Customer Reviews
Remember, this was made by grownups - By: elmsyrup, 11 Aug 2003 
This is a genuinely good trancey, happy chillout album. Yeah, the kids will like it, but it really does have its depths for clubbers as well. Also, the holographic cover provides simple fun for those who are mashed.
the Fab four of britan.... teletubbies and company - By: , 03 Feb 2002 
this album may not seem much!
Just a very childish album....
but hey really it might sound simple but its clearly more than just bouncy sound effects.
on this album the touch of both country & western balet waltz classical msuic & rock n roll inspierd music apears. if you don't beleive me just check out the marvalous twisty dance(and yes they mean the rockin & rollin twist)
also several bouncy instruemtals have the toch of classical music & balet & waltz its more than you think. also the country mandolin sound breaks out on the well known chorus of teletubbies say eh-oh & the crazy chourus of dipsy's fancy hat. also clouds is very mind blowing for being small childrens music to me it sounds like a early kraftwerk syth recording.
the lullaby ends very nice with very nice piano play. great indeed more that just sound effects! a cool musical experience this is so cool!
Pure, Simple Fun. - By: , 14 May 2000 
I'd been looking for months: I eventually found the US versionin Boston & settled down to some serious listening. "Puddle Dance" is, of course, the perfect place to start. My children jumpin puddles to this day, using the classic Tubby Rhythm. "Animals" & "Tree" are favourites - watch their faces light up! But then the classics set in: "Running Away Dance" & "Dirty Knees". Some famous tubby tunes are missing, but then, there has to be a "Tubby Two" to make up for the disappointing "Nursery Rhymes" album.
Eh-oh - By: Mr. A. Pomeroy, 05 Apr 2000 
As with the show, there is another audience for this record - irony-loaded students seeking strange audio thrills. As such, it's a mixture of surreal line-dancing tracks & ultra-lite William Orbit dance music, constantly overlaid with the muttering & chattering of the Teletubbies. Oddly, it doesn't actually feature all the music from the series, just a selection. Presumably there is a forthcoming two-CD 'collectors edition'.
The final track, a lullabye which would not be out of place on Chris Morris' 'Blue Jam', is extremely helpful if you want to go to sleep, although it should really go on for an hour or so.