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VA - Technicolor Paradise: Rhum Rhapsodies & Other Exotic Delights (2018)

Posted By: Rtax
VA - Technicolor Paradise: Rhum Rhapsodies & Other Exotic Delights (2018)

VA - Technicolor Paradise: Rhum Rhapsodies & Other Exotic Delights (2018)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 594 MB
2:17:31 | Jazz, Pop, Easy Listening, Mambo, Pacific, Surf, Space-Age, Lounge | Label: Numero Group

It was a musical cocktail born in a marketing meeting: Two parts easy listening, one part jazz, a healthy dollop of conga drums, a sprinkling of bird calls, and a pinch of textless choir. Serve garnished with an alluring woman on the album jacket for best results. Liberty Records co-founder Si Waronker called it Exotica; the soundtrack for a mythical air conditioned Eden, packaged for mid-century, tiki torch-wielding armchair safariers. In the five years after Exotica—Martin Denny’s 1957 landmark Liberty debut—arrived, hundreds of other ethnographic forgeries washed up in record racks all over the U.S., bearing titles like Sophisticated Savage, Sacred Idol, Chant of the Jungle, Polynesian Paradise, Exotic Paradise, Taboo, Primitiva, Forbidden Island, Afrodesia, Hypnotique, Percussion Exotique, and a barrel’s worth of other portmanteaus. “All of those ica and itiva endings I came up with because I thought I was being cute,” Waronker said. “And I don’t know why, but nobody got wise.”

While Liberty certainly had a first mover advantage, it wasn’t long before the major recording companies began reinventing their aging mood music purveyors as pushers of peregrine percussion. And where the majors went, so too did the rest of the market. Dozens of readings on the genre standards like “Quiet Village,” “Similau,” “Miserlou,” “Caravan,” “Nature Boy,” “Moon of Manakoora,” and “Taboo” appeared on micro-pressed 45s and LPs as hotel lobby combos and restaurant entertainers alike tried their hand at creating regional living room lotus lands while others summoned their own sonic visions of Shangri La, bringing their versions of the Pacific, Africa, and the Orient to the hinterlands America.

If you can’t come to paradise, I’ll bring paradise to you.
The earliest whispers of this brand of appropriated escapism appeared not in song, but literature. Rudyard Kipling’s 1894 collection The Jungle Book and William Henry Hudson’s 1904 novel Green Mansions both chronicle the experiences of young protagonists in the jungles of India and Guayana, respectively. Eight years later, Edgar Rice Burroughs blew the naturalist scene wide open with Tarzan of the Apes. These woodland tales inspired English Impressionist Cyril Scott, who in penning “Lotus Land” in 1905 and “Impressions of the Jungle Book” in 1912 unwittingly became the godfather of exotica.

“Exotica was a name I made up,” recalled Waronker, “I never heard that word before.” But the cultural trappings of that word began appearing nearly 25 years before his invention. Born in February 1907, Ernest Raymond Beaumont Gantt would be the first to “bring paradise”—as he sloganized—to American shores. The 1933 opening of his first Don the Beachcomber’s Cafe offered Los Angelenos a glimpse into island life, its walls adorned with spears, masks, and bamboo, a hose dripping on the corrugated metal roof giving beachniks refuge from a make believe tropical deluge. The fare was simple: Chinese food served in wooden bowls. The drink menu, on the other hand, was transportive: A bootlegger’s trunk of rums mixed with fruit juice and other liqueurs, with terror-glee inspiring name like Cobra’s Fang, Demerara Dry Float, Missionary’s Downfall, and Zombie. As Hollywood rediscovered their love of alcohol following the repeal of prohibition, Gantt—who officially changed his name to Donn Beach—found himself in the middle of a typhoon of cash and franchise opportunities.

The bombing of paradise on December 7, 1941 inadvertently set off the tiki explosion, when Beach and 16 million others joined the war effort. Many servicemen caught their first glimpses of the outriggers, rattan rugs, thatched roofs, wahine waifs, and totems while stationed on Wake Island, the Philippines, and Guam. When the curtain was drawn on the Pacific theater, these suntanned veterans washed up stateside with more than just sand in their boots; they brought tiki culture to the suburbs. Beach faced a rude awakening upon his return; his wife filed for divorce and he lost everything but his name, which he’d take to Waikiki for a reboot.

