Music
With ‘Trip to DC,’ Providence musicians use hip-hop to explain how the government works
01:00 AM EDT on Monday, October 6, 2008

Rappers Scott “Free” Geer and Jeff “Shoeless” Dujardin run Smart Songs, a Providence-based record label that makes educational hip-hop records for kids.
The Providence Journal / Ruben W. Perez
PROVIDENCE — Either Sen. Barack Obama or Sen. John McCain will be the next president. But how many of the other presidents can you name? What did each of them do?
Well, even most adults would have a hard time coming up with the complete list. But a couple of guys from Providence have come up with a song to help kids keep it straight — and a whole CD of music about the way our nation’s government works.
Trip to DC is the first disc from Smart Songs, a company run by rappers Shoeless Jeff and Scott Free (born Jeff Dujardin and Scott Geer), who are both 23 and recently graduated from Providence College.
They started Smart Songs a little more than a year ago, when they recorded a couple of songs at a studio in Brooklyn run by Jeff’s cousin.
They already knew they wanted to make hip-hop records for kids. When Scott and Jeff were students at Providence College, they were the frontmen and rappers in a band called Capitol Hill. They didn’t make music for kids, but “we always kept it very positive,” Jeff says.
“Clean too,” adds Scott.
Jeff’s brother is a teacher at a private high school in Boston. Scott and Jeff did some Capitol Hill songs up there one day, and the students “really enjoyed listening to our raps,” Scott says.
“… Kids like hip-hop; we do hip-hop,” Scott says. “So the two came together.”
And they noticed that lots of kids learn song lyrics really quickly and easily.
“You walk down the street and you see kids reciting lines from popular hip-hop songs,” Jeff says. “They’re spitting it out verbatim. And we thought, why can’t they be singing about academic themes?”
“I was in a 7-Eleven one day,” Scott adds, “and there was an eight-year-old boy in there. And I couldn’t believe the songs — line-by-line, he was singing what was on the radio. It was a hip-hop song, and the content wasn’t appropriate for him, but I was shocked by him knowing [the words].”
So they recorded a bunch of songs in Brooklyn, including one about the planets and another about the state of Florida. But it was the song “Presidents” that attracted the attention of the children’s magazine Highlights.
Jeff says he always enjoyed social studies in school; Scott majored in American studies at PC. “We had some good knowledge,” Scott says.
The disc is structured as a trip to and through Washington, just like the title says. It includes the two flying to Washington, walking down the streets of D.C. and riding on the Metro — the Washington subway.
It includes “Presidents” (“Calvin Coolidge wiped away the nation’s debt/ But then came depression much to Herbert Hoover’s fret/ Yet Franklin D. Roosevelt, new jobs he created/ Harry Truman’s usage of the bomb was much debated”) as well as songs about the Bill of Rights (“Well, the Constitution took days and nights/ But the writers still had to go and look at it twice”), voting rights (“Women who wanted to vote were called suffragettes/ In 1848 in Seneca Falls they met”) and more.
Trip to DC is aimed at kids ages 10 to 12, Scott and Jeff say. Younger kids can enjoy the rhythms and maybe the choruses, the detail they go into on the workings of government is most appropriate for middle-schoolers. “We don’t want to dumb things down,” Scott says, “because kids can recognize it.”
“Kids are challenged,” Jeff agrees, “and they welcome this challenge.”
It’s also a musical decision. “We don’t want to sacrifice what we consider good hip-hop — good rhythms and good rhyme schemes,” Scott says. “And [we want] to really capture that and to have a good quality song.”
Trip to DC is available on the Highlights Web site ( www.highlights.com) or the Smart Songs site ( www.smartsongs.org). It’ll also soon be available on iTunes, Rhapsody and eMusic.
| Backstage at bridal fashion show in Warwick | |
| Chabad members in Warwick pray for those slain in Mumbai | |
| Owners of a 1776 Colonial in Cumberland consider themselves caretakers |
More music stories
Idol champ David Cook tries for the real thing
Most active surveys
Share your reviews of area restaurants
Share your Black Friday shopping experience
What NFL team is the one you love to hate?
Most e-mailed in the last 24 hours
Popular Stories









You must be logged in to contribute. Log in | Register Now!
You are logged in as screenname | Log Out
You are logged in, but do not have a "screen" name. Update Your Profile