2025 Children’s Music Roundup

Welcome to Kids Rhythm and Rock’s annual Children’s Music Roundup! 2025 got away from me a little bit so this is coming to you a tad later than usual. Luckily, it’s never too late to celebrate great children’s music!

At the end of each year, rather than doing a “Top 10” or a “Best of” list, I compile a list of albums that have come to my attention during the last 12 months and separate them into fun categories. While the total number of albums that are included varies from year-to-year, the richness and depth that is family music just keeps growing and this past year was no different.

Let’s kickoff 2026 by taking a look back at the “year that was” in children’s music. Don’t see your favorites? Please add them in the comments.

Introducing…

Debut albums you should know

Hang Out with Raven from City Birds

I Like the Sounds You Make from Eeme and Shan

Tunezies Vol. 1 from Jesse Palter

Alphabops from Bug Friend

Be Mindful, Be Kind

Empathy, inclusion, and loving one another (as kids and parents) are at the heart of these albums.

Together from Heather Feather

I Am Enough from Hopscotch Songs

Change is Inevitable from Mama Nous

Fun Machine Dream Vol. One from You & Us

Oh to Be Young

Music with the littles in mind. Many of the songs would be great for storytime.

My Voice from Andy Z

Imagine Shine Play from Miss Jessica

Family Friendly Songs, Vol. 5 from Tom Foote

Go Go Stop: Music and Movement for Kids from Shawny

Super Duper Awesome Day from Ashley Mills Monaghan

Warm Fuzzies from Katie Dwyer Music

Funky Fun

Silly, thoughtful fun for everyone!

Big Kid Stuff from Mr. Jeff

The Color Weasel from Todd ‘n’ Tina

Jesse Jukebox Sells Out from Jesse Jukebox

Slippery When Peeled from Go Banana Go and Flula Borg

Sweet Home Chicago

These artists all call Chicago home.

Get Your Sunny Side Up from Wendy and DB

After We Roam from Little Miss Ann

Brain Freeze from Justin Roberts

Keeping It Real

These albums all feature stories and experiences from real people.

Dandelion Songs: Inspired by Military Kids and Families from Greg Lato

The Story of U.S. Vol. 1 from Griot B

Herstory from Flor Bromley

Arise & Shine: Piano Music by Black Composers for Kids

Naturally

These albums celebrate the Earth, the animals, and the plants, and how we all fit together on this planet we call home.

Belong from Musiquita (bilingual)

Tree Sounds from Marko Polo

Pop Jams

The title says it all!

Wonder FULL from Dana

M.Y. F.A.M.I.L.Y. from Scott & Mark Hoying

Oopsie Daisy from Teacher Peter (bilingual)

Carry On! from Princess Backpack and Benjamin

Our Friends to the South

Just a sampling of the vibrant children’s music scene in New Zealand

Little Wild Singable Songs: Play, Help, Wonder from Claudia Robin Gunn

The Prose and Cons from Captain Festus McBoyle

BeetBite vol. 3 and 4 from BeetBite

Unstoppable Beats

Glam pop, hip hop, space folk and more!

Micro Party from Electric Blue Yonder

On the Stoop from Rolie Polie Guacamole

Buddy’s Magic Tree House from Mega Ran

A Non Fiction Fairytale from Twinkle Time

We Are Family

This year’s top duets were provided by two children’s music artists and their young daughters.

Ageless: 100 Years Young from Joanie Leeds & Joya

Harmony from Fyütch & Aura V

Potpourri

As in my favorite Jeopardy category, not the dried flowers.

Arise Together: Songs to Inspire from various artists

Sunny Side Up from Brady Rymer and the Little Band That Could

Dinosaur Spaghetti from City Love

Try Try Again from Mike Bryden

Hooray for the World! from Red Grammer

Albums that Uplift and Inspire

I am so excited by the three albums featured here. Each album is written and performed by a dynamic female artist, sharing messages that will encourage and empower listeners of all ages. In a world that can often feel very heavy, all of the music below will bring a smile to your face and put a spring in your step.

Together performed by Heather Feather

It’s not often that I get to be in the room when a song is born, but that is exactly what happened at the 2024 Children’s Music Network conference when Heather Feather and friends took the stage and performed the beginning seeds of what would become, “Party,” the opening track on Together, Heather’s second album for families. Filled with energy, great beats, and a message about inclusion, “Party” is the perfect song to kick things off. Based in Montreal, Heather is a bilingual performer whose experience as an educator and performer (she has just started a new endeavor as a teaching artist for Prologue Arts) is evident in the social emotional concepts skillfully woven throughout the ten songs in this collection. Each song tells its own story while employing a variety of musical genres. Heather touches on messages of kindness, sharing, caring, and acceptance while emphasizing the ways to deal with different emotions as in “Fill Your Bucket,” about finding happiness, and “The Angry Song” which explores ways to deal with anger. Additional themes include it’s ok to not be a winner as long as you tried your best, the importance of encouraging those around you, as well as the fact that everyone needs to feel important and included. Holding a PhD in music theory, Heather is a gifted songwriter who artfully creates music that engages, while also allowing her beautiful soprano voice to shine. A perfect example of this is the final song on the album, “A Fishy Tale,” a jazzy cumulative tune that would be a fantastic addition to storytimes. Never didactic and always entertaining, Together is an album to be enjoyed by the whole family.

