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This album continues a series of children's music recordings that Loeb has made, mixed in with music intended for adult audiences. Nursery Rhyme Parade! was produced by Amazon and accompanied by a 30-minute music video version shot in Hasting Studios for Amazon Prime. [1] Loeb also promoted the release with live sing-along performances for ...
Loeb's third children's album, Nursery Rhyme Parade!, was made available [43] exclusively through Amazon Music on October 16, 2015. The album includes 35 nursery rhymes and songs, [44] including renditions of "The Muffin Man" and "The Farmer in the Dell".
Lisa Loeb Embarked a small tour to promote the Children's album in the Fall of 2016 & Winter of 2017. Despite going on a children's tour, Lisa performed many of her "Adult" and "Older" songs. [ 5 ] Lisa also constantly played her songs on " Kids Place Live Radio " for nearly 1 year after release.
Loeb began the new millennium focused on children's music and has since recorded several albums in the genre, including Camp Lisa. 2013 saw the return of adult material with the release of studio album No Fairy Tale. Loeb returned again to children's albums with Nursery Rhyme Parade!, which was made available on October 16, 2015. [1]
As she releases her 15th album on her own label, it's a full-circle moment for the woman who was the first independent artist to go to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Nursery Rhyme Parade! (2016) No Fairy Tale is the seventh solo studio album by Lisa Loeb, released on December 12, 2012 in Japan and January 29, 2013 in North America ...
Ben Stiller, Lisa Loeb, Winona Ryder, Janeane Garofalo and Ethan Hawke celebrate the 25th anniversary of Reality Bites at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival at BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center on ...
The song is based on the ideals that she would pass down to her kids. “I wrote this album for what I’d like to pass along to my kids and kids in general,” said Loeb, “For this album, I wrote a song about ‘seeing’ and acknowledging others, in the song ‘Say Hello,’ and for kids to just have their feelings in ‘Feel What U Feel’ and not to judge them.” [4]