Ben Folds on the depth of the new ‘Snoopy Presents’ animated musical and why he left Trump’s Kennedy Center

Snoopy is the superstar of the βPeanutsβ world, but Ben Folds is loyal to Charlie Brown. βIβm going to have to go with Chuck because heβs so emotionally compressed,β the singer-songwriter said when asked for a favorite.
Folds didnβt grow up poring over the Charles M. Schulz comics or memorizing the TV specials β βI canβt think of anything I really was a fan of outside of musicβ β but he loved Vince Guaraldiβs music for the animated specials.
He started studying Charlie Brown and the gang when he was hired to write the title song for βItβs the Small Things, Charlie Brown,β sung by Charlieβs sister Sally in the 2022 Apple TV special. And he recently dove back into the world of these iconic characters when he returned to write the final three songs for βSnoopy Presents: A Summer Musical.β
βI think itβs good that I came to fully appreciate the world of βPeanutsβ as an adult,β says Folds, although he adds that he was still starstruck about writing for Charlie Brown. βItβs a lot of responsibility,β he says. βI was asking the Schulz family, βCan I say this?β and theyβd say, βYes, itβs yours.ββ

Ben Folds performs in concert during the βPaper Airplane Request Tourβ at ACL Live at The Moody Theatre on December 11, 2024 in Austin, Tx.
(Rick Kern / Getty Images)
Foldsβ best-known songs, such as βBrick,β βSong for the Dumped,β βArmy,β βRockinβ the Suburbsβ and βZak and Sara,β may seem too sardonic or dark for the sweet world of Snoopy and company. But he sees it differently.
βThereβs a lot of deep stuff there. βPeanuts,β like βMister Rogers,β presents an empathetic and nuanced, not dumbed-down view of the world, and that is rare for kids programming,β he says. βI was able to say stuff in my songs that kids will understand but that will go over the heads of many adults.β
He also knows how to approach the storytelling aspect of musical writing pragmatically.
Within the showβs parameters, Folds is grateful to the creators for giving him his artistic freedom. βThey give me carte blanche and donβt push backβ Folds says, adding that when he puts in poetic imagery β βIβm not calling myself fβing Keats or anything,β he adds as an aside β director Erik Wiese would weave those ideas into the animation. βThatβs really cool to see.β
βMy ambition is to have them tell me that my lyrics meant they could delete pages of script,β he adds. βThatβs what these songs are for.β
Wiese says Folds was the ideal person to βtake the mantleβ from Guaraldi: βHe brings a modern thing and his lyrics are so poetic; on his albums he always touches your heart.β

Writer and executive producer Craig Schulz, who is Charlesβ son, was impressed by both Foldsβ songwriting and the responsibility the musician felt to the βPeanutsβ brand. βHe has a unique ability to really get into what each of the gang is thinking and drive the audience in the direction we want to,β says Schulz, adding that there was one day where the writers got on the phone with Folds to explain the emotions they needed a scene to convey βand suddenly he says, βI got it, Iβm super-excitedβ and then he hangs up and runs to the piano and cranks it out.β
The first song Folds wrote for βA Summer Musicalβ was when Charlie Brown realizes that the camp he holds dear βis going to get mown over in the name of progress. I wanted him to have the wisdom of his 60-year-old self to go back to βwhen we were light as the cloudsβ to let him understand the future,β he says. So itβs a poignant song even as heβs writing about Charlie Brown looking through βold pictures of people he met five days ago. Thatβs the way kids are β theyβre taking in a whole world and learning a lot in five days.β
(He did not write the showβs first two songs, though youβll hear plenty of Folds-esque piano and melody in them because, Wiese says, βWe wanted it to sound cohesive.β)
In the final song, Foldsβ lyrics celebrate the saving of the camp (yeah, spoiler alert, but itβs βPeanuts,β so you know the ending will be happy), but he laces in the idea that these children are inheriting a lot of bad things from older generations, including climate change. But itβs not cynical, instead adding an understanding that their parents did the best they could (with a βHello Mother, Hello Fatherβ reference thrown in for the old-timers) and that this new generation will do the best they can and make their own mistakes.

Franklin, Marcie, Peppermint Patty, Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Woodstock and Sally in βSnoopy Presents: A Summer Musical.β
(Apple TV+)
Folds says itβs important for people in the arts and on the left to bring a realistic view but not to become doomsayers.
βI see how bad it could get, but there are two stories you can always tell that might be true β one way to talk about climate change will leave people saying, βWeβre screwed anyway so Iβll just drink out of plastic bottles and toss them in the garbage,β but the other way is to motivate people, to tell a story that shows an aspiration towards the future.β
That does not mean, of course, that Folds is blind to the perils of the moment. He stepped down as the National Symphony Orchestraβs artistic advisor at the Kennedy Center to protest Donald Trumpβs power play there.
βI couldnβt be a pawn in that,β he says. βWas I supposed to call my homies like Sara Bareilles and say, βHey, do you want to come play here?ββ But heβs focusing on the positive, noting that heβs now working with other symphony orchestras with that free time.
Folds has recently also tried countering the turmoil of our current era: Last year he released his first Christmas album, βSleigher,β and his 2023 album βWhat Matters Mostβ opens with βBut Wait, Thereβs More,β which offers political commentary but then talks about believing in the good of humankind, and closes with the uplifting βMoments.β
And obviously, Folds knows that a show that stars a beagle and a small yellow bird that defies classification is not the right place to get bogged down in the issues of the day. Even when the lyrics dip into melancholy waters, they find a positive place to land.
βIn this era I donβt want the art that passes through my world to not have some semblance of hope,β he says.