Here Comes Science
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Average customer review:(217 customer reviews)
Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Science Is Real
- Meet the Elements
- I Am a Paleontologist <i>w/Danny Weinkauf</i>
- The Bloodmobile
- Electric Car <i>w/Robin Goldwasser</i>
- My Brother the Ape
- What Is a Shooting Star?
- How Many Planets?
- Why Does the Sun Shine?
- Why Does the Sun Really Shine?
- Roy G. Biv
- Put It to the Test
- Photosynthesis
- Cells
- Speed and Velocity <i>w/Marty Beller</i>
- Computer Assisted Design
- Solid Liquid Gas
- Here Comes Science Bonus Track
- The Ballad of Davy Crockett (in Outer Space)
Disc 2:
- Science Is Real [video content]
- Meet the Elements [video content]
- I Am a Paleontologist <i>w/Danny Weinkauf</i> [video content]
- The Bloodmobile [video content]
- Electric Car <i>w/Robin Goldwasser</i> [video content]
- My Brother the Ape [video content]
- What Is a Shooting Star? [video content]
- How Many Planets? [video content]
- Why Does the Sun Shine? [video content]
- Why Does the Sun Really Shine? [video content]
- Roy G. Biv [video content]
- Put It to the Test [video content]
- Photosynthesis [video content]
- Cells [video content]
- Speed and Velocity <i>w/Marty Beller</i> [video content]
- Computer Assisted Design [video content]
- Solid Liquid Gas [video content]
- Here Comes Science [video content] Bonus Track
- The Ballad of Davy Crockett (in Outer Space) [video content]
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #457 in Music
- Brand: Baker & Taylor
- Model: 050087148997
- Released on: 2009-09-08
- Number of discs: 2
- Format: CD+DVD
- Dimensions: .25 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
This 2 disc CD+DVD set from GRAMMY® winners, They Might Be Giants creates a new creative way for kids to learn. Here Comes Science, follows up their successful past two children's albums Here Come the ABCs and GRAMMY® winner Here Come the 123s. With songs like Electric Car, Photosynthesis and Solid Liquid Gas (among others) kids will learn about science while having fun. The album features 19 songs and 19 entertaining videos.
Susan Lee Poage, Kindergarten Teacher Professor of Early Childhood Education Winner of the Presidential Award for Excellence in Teaching Science and Mathematics
Every K-5 classroom should invest in the music and DVD video of TMBG's Here Comes Science. The toe-tapping sequence of science topics presented in sight and sound has something for every grade level in the areas of physical, earth, and life sciences.
The scientific process is made clear in the kick-off song, Science is Real. Songs with influences from every decade of rock and roll will help students make meaning of tricky scientific topics such as circulation, photosynthesis, speed and velocity, and states of matter.
Additionally, the music and video help to dispel common scientific myths, as well as inspires the use of scientific inquiry at every level. Using real-world connections students can relate to, a stimulating soundtrack that educates, and eye-popping graphics that punch the point make Here Comes Science a great teaching tool.
Teachers can use the songs and video to begin a unit of study, assess prior knowledge of a topic to help plan instruction, differentiate instruction, stimulate further discussion of a topic, expose students to new concepts, and develop science vocabulary and comprehension.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
128 of 130 people found the following review helpful.
Catchy Science Music
By Jason S. Schneiderman
While not a kid, I am a fan of TMBG, a scientist and I love this album. There are too few songs for kids done by good musicians about some of the most wonderful things about the world around us. The videos add a level of detail without weighing down the music or the level of fun. What particularly impressed me about the album is that it is more then just a series of facts set to song. The songs "Why Does the Sun Shine?" and "Why Does the Sun Really Shine?" TMBG captures the self-correcting nature of science, while "Science is Real" and "Put it to the Test" convey that science is an active ongoing process.
I highly recommend this album to parents out there, as well as science fans of all ages.
71 of 73 people found the following review helpful.
Catchy, educational, AND cheap??
By J. F. Halsey
Just got this album in today and already I'm raving about it. The songs are fun and catchy, but the real deal-closer for me was the DVD. Over 45 minutes long, every single track on the CD has an animated video, each in a different creative style, that really bring the educational part home for the younger viewers. I have a daughter who is 4, and watching her stare with rapt attention as the "bloodmobile" explained how the cardiovascular system carries oxygen, nutrients, white blood cells, hormones, and waste to the different parts of the body--and seeing that she was really getting it--is incredibly rewarding. Or "Meet the Elements"... it's a bit too advanced for a 4 year old, but I can tell that she is at least getting some groundwork laid down in the basic concepts--that everything, and everyone, is made up of the same "stuff".
As a huge "fan" of science (I read science blogs while my coworkers check out ESPN), I can't tell you how fantastic it feels to have an entire album dedicated to, *ahem*, "singing the praises" of everything from anatomy to geology, astrophysics to zoology, the Big Bang to DNA. When I was a little kid, I was a little too late for Sagan's COSMOS, but I would watch hours of this silly little HBO show called ENCYCLOPEDIA, where they did silly sketches and songs about a lot of science facts and history. I know my fascination for learning new things about the How's and Why's of the world were, in part, kindled at that early age by such educational entertainment. I can't tell you how much it thrills me to see my kids starting on the same path of knowledge and discovery.
Thank you, John and John.
46 of 50 people found the following review helpful.
Catchy songs with a good message.
By Michael Lawson
TMBG's biggest strength is their ability to make music that people of all generations can enjoy. It's rare that I find an album of kid's music that is tolerable, let alone something that I'll actually listen to on my own time -- "Here Comes the Science" is definitely the later.



