Houston Chronicle

GROWING PAINS

Kidz Bop is a juggernaut of the CD age. Can it survive the streaming era?

- By David Peisner

Several years ago, Vic Zaraya, the president of the music brand Kidz Bop, was having lunch with a senior music industry executive. At the time, Zaraya also was the president of Razor & Tie, the independen­t label that released Kidz Bop albums until 2018.

“Kidz Bop is our Adele,” Zaraya told his lunch companion.

The executive laughed at him. If anything, Zaraya was underselli­ng Kidz Bop’s standing. The series began in 2001 as a lark: an album of current pop hits sung by tweens with sanitized, safe-for-allages lyrics.

Two lawyers with a passion for music, Cliff Chenfeld and Craig Balsam, had formed Razor & Tie in 1990, initially selling compilatio­ns like “Monster Ballads” and “Those Fabulous ’70s” via direct-to-consumer television commercial­s that themselves were kitschy delights. They applied the strategy to Kidz Bop, and the lark became a startlingl­y successful, still-running series of albums.

Kidz Bop has scored big with versions of songs like Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars’ “Uptown Funk,” Taylor Swift’s “Shake It Off ” and Kelly Clarkson’s “Since U Been Gone.”

Since 2001, more than 20 million Kidz Bop albums have been sold, and during a remarkable run between 2005 and 2015, the rotating crew of Kidz Bop Kids earned 22 Billboard Top 10 albums.

In fact, only three artists — the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and Barbra Streisand — have more Top 10 albums than the Kidz Bop Kids. Adele has three.

But while Kidz Bop has become a name familiar enough to be referenced on “Saturday Night Live” and minted a few breakout A-listers — future Disney (and “Euphoria”) star Zendaya got an early boost performing the Kidz Bop version of Katy Perry’s “Hot n Cold” in 2009 — the series’s exceptiona­l chart success has evaporated in recent years. None of Kidz Bop’s last seven

albums has reached Billboard’s Top 10, and three of the last four haven’t even cracked the Top 40.

“One of the problems is the idea of a compilatio­n is somewhat obsolete,” said Vickie Nauman, the founder of CrossBorde­rWorks, a music industry consulting group. “Compilatio­ns filled a need because they were portable, curated and a way to sample different artists without buying 10 albums. But playlists are the new compilatio­ns.”

While Zaraya doesn’t see Kidz Bop as a compilatio­n, the series’ chart struggles coincide with an overall sea change in how people consume music.

Between 2015 and 2018, streaming grew from 35 percent to 75 percent of the music market in the U.S. Can Kidz Bop surge again, or pivot — or is it going to become a fading relic of the CD era?

The Kidz Bop concept grew from Chenfeld’s and Balsam’s experience­s ferrying their own elementary­school-age children to birthday parties. (Both left Kidz Bop last year, after Razor & Tie was absorbed by Concord Music.) The music played at these events tended toward either groan-inducing jingles aimed at younger children — think Barney or the Wiggles — or hits by the likes of Britney Spears or Eminem that frequently contained language and themes inappropri­ate for 8-year-olds.

Kidz Bop steers clear of risqué songs and rewrites potentiall­y offending lyrics. A recent cover of Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road” swaps “My life is a movie/Bull ridin’ and boobies/Cowboy hat from Gucci/ Wrangler on my booty,” for “My life is a movie/Bull ridin’ and bougie/ Cowboy hat from Gucci/Wrangler like on TV.” Kidz Bop albums became something parents and kids could agree on, ideal for the minivan’s CD player while the children sat in back, juice boxes in hand.

“Kidz Bop identified this need and super-served a particular audience, which is kids and parents willing to let their kids play these CDs on repeat,” Nauman said.

With CD players disappeari­ng from those minivans, Kidz Bop debuted its own SiriusXM channel in 2014.

That’s where Geoff Boothroyd and his daughters, Claire, 9, and Caitlyn, 7, first discovered the series.

“I was actually dismissive of the station, but the girls were like, ‘Oh, I’ve heard this song before! Daddy, don’t change it!’” Boothroyd said. “It works well because I know that it’s age-appropriat­e and not going to end up with curse words and such.”

Now his daughters also listen through Apple Music playlists, but it’s almost always under the supervisio­n of Boothroyd or his wife. “We monitor them pretty closely, given their age.”

Zaraya contends that Kidz Bop’s recent Billboard dip doesn’t signal an accompanyi­ng dip in popularity.

“The charts don’t reflect overall consumptio­n for our brand properly. We’re not first-week-focused, first-month-focused or even album-focused,” he said. “When we release ‘Kidz Bop 39,’ people go to Spotify and don’t necessaril­y listen to ‘Kidz Bop 39.’ They listen to the Kidz Bop catalog.”

Although Kidz Bop continues to release albums to streaming services and retail outlets, the pace has slowed. The next one, the second of 2019, is due in November, but in 2020, for the first time since 2002, the company may only release one album. The focus instead is on a constant flow of singles.

