Basta is one of my favorite music labels. Based in Amsterdam, they've reissued a lot of Raymond Scott's work, from his early big band songs (many of which were used in Warner Brothers cartoons) to his mindblowing 1950s and 1960s pre-Moog electronic music. Their CD covers are illustrated by the likes of Robert Crumb and Chris Ware.
Doug Rushkoff let me know about Basta's release, The Langley Schools Music Project: "INNOCENCE AND DESPAIR" and the clips are great. Check it out.
The Langley Schools Music Project is a 60-voice chorus of rural school children from western Canada, untrained but captivated by melodic magic, singing tunes by the Beach Boys, Paul McCartney, David Bowie, The Bay City Rollers, and others. The students accompany themselves with the shimmering gamelan chimes of Orff percussion, and elemental rock trimmings arranged by their itinerant music teacher, Hans Fenger.
These 1976-77 recordings, captured on a 2-track tape deck in a school gymnasium, weren't staged to achieve money or fame, to sell albums or land a record contract. These kids played music because they loved it. Innocent, flawed and bittersweet, guided by Fenger's unsuspecting genius, these recordings deserve to be heard and preserved. They brim with charm and youthful elan, sparked by flashes of lo-fi Spectorian majesty and Pet Sounds subtlety. Call it folk art, outsider, or campfire rock — the labels don't matter. These are gorgeous, heavenly artifacts. Period.