Lieutenant Commander James A. Michner published his account on the fictional island of Bali Ha’i as Tales of the South Pacific in 1947. “I wish I could tell you about the South Pacific,” Michener wrote. “The way it actually was. The endless ocean. The infinite specks of coral we called islands. Coconut palms nodding gracefully toward the ocean. Reefs upon which waves broke into spray, and inner lagoons, lovely beyond description. I wish I could tell you about the sweating jungle, the full moon rising behind the volcanoes, and the waiting. The waiting. The timeless, repetitive waiting.”

For America, the wait for exotica’s arrival was almost over.

In 1947, Eden Ahbez was living under the first L of the Hollywood sign. He’d spent the bulk of his 40 trips around the sun as a proto-hippie, living in caves and lean-tos with a group of men affectionately known as “The Nature Boys,” before decamping to Mount Lee with a sleeping bag and his wife. Lyrics for his free-love hymn “Nature Boy” began circulating in 1946, with a tattered copy reaching Nat King Cole via his valet the following year. Hoping to record the song, Cole began seeking out a bearded man who was last seen preaching the wonders of Lebensreform on the streets of Hollywood. The April 1948 release would ultimately hit #1 on the Billboard charts and spawn dozens of cover versions, making “Nature Boy” the first hit in the exotica canon.

Nearly a year to the day after the release of “Nature Boy,” Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II’s musical adaptation of Tales of the South Pacific debuted on Broadway, whetting America's island appetite. Juanita Hall’s quivering mezzo-soprano on “Bali Ha’i” prototyped the coming movement, her character Bloody Mary creating a sultry intrigue with the lyric “Where the sky meets the sea. Here I am your special island. Come to me, come to me.” The Original 1949 Broadway cast LP was the best selling album of the decade, bringing the imagined sounds of Vanuatu into living rooms everywhere.

In Cyril Scott’s 1928 book The Influence of Music on History and Morals he anticipated that “Great floods of melody will be poured forth from the higher planes, to be translated into earthly sound by composers sensitive enough to apprehend them.” His heir apparent was only six at the time of the prediction, but two decades later Les Baxter found himself on the cusp of creating a series of modern classical works that would define an entire genre. Baxter had spent the ’40s banging around west coast jazz combos, including stints with Freddie Slack, Mel Tormé and his own Les Baxter Trio before being tapped by composer Harry Revel to arrange an album around the then-chic theremin. The two Revel collaborations—1947’s Music Out of the Moon and 1948’s Perfume Set To Music—solidified Baxter’s innovative reputation at Capitol Records, who had unusual pairing in mind for his next effort.

“I hadn’t been to South America or Cuba or anyplace when I did my exotic stuff,” Baxter said in a 1995 interview with Peter Huestis. “It just came out of nowhere.” He did, however, have a Peruvian princess in the studio to make up for the lack of stamps in his passport. Yma Sumac arrived in New York in 1946 with her husband/manager Moisés Vivanco, showcasing her her five octave, quasi-operatic talent as Inca Taqui Trio before finally catching Capitol's ear three years later. “We sat with Yma Sumac and listened to her natural incantation, or music, or whatever you might call it, which was totally foreign to anything that we know as Western music or European music, or anything else,” Capitol V.P. Alan Livingston said. “I give Les Baxter credit. He sat with her and managed to isolate certain portions of what she was doing to write and create a background to go with it.”

“After (Voices of the Xtabay) came out, people were very intrigued,” Sumac said. “They had never heard this kind of singing before. They didn’t know how to classify it; whether it was classical or mumbo-jumbo!”

