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His music is featured on the Miss Lori and Hooper segments of PBS Kids Preschool Destination, where he appears as "Mr. Steve" and performs original songs between other programs. [1] Prior to his career as a recording artist, Roslonek graduated from Wesleyan University [2] and performed with a professional a cappella group on Martha's Vineyard. [3]
Greg & Steve are a musical duo based in Los Angeles, California. The duo, composed of Greg Scelsa (born October 29, 1947) and Steve Millang (born May 10, 1947), has been performing and recording children's music since 1975.
In 1991, Greg & Steve recorded the song, along with "Rain Rain Go Away", for their album Playing Favorites. In 2019, the song entered the public domain in the United States, and in 2024 sound recordings from 1923 of the song entered the public domain.
The first words ever recorded (in 1860 by Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville) was the first verse of the French folk/children's song "Au Clair de la Lune". In 1888, the first recorded discs (called "plates") offered for sale included Mother Goose nursery rhymes.
Song: "Get Ready To Wiggle" Greg tells everyone that there going to sing a song all about four animals. At the end of the song, he says that let's all growl like a scary bear. Song: "Here Comes A Bear" While Jeff, Greg and Murray are growling at the end of the song, Captain Feathersword arrives and tickles them with the feathersword.
From 2012 to 2019 it was known as Best Children's Album, after the Best Musical Album for Children and Best Spoken Word Album for Children categories were merged (basically returning to the situation as it was prior to 1994, although with a small name change). In 2020, spoken-word children's albums were moved to the Best Spoken Word Album ...
The song's playful lyrics include onomatopoeia, with the "motorboat" sound [5] (an extended raspberry) imitating a car's engine. [6] Possibly the best known of Guthrie's many children's songs, [7] it remains a family and sing-along standard into the 21st century. [6] [7] "Riding in My Car" is included in the popular sing-along songbook Rise Up ...
The song typically has only one verse, with lyrics similar to those below. The second line repeats the first line both in words and in melody, the third line has a rising tone, and the fourth line repeats the first two. Children might dance while they sing the song and touch their head, shoulders, knees, and toes in sequence to the words. [4]