“It has changed drasticall­y,” said Michael Anderson, Kidz Bop’s senior vice president of music, who has overseen the recording process since the series’ inception. “It used to be that I’d record songs, collect them, then had time to figure out the sequence and release it.”

Now, he said, “Every other day, I’m submitting a new song to record, then our video team is coming up with scenes for a new video and getting it shot quickly.”

Streaming services aren’t built with children in mind, as Greg Cham, a former consultant for Kidz Bop who has worked on projects including Disney’s multiplati­num Cheetah Girls and “High School Musical,” pointed out.

“They’re designed specifical­ly for adults,” he said. “The problem is that parents don’t have the understand­ing or the ability to curtail the activity of children at this point, primarily because technology has gotten away from the parent.”

(Cham is also, not coincident­ally, the founder of a new music streaming app for kids called Fruit Punch.)

According to the user agreements for most streaming services, users must be at least 13. Although many kids (and parents) ignore this rule, left to their own devices, will more third-graders stream the Kidz Bop version of “Me!” or the Taylor Swift version?

“One reason Kidz Bop CDs have always done well is because it’s a safe environmen­t,” Nauman said.

For parents today, controllin­g their children’s access to music can be an all-or-nothing propositio­n. Parental controls on Spotify, YouTube or Apple Music often are unwieldy and unreliable, a broadsword solution to a problem that needs a scalpel.

This helps explain why Kidz Bop has managed to continue selling CDs long after the rest of the industry wrote them off as viable products.

While Kidz Bop’s total album sales — the number of CDs plus digital downloads sold, according to data from Nielsen — have dipped from 818,000 in 2016 to 410,000 in 2018, that drop-off is comparativ­ely modest.

Drake sold 1.9 million albums in 2016, but only 436,000 last year. And more than 330,000 of Kidz Bop’s 2018 sales were physical CDs — nearly three times as many as Drake.

Kidz Bop’s album sales have continued to fall this year. Its streaming numbers, though, are moving in the opposite direction — from a little more than 300 million total streams in 2016 to 833 million last year — and they’re on pace to top 1 billion for the first time this year.

Those stats, though, don’t put the brand in the same echelon it once inhabited. According to Nielsen’s music consumptio­n data, the Kidz Bop Kids ranked 120th among all artists in 2018.

“The transition from albums to where we are now was challengin­g,” Zaraya said. “As we watched the CD business decline and the streaming business was slow to grow, we had to start spending and thinking really creatively about how we reach new consumers.”

Kidz Bop launched its YouTube channel in 2014, which now has more than 1.3 million subscriber­s. New music videos, as well as instructio­nal dance and behind-thescenes videos, are uploaded weekly.

“We have our own in-house production team,” said Sasha Junk, Kidz Bop’s senior vice president of marketing. “We’re producing 150 music videos annually.”

When Junk joined the company 10 years ago, one of her core ideas was to transform the Kidz Bop Kids, which previously had been a collection of studio performers, into a troupe of 10- to 14-year-olds who starred in music videos, made public appearance­s and did live performanc­es.

“Now, they’re the faces of the brand,” she said.

Some of those faces went on to bigger things — in addition to Zendaya, Olivia Holt, Becky G and Ross Lynch were all once Kidz Bop Kids — which has given the group a hint of the star-factory cachet of Disney’s early 1990s Mickey Mouse Club.

Full Kidz Bop Kids tours began in earnest in 2014 but initially were mostly a loss leader, playing venues with a capacity of 500 to 1,500.

“The tour was something on the side that would push our music and brand,” Anderson said. “Now it’s its own beast.”

The shows are tightly choreograp­hed affairs, complete with video screens, confetti, pyrotechni­cs and four Kidz Bop Kids occasional­ly playing live instrument­s while running through 60 to 90 minutes of songs.

Over the past three years, the tours have sold half a million tickets.

Beginning in 2017, additional Kidz Bop Kids troupes were introduced in Britain, then Germany, Australia and New Zealand. Last year, the Hard Rock Hotel in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic, debuted the Kidz Bop Experience, a sort of Kidz Bop fantasy camp, where kids can learn dance moves, write songs, design album covers and star in their own videos. This year, a second Kidz Bop Experience opened at a Hard Rock in Mexico.

Zaraya sees Kidz Bop evolving into a burgeoning empire: “We’re at an interestin­g inflection point, analogous to where Disney was in the early ’80s when they had theme parks and some movies but only a glimpse of what they were to become,” he said.

The brand faces some unique challenges, though. For starters, its fans grow out of their fandom.

“You have new kids being born every day, so our core audience is constantly repopulati­ng itself,” Junk said. “They learn about it from older brothers and sisters, and everything we’re doing on YouTube, so we constantly have a refreshed audience.”

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The Kidz Bop series of CD compilatio­ns features current pop hits sun
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Parents dance with younger fans at the Kidz Bop concert.
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Photos by Anthony Rassam / New York Times ng by tweens with sanitized lyrics.
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Younger fans dance at a Kidz Bop concert.

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