Silly Songs is the fifth album in the Cedarmont Kids classics series from July 20, 1993 and the fifth video released in September 19, 1995. It contains 18 Wholesome fun Songs for Kids.
Cast Members[]
- Keeley Alexander
- Myranda Alexander
- Marty Gay
- Robert Gay
- Jamie Grable
- Graham Leach
- Anthony Mullins
- Emily Smith
- Cory Warfield
- Leah Berkley
- Lacey Berkley
- Delaney Cusic
- Megan Durham
- Luke Jabari
- Coleen Kelly
- Ryan Leach
- Paige Meadows
- Anna Musick
- Timothy Richmond
- Sidney Rolands
- Tanner Richards
- Cole Roland
- Sydney Roland
- Allie Brooke Shelby
- Karli Shelby
Songs from the CD[]
- Dry Bones
- John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt
- The Wise Man and the Foolish Man
- S-M-I-L-E
- Do Your Ears Hang Low?
- Rocka My Soul
- Skinny Marinky Dinky Dink
- Fingers, Nose and Toes
- The Bear Went Over the Mountain
- Who Built the Ark?
- BINGO
- I Got Shoes
- Looby Loo
- Polly Wolly Doodle
- Who Did Swallow Jonah
- Michael Finnegan
- Oh, You Can't Get to Heaven
- There's a Hole in the Bucket
Songs from the Videos[]
- Do Your Ears Hang Low?
- The Wise Man and the Foolish Man
- Rocka My Soul
- Skinny Marinky Dinky Dink
- Dry Bones
- Polly Wolly Doodle
- Who Did Swallow Jonah
- Fingers, Nose and Toes
- Michael Finnegan
- The Bear Went Over the Mountain
- Oh, You Can't Get to Heaven
- S-M-I-L-E
- Who Built the Ark?
- BINGO
- I Got Shoes
- John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt
- Looby Loo
- There's a Hole in the Bucket
Trivia[]
- The cover is orange with a white inside.
- This is the one of the two videos that has geometric shapes briefly filling the screen then spinning on sound effects cartoon sfx to reveal the next song. The other is Action Bible Songs which is also the second album.
- In the Spanish version of this album --known as Cantemos Y Juguemos-- as the song "Who Built the Ark?" biblically teaches young Christians to know the numbers from 1 through 10 in the song "Who Built the Ark?" --from the English version (known as "Silly Songs")-- the song in Cantemos Y Juguemos "¿Quién Hizo el Arca?" teaches the numbers 1 through 10 in Spanish (uno, dos, tres, cuatro, cinco, seis, siete, ocho, nueve, and diez).