Exotica (Martin Denny album)
Exotica is the first album by Martin Denny, released in 1957. It contained Denny's most famous piece, "Quiet Village", and spawned an entire genre bearing its name. It was recorded December 1956 in Webley Edwards' studio in Waikiki (not, as often reported, the Aluminum Dome at Henry J. Kaiser's Hawaiian Village Complex). The album topped Billboard's charts in 1959.[2]
Exotica | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | May 1957 | |||
Recorded | December 1956 | |||
Genre | Exotica | |||
Length | 30:36 | |||
Label | Liberty Records | |||
Producer | Martin Denny (uncredited) Simon Jackson | |||
Martin Denny chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic |
The album was recorded in mono. It was re-recorded in stereo in 1958; by then, however, Denny's sideman Arthur Lyman had left the group, and was replaced by Julius Wechter. Denny preferred the original mono version: "It has the original spark, the excitement, the feeling we were breaking new ground."[3]
Track listing
- "Quiet Village" (Les Baxter) – 3:39
- "Return to Paradise" (Dimitri Tiomkin, Ned Washington) – 2:19
- "Hong Kong Blues" (Hoagy Carmichael) – 2:15
- "Busy Port" (Baxter) – 2:50
- "Lotus Land" (Cyril Scott) – 2:22
- "Similau" (Arden Clar, Harry Coleman) – 1:57
- "Stone God" (Baxter) – 3:07
- "Jungle Flower" (Baxter) – 1:46
- "China Nights" (Shina No Yoru[4]) (Nobuyuki Takeoka[5]) – 2:01
- "Ah Me Furi" (Gil Baumgart) – 2:08
- "Waipio" (Francis Brown) – 3:11
- "Love Dance" (Baxter) – 2:29
Personnel
- Martin Denny – piano, arrangements
- Arthur Lyman – vibes, xylophone, percussion
- John Kramer – string bass
- Augie Colon – bongos, congas, Latin effects, bird calls
- Harold Chang – drums, percussion
- Bob Lang – engineer
- Sandy Warner – cover model
gollark: Don't "raw" files have metadata and headers and stuff?
gollark: Anyway, I think to do what I said you would need to either somehow make an image start with valid machine code which moves to some arbitrary-data bit of the image, or find a very permissive image foramt.
gollark: But is a Linu-X distribution.
gollark: Alpine doesn't, by default, use GNU stuff, as far as I know.
gollark: Oh, here's another fun idea: run Alpine Linux, then go somewhere where people complain about GNU/Whatever a lot.
References
- Allmusic review
- Sisario, Ben (2005-03-05). "Martin Denny, Maestro of Tiki Sound, Dies at 93". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
- Exotica/Exotica II (CD). Martin Denny. New York: Scamp Records. 1996. p. 11. R2 70774.CS1 maint: others (link)
- 支那の夜(in Japanese)
- 竹岡信幸(in Japanese)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.