SONGS & STORIES FOR ALL AGES... FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT... EDUCATIONAL SCHOOL SHOWS
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CD ReviewBy Kathleen Kelly MacMillan, School Library Journal, June 2003 Steve Blunt's first album is a 14-track serving of fun music for kids and adults alike. Incorporating a variety of musical styles, from jazz ("Rainy Day") to 50s-style rock 'n' roll ("Digga Digga Dinosaur") to reggae ("Macaroni and Cheese"), Blunt never wavers from his kid's-eye view of the world. Nowhere is this more evident than in the hilarious "The Sacrifice Fly (or How I 'Beet' Mrs. Hoffman's Clean Plate Rule)," the tale of an unfortunate insect and a plate of cafeteria food. Even Blunt's deeper messages completely avoid heavy-handedness: "(You've Been Watching) Too Much TV!," for example, includes such lyrics as "Do your eyes bug out?/Are you sleepy in the bum?," and advises how to best avoid the need for a "TV-ectomy." "Who Will Win, the Tiger or the Lion?" has a message about sharing and taking turns in a silly jungle doo-wop. Blunt gets the emotions just right in "Don't Wake Up the Baby," when a young boy, sick of his new baby sister always needing sleep, overhears his mother telling her, "Don't wake up your brother!" This is an upbeat, kid-friendly album for the whole family, and Steve Blunt is an artist to watch. Writing little songs for BIG imaginations: Nashua singer-songwriter Steve Blunt is a kid favoriteBy John Collins, 1590 Broadcaster, January 2, 2003 He is not nearly as big or as purple as Barney. Express yourself by singing about macaroni & cheeseBy Lisa Parsons, HippoPress Manchester, November 7, 2002
Nashua resident Steve Blunt keeps a rhyming dictionary and an 800-page volume of New England folklore on top of his toilet. He might need them for writing song verses like this: "Well, teacher, how can you expect me to finish my lunch?/I got a pile of cooked beets that a dog wouldn't touch." School lunch is a well-worn topic in children's music. But you most likely have not heard a school lunch song like "The Sacrifice Fly," one of 14 songs on Blunt's new (and first-ever) CD, "Hang on, Henry!" In "The Sacrifice Fly," the child is spared a lunch of beets by the sudden appearance (and demise) of a hungry fly. The songs on "Hang On, Henry!" are heartfelt, funny and engaging. After a few listens, I can't help but think of nationally acclaimed loved-by-kids-and-grownups Massachusetts songwriter Bill Harley. Blunt appreciates the comparison, calling Harley "the Elvis of smart, funny children's music." At a recent performance at Leach Library in Londonderry, Blunt had kids in stitches. His baritone deadpan of "Trick or treat, smell my feet" had one boy rolling on the floor laughing. The parents liked it when he sang about dressing up as the scariest creature of all, the one that comes out at midnight... the Crying Baby. Blunt has been playing at libraries, birthday parties, schools, and even senior centers (bit of a different repertoire there) in New Hampshire for a few years now.With the CD, he's hoping to reach a wider audience. From Beatles to Beowulf Blunt is serious, thoughtful, and unfailingly polite. He doesn't laugh or joke much. He's earnest about the importance of family and the people who worked with him on the CD (like Otis Ball of Otis Ball and the Chains, a bassist named Killer, and sound engineers at Manchester's Rocking Horse Studio). "I'm 38, born in February, 1964," he said. "The Beatles were on the Ed Sullivan show the night I came home from the hospital. Family legend has it that I watched intently, which may be true, because I became the biggest Beatles freak around when everybody else was listening to Pink Floyd, AC/DC, Journey." When Blunt was in eighth grade, his family moved to the Chicago suburbs from Ohio. "It was tricky moving and making friends at that age, " he said. He spent hours alone listening to The Beatles and studying their lyrics. "That's when I really fell in love with recorded music and started paying attention to the words. From there, it wasn't long before I had my own guitar and was making up my own little songs." His formal education in music consists mainly of playing baritone horn in his school band, where he learned to read music - a skill he uses very little. The only guitar lessons he's ever had were from the Rev. Bill Lawser, who led a church youth group in Illinois. In second grade, young Steve Blunt wrote a verse called "Where the Monsters Are," derived from his favorite children's book (still), "Where the Wild Things Are" by Maurice Sendak. In high school, when the English homework was to analyze "Beowulf," he asked the teacher if he could write a song about it. He did his best thinking that way. At age 5, he had wanted to be a lion tamer; at age 10, a pro football player, and by 15, his aim was to become an English teacher, which he did. When he moved to New Hampshire to be with family he took a job teaching English at the Derryfield School, a private middle and high school in Manchester. Finding songs everywhere But there was always music and there was always writing. He works on his songs in the shower and practices them on his daughter at breakfast. "She's 3 years old and her favorite food is macaroni and cheese. We're driving in a car pointing at everything we can see that is the same color as macaroni and cheese. Pretty soon we start singing, and the song ('Macaroni & Cheese') writes itself in about an hour," he said. Blunt wrote "Hang On, Henry" - about a boy swept away on a kite - when his daughter was an infant. "I'm sitting in the recliner while she dozes peacefully in the space between my hand and the inside of my elbow. Staring vacantly out the window, I notice a kite is being flown way up in the air. I wonder how much force would be required to lift my infant daughter up, up and away," he said. "The song 'Hang On, Henry' is conceived but isn't finished 'til six months later when I'm jogging in some woods before an afternoon teachers' meeting." Last year he quit his Derryfield School position so he could devote time to his family and making music. Now, he's a substitute music teacher at a Nashua elementary school and he loves it. If he ever returns to regular teaching, he'd like it to be teaching music to young kids. Where and when Upcoming performances include: For information on booking a performance or buying CDs, visit www.steveblunt.com or call 888-3866. CDs are available at area Borders bookstores and other outlets. Article and photos from radio performance available on WERS website |
| steveblunt@comcast.net (603) 888-3866 | Page last updated on November 10, 2007 |