At the half century mark, exotica had found its image via Donn Beach, its sound through the classical musings of Les Baxter, and its voice in Yma Sumac, but it lacked for an anthem. Baxter’s 1951 solo debut The Ritual of the Savage would change that. The back cover described the album as “a tone poem of the sound and the struggle of the jungle…the hue and mood of the interior…the tempo and texture of the bustling seaports and the tropics!” Savage’s signature moment doesn’t appear until the opening of side B, when “Quiet Village” unfurls as a series of ostinatos bathed in percussion and strings. It would be another eight years before the song hit the charts, and even then Baxter’s name could only be found while squinting at the credits.

Martin Denny washed up at Donn Beach’s Dagger Lounge in 1954. The pianist had spent the previous 20 years in and out of casinos and hotels on and off the mainland before forming a trio with vibraphonist Arthur Lyman and bassist John Kramer. A year later, after moving on to the Shell Bar at Hawaiian Village and adding percussionist Augie Colon, inspiration struck Denny: “The Hawaiian Village was a beautiful open-air tropical setting. There was a pond with some very large bullfrogs right next to the bandstand. One night we were playing a certain song and I could hear the frogs going ‘Rivet! Rivet! Rivet!’ When we stopped playing, the frogs stopped croaking. A little while later I said, ‘Let’s repeat that tune,’ and sure enough the frogs started croaking again. And as a gag, some of the guys spontaneously started doing these bird calls. The following day one of the guests came up and said, ‘Mr. Denny, you know that song you did with the birds and the frogs? Can you do that again?’ At the next rehearsal I said, ‘Okay, fellas, how about if each one of you does a different bird call? We must have played that tune thirty times. It turned out to be ‘Quiet Village.’”

Word of Denny’s schtick spread east to Liberty Records’ Los Angeles office, leading Si Waronker to take a $850 gamble and put Denny & Co. in the studio. The result was 1957’s Exotica, a slow burner that wouldn’t find the charts for nearly two years, but would ultimately be the genus for an entire subspecies of music. Baxter’s song would be covered vigorously in the coming years, working its way into every lounge set from Maui to Miami, replete with bird calls and piped in shorebreaks and tradewinds. Was it jazz? Was it classical? Was it world music? Could it be mumbo-jumbo?

Just as Si Waronker wrung every nickel out of Ross Bagdasarian’s Chipmunks, he would apply the same level of force in getting the most out of his new invention. Thirteen Martin Denny albums were pushed through the system over the course of five years alongside cash-ins by the likes of Russ Garcia, Leo Arnaud, Jack Costanzo, Ethel Azama, John Buzon, Augie Colon, Chick Floyd and Rene Paulo. Many of these shared more than just a flair for Polynesian pop, they used the same team of photographers, and quite often the same woman for their album covers.

The team of Murray Garrett and Gene Howard had only a few credits under their belts when a portrait of a bejeweled Sandy Warner peering through a beaded doorway was optioned by Liberty Records for use on Denny’s debut. An aspiring model and actress, the buxom Warner appeared on 16 Denny jackets wearing little more than the wind, and many of the other Liberty exotica titles. Blonde or brunette, half naked or clothed, in nature or in studio, Warner’s striking look earned her the title of “Exotica Girl” on the way to a career that included body doubling for Marilyn Monroe in Some Like It Hot and guesting on The Twilight Zone. “A lot of people bought the album on the strength of her pictures,” Denny reflected.

“She came to Hawaii and sat in the audience right in front of the stage. After my performance, she sort of waved at me to come over. I walked over to her table, and it turned out that she was on her honeymoon. But I didn't know who she was. Then she said ‘You and I have a lot in common.’ And I said ‘Oh, really? What's that?’ She said, ‘Well, I'm the girl on your album covers!’ I looked at her and said, ‘My God, you're right!’”

Warner took her celebrity status one step too far with 1959’s Fair & Warner album, exotic in cover only, and even then just barely. She’d hardly be the last struggling actor to go looking for paradise in a Hollywood recording studio; Martha Raye, Aki Aleong, and Darla Hood all donned sonic loincloths on their climb up Mount Lee. Even Les Baxter succumbed to the pressure of Tinseltown and recut his own version of South Pacific, adding—as described on the back cover—”a new dimension of color and momentum…to the already legendary music of Rodgers and Hammerstein.”

