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home" as the kid-centric "Bill Bailey, Get Yourself Back Home" and even manages to rock out a little on the goofy, energetic, and infectious "Don't Make Me Dance." Some Assembly Required stays positive and whimsical, and it might be more accurate to call Chapin a family songwriter, since his songs really manage to pull off the difficult feat of addressing both children and parents at the same time in the same song, and that kind of unity of purpose is a very special gift.
Steve Leggett, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Puppy at the Pound
  2. Only One Shoe
  3. Bill Bailey, Get Yourself Back Home
  4. How I Became a Clown
  5. My Face
  6. Brown Gold
  7. I'm the Only Me
  8. Walk the World Now, Children
  9. The Happiest Song I Know
  10. Questions
  11. Some Assembly Required
  12. Don't Make Me Dance
  13. Planet Bruno
  14. Quiet Time
  15. Home Is the Welcoming Sound
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