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Make a Pretty Sound

A Story of Ella Jenkins—The First Lady of Children's Music

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Once upon a time, children's music was just Mother Goose, nursery songs, and lullabies. And then came Ella Jenkins.

Ella Jenkins is an American folk singer and living legend dubbed The First Lady of Children's Music. For nearly 70 years, she has been writing and performing music that has entertained and engaged generations of young listeners. In Make a Pretty Song, Ella's life and legacy are captured in vibrant sights, sounds, and stories that leap right off the page.

Born in St. Louis, Missouri, and raised in Chicago, Ella grew up loving music of all kinds—the call-and-response of Cab Calloway, the exciting rhythms of Moroccan and Indian records spun in a local record shop, the bluesy notes her uncle teased from his harmonica. She listened to music from around the world, and no matter what language it was in, she could feel what it meant—the bridge in understanding and feeling that music offers from one heart to another.

When she began working with children, she knew just what to do. She knew music would offer children a kinetic learning experience that engaged them physically, verbally, and empathetically, creating community out of song. Soon, she was recording her own albums and became an international star.

Ella's journey—from the gritty streets of Chicago to the classrooms where she found her calling to an opportunity to raise her voice for freedom alongside Martin Luther King, Jr., to the spotlight of the world's stage—is rhythmically, joyfully, brilliantly illuminated. For readers familiar with Ella Jenkins or new to her work, this nonfiction book offers a treasury of inspiration that touches on American history, civil rights, cultural awareness, and the incredible power of music.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from November 11, 2024
      Todd and Davis’s melodic paean to performer Ella Jenkins (b. 1924) follows a figure who “wants/ to make/ a pretty sound.” Growing up on Chicago’s South Side, musically inclined Jenkins cuts her teeth on jump-rope rhymes, vinyl records, and “dazzling Bronzeville music halls.” Jenkins matures to “the rhythm of picket lines/ under picket signs,” protesting establishments refusing Black people service before moving to Los Angeles, where former wartime workers nurture their families “black and white—side by side.” There, teacher Jenkins learns the conga drum and passes her knowledge (“songs the children know,/ songs she makes up on the spot/... Songs about growing up in Bronzeville”) to her students. Soon, she carries her music back home and marches for equality, then spends her days teaching children and embarking on a recording career. Onomatopoeia and crisp alliteration lend flair to lively text, while energetic digital illustrations play with warm, saturated color blocks and negative space in this work about a figure who taught children, “You sing a song,/ and I’ll sing a song,/ and we’ll sing a song together.” Back matter includes an author’s note. Ages 5–8.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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