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Steve Klaper & Caitlin Klaper : I Have A Little Shadow
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Two-CD set of contemporary lullabies inspired by the poems of Robert Louis Stevenson's A Child's Garden of Verses. Jazz, pop, folk and ballads - this collection will appeal to adults and children alike. Beautifully illustrated book contains complete text
Genre: Kids/Family: Lullabies
Release Date: 2005
I Have A Little Shadow Record Label: Steve Klaper & Caitlin Klaper
  • Buy CD - $19.95
SPECIAL: 10% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
The Lamplighter 4:09 Album Only
Block City 3:30 Album Only
Keepsake Mill 4:10 Album Only
The Land of Counterpane 3:02 Album Only
Bed In Summer 4:11 Album Only
The Dumb Soldier 3:33 Album Only
The Swing 2:55 Album Only
Picture Books In Winter 3:52 Album Only
Armies In The Fire 2:40 Album Only
The Cow 2:52 Album Only
Windy Nights 2:16 Album Only
My Shadow 3:45 Album Only
Looking Glass River 3:29 Album Only
Singing/Rain 4:22 Album Only
A Good Boy 3:12 Album Only
for Robert 3:55 Album Only
preview all songs

Album Notes

Meet Steven and Caitlin Klaper!
This father/daughter duo recorded three CDs of original, contemporary Jewish music before Caitlin's 17th birthday. Now they've produced their first CD for children and families - I Have A Little Shadow - a collection of original melodies that provide a setting for the classic poems of Robert Louis Stevenson's, A Child's Garden of Verses.
These contemporary lullabies were written by Steve for Caitlin when she was just three years old. Now nineteen and a vocal music major in college, Caitlin and her Dad have completed the "project" begun some 16 years ago.
Steve writes:
"Once upon a time, parents read their children bedtime stories, sang lullabies and read them nursery rhymes. Some still do. In the late 1950's, my mom, who couldn't carry a tune in a bucket, sang to me anyway, and I thought it sounded beautiful. Every night, she sat on the edge of my bed at bedtime with a book. She read me stories of Raggedy Ann and Babar the Elephant and Curious George and Timothy Turtle, and the poems of Robert Louis Stevenson.
In 1988, my daughter Caitlin was 3 years old. Every night, her mom sat on the edge of her bed at bedtime with a book. She read Caitlin stories of Winnie the Pooh and Bartholomew Cubbins and Goodnight Moon and Chinese folktales and the poems of Robert Louis Stevenson.
Not being one to miss a story, I sat in the corner, playing soft background music on my guitar, and slowly but surely began composing tunes for the Stevenson poems. They became Caitlin's bedtime lullabies, and she grew up thinking that A Child's Garden of Verses was a collection of Robert Louis Stevenson songs when, in fact, she was the only one who had ever heard the single-verse ditties.
Then 16 years went by, and Caitlin became a singer, and we now had a reason to turn those old lullabye ditties into real songs. It is a privilege for us to introduce these poems to a new generation of parents and their kids, but this is just a taste. Get a copy of the complete collection of "A Child's Garden of Verses," by Robert Louis Stevenson. Read them aloud, to yourself and to your kids. The music of Stevenson's poetry and the gentle poignancy of his child's perspective touches something timeless within us all, even as it transports us back to another time, when heroes came "home from the Indies and home from the ocean," and mother comes in to "blow out the light."
Stevenson wrote these poems in the late 19th century, at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution - before radio, before electric lights, before telephones, before automobiles - when an active imagination was the most versatile toy a child could own. Now, in a 21st century filled with electronic games and carefully scripted play groups, programs and events that occupy every hour of a child's day, it's worthwhile to take a moment now and again and pretend. Pretend that what if just might be. Just make believe...."
The recording is accompanied by a beautifully illustrated book that contains the full text of fifteen poems. The book was illustrated by Detroit-area artist Anne Costello whose whimsical watercolors add so much to this project. A second CD contains computer screen savers of the artwork, mp3 versions of all 16 songs and complete lyrics and sheet music for piano, guitar and voice.

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