Wonder FULL performed by Dana

Dana is the personification of sunshine. She fills every room she enters with love and joy and does the same thing with her music. Her latest album, Wonder FULL is no exception. Inspired by the seemingly never ending questions that children come up with, each track tackles a different question word (who, what, when, how) and gives some answers. First up is “WHY WHAT WHERE WHO? (30th Anniversary Version)” proving the evergreen nature of the inquisitive minds of the young. From there, Dana channels her inner rock goddess for the electric guitar and drum driven “WHICH (One Will I Choose)” about the struggle to select green vegetables at the grocery store before switching gears and flowing into the flute laden, “WHO (Are My People),” a celebration of family and the ones we love. Also included are songs about having to wait, helping the environment, and the seasons. After asking all the questions, the album concludes with the song, “ANSWERS (Will Come)” a beautiful tune that reassures listeners that they don’t have to have all the answers now, and that learning and discovering is an ongoing part of life. Dana’s versatile voice conveys lyrics that young listeners can relate to while a cadre of talented musicians elevate the sophisticated melodies into songs that adults will want to turn up the volume and jam to.

Herstory performed by Flor Bromley

Known for her bilingual music for families, Flor Bromley takes a different approach to her latest collection, Herstory, a concept album that celebrates women from every continent. The title track anthem sets the tone with a chorus of female voices of all ages proclaiming, “Herstory, herstory, I want to hear her story/Herstory herstory, I want to hear our story.” From there, listeners are treated to songs about brave, talented, smart, incredible women; some who are well known and some that they might be meeting for the first time. Included in the collection are astronaut Emily Calandrelli (North America), author Isabel Allende (South America), Olympic marathon champion Fatuma Roba (Africa), singer Gloria Estefan (Central America), environmental activist Greta Thunberg (Europe), inventor Sahithi Pingali (Asia), explorers Clare Ballantyne, Mairi Hilton, Natalie Corbett and Lucy Bruzzone (Antarctica -penguins!), and politician Louisa Wall (Oceania). The beauty of the album isn’t just in the variety of women that are highlighted, but in the fact that Bromley chose musical genres and styles for each song that matched not just the woman, but the land that she is from. Space pop, salsa, punk rock, African drums, soaring cello, it’s all here, allowing the music to flow from one track to the next connected by the common theme of empowerment. The closing song, “Trailblazing” perfectly bookends the album, leaving listeners with a gentle call to action, imploring them that it is “time to create your story.” Herstory is our story and needs to be shared in the classroom, in the car, at home, and with family and friends.

Sounds of the Season

As a child, whenever I heard adults use the phrase, “where does the time go?” I always thought, “I don’t know where it goes, but it sure goes slow.” Now, as an adult, I too wonder where the time goes, and why it goes so quickly. It feels like Halloween was just yesterday yet the first day of 2025 is only two weeks away. I had every intention of writing several posts over the course of the past month highlighting various new holiday songs, but alas, best laid plans and all. Instead, here is one bigger post to celebrate the sounds of Christmas. 

graphic of a running gingerbread man cookie

Let’s kick things off with one of my favorite things about the holidays – cookies!! First up is the new song “Gingerbread Man” from Stacey Peasley. This movement song is filled with actions including running, skipping, hopping, and spinning, making it the perfect song to include on Noon Year playlists or to wear out the kids after too many sugary treats. Take a listen to “Gingerbread Man” by clicking on this link.

Next up is the clever “360 Million Cookies,” a new song performed by Suzanne Jamieson about all of the cookies that Santa has to eat in one night as he makes his way around the world. The Mid Century Modern flair of the graphics in this lyric video blend well with the modern pop sound to create a tune that children young and old will enjoy.

Now that we’re full of cookies, let’s celebrate Christmas with some old friends and new. Our first stop is in Canada where Heather Feather shares her beautiful new song “When Santa Comes to Visit Me” in English, French, or a bilingual version. Take a listen at this link.

For another bilingual song, let’s visit Flor Bromley who, along with the cute chicks from Canticos, bring us “Navidad.” This lyrical video is in Spanish and English and features a Latin beat that will have viewers dancing along.

Next up is a quick trip to a tropical island for “Christmas Island Time” written by Freddy Wexler and performed by Teacher Pete to accompany Wexler’s new picture book, Everett Green: The Not-So-Christmas Tree.

And finally, a visit to our friend Mr. Jeff and his family. By this point in December, Paul McCartney’s “Wonderful Christmastime” has popped up on every streaming list more times than I can count. But just as I’m getting tired of it, along comes Mr. Jeff and his adorable back-up singers to give the tune a fresh new look and sound. 

Looking for even more holiday music to share during your family gatherings or last minute Christmas events? Check out this playlist curated by Esther Crow. Featuring over 75 contemporary and classic Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa songs from performers from around the world, this list can’t be beat. Still don’t see your favorite holiday song here? Please add it to the comments. With Christmas (December 24-25), Hanukkah, (December 25-January 2) and Kwanzaa (December 26-January 1) all falling within days of one another this year, we want to lift up all of the sounds of the season at this time.

Wishing everyone a holiday season filled with love, peace, and joy!