[toe-tapping review] Animal Albums from A to Z by Cece Bell

#64 in an ongoing series of posts celebrating the alphabet.

As a teen I used to love browsing the wooden bins at our local record store. Which LP should I take home for $3.25? Decisions, decisions. It was always a conundrum when parting with precious allowance money.

Of course I had been trained early on by my music-loving dad to treasure the vinyl discs that lived in all kinds of interesting cardboard sleeves (hello, Mantovani, Les Paul, Mario Lanza). As I began building my own record collection, I also grew quite enamored of album cover art — its own genre of inventive graphic design showcasing photos, illustrations, and typography — all on a neat 12″ x 12″ square.

Now that I think about it, some of my fave recording artists have animal names: Beatles, Monkees, Byrds, Steppenwolf, Buffalo Springfield, Iron Butterfly (and later, Eagles). So you can imagine how ecstatic I was to see Cece Bell’s, Animal Albums from A to Z (Walker Books, 2024) — a unique, wildly imaginative, uber creative tour-de-force that easily ranks in my top three favorite alphabet books of all time.

Letters. music. art. song lyrics. quirky. handmade. heartmade. humor. nostalgia. food (soup and pie!). Cece knows me. She’s checked all the boxes. Mind totally blown.

She opens her 64-page, all-ages ABC extravaganza with a tongue-in-cheek Introduction extolling the varied talents of imaginary animal musicians, enthusiastic to share 26 albums from her personal collection. She notes that they date from the 40’s to the 80’s, “the heyday of recorded animal music,” such records being difficult to find today.

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[wet and salty review] ringo starr’s octopus’s garden with art by ben cort

A year ago today, a special online friend whom I met at my old LiveJournal blog passed away. Though Slatts and I never met in person, we bonded over our mutual love for the Beatles and Bob Dylan. For eight years, we chatted about lyrics, album covers, adolescent memories, and biographical tidbits. As an artist and musician himself, Slatts was the logical go-to guy for backstories and questions, and I greatly admired the many caricatures and portraits he created of my rock idols.

Since Ringo was Slatts’s favorite Beatle, it seemed like a good time to feature this Octopus’s Garden picture book published in 2014. It contains Ben Cort’s vibrant jewel-toned illustrations inspired by Ringo’s original lyrics, and comes with a CD of Ringo reading the story aloud + vocal and instrumental versions of the song.

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bare, naked and crazy abcs

#34 in an ongoing series of posts celebrating the alphabet.

Nothing wrong with the traditional ABC song, but once in awhile it’s good to go crazy. Can you think of some head-turning words for each letter of the alphabet? When in doubt, go to the Barenaked Ladies for inspiration. Prior to listening to their “Crazy ABCs,” I hadn’t heard of “phon” or “qat.” And isn’t “vraisemblance” simply wonderful?

Goodbye mundane, hello pencil thin mustaches, a sip of cognac, warm brie.

What are you having for dinner tonight?

Filet of vraisemblance avec haricot verts.

Who brings your mail?

Monsieur Vraisemblance. Toujours un cadeau.

What are you writing about?

Vraisemblance, naturellement. Toujours, toujours!

See what I mean? It’s all good.

Knock yourself out.  And you gotta love a group who names an album, “Snack Time.”

Oh, gotta mention this: How do you pronounce “llama”? I always thought it rhymed with “drama.” Maybe it’s a Canadian thing . . . or the same people who think “Jama” rhymes with “drama.” ☺

♥ More alphabetica here.

Certified authentic alphabetica. Made by hand with love and beaucoup vraisemblance.

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Copyright © 2011 Jama Rattigan of Jama’s Alphabet Soup. All rights reserved.