By the time Hawaii entered the union in August 1959, the Exotica movement was febrile. Hawaiian shirts and floral muu muus became de rigueur. Backyard pools were ringed with torches and rattan furniture. The Outrigger Lounge in Rochester, Minnesota, The Mainlander in St. Louis, Missouri, Tiki Cove in Fairbanks, Alaska, Kahiki in Columbus, Ohio, and Judges’ Beyond The Reef in Brookfield, Wisconsin, proved that the phenomena was no longer coastal. Walt Disney even got into the fray, breaking ground on his million dollar Enchanted Tiki Room at the turn of the decade, promising to combine “entertainment magic and the wonders of space-age electronics…starring a cast of more than 200 birds, flowers and tropical Tikis…all brought to life through the wonders of AUDIO ANIMATRONICS!”

The arrival of the Beatles and their British brethren in 1964 wiped out this lush, easy-listening movement almost entirely. Sinatra or Martin might be able to squeeze “Blue Hawaii” into a set at the Sands, but for the turned-on boomers gripping with the Kennedy assassination and the Civil Rights Movement, a bit more substance was required. A few outliers would slip through here and there, but America’s fascination with the tropics was largely over. Martin Denny’s 1969 album Exotic Moog was a fitting nail in the coffin. “The company aimed this at what was then called the ‘underground’ market. This was when the hippie thing had started happening in San Francisco,” Denny said. “But the record never sold, so that was the end of that.”

A quarter century later, a new generation of space age bachelors and bachelorettes rediscovered the sound, nestling Esquivel and Chaino LPs between their mid-century hi-fi systems and Libbey cocktail glassware. Capitol Records—the repository for both the Les Baxter and Liberty catalogs—rolled out nearly 50 volumes of Ultra Lounge, compact disc compilations aimed squarely at hipsters and boomer nostalgists alike. Fittingly, much of the renaissance focused on the more established names in the field, ignoring—or just completely unaware of—the indie contributions to the field.

Technicolor Paradise is proof that Denny, Sumac, and Baxter were just islets poking through the sea, and that Exotica’s larger ecosystem of reefs, lagoons, and sandbars are worthy of equal attention and conservation. Be it mosquito-bitten torch singers, landlocked surf quartets, fad-chasing jazz combos, mad genius band leaders, wannabe actors, or a middle aged loner programming bird calls into a Hammond, Exotica was always more concerned with what geography might sound like over who was conducting. Bill Bradway of the Gospel Hawaiianaires never even made it to the 50th state, but his homemade three-necked pedal steel is far more exotic than the Xaphoon or Chinese Bell Tree.

Technicolor Paradise is where one makes it, after all.

Tracklist
Disc 1
1. Chuck "Big Guitar" Ernest with the Satellite Band - Blue Oasis (2:12)
2. The Sound Breakers - Marooned (2:23)
3. The Wailers - Driftwood (2:44)
4. Lenny - The Moon of Manakoora (3:20)
5. Biscaynes with Co-Encidentals - Midnight in Montevideo (2:40)
6. Red Harrison & His Zodiacs - Chant of the Jungle (1:39)
7. The Palatons - Jungle Guitar (2:06)
8. Chayns - Live with the Moon (3:05)
9. Bailey's Nervous Kats featuring James Mills - Cobra (2:26)
10. The Blazers - Sound of Mecca (2:44)
11. The Crew - The Jaguar Hunt (2:55)
12. The Gems - Slave Girl (2:01)
13. Jerry & the Catalinas - The Arabian Knight (2:29)
14. The Jaguars - Night Walker (2:54)
15. The Voodoos - The Voodoo Walk (2:42)
16. The Shelltones - Blue Castaway (2:35)
17. The Blue Bells - Atlantis (2:26)
18. Bill & Jean Bradway - Paradise Isle (3:03)

Disc 2
1. The Melody Mates - Enchantment (2:25)
2. Don Reed featuring the Voice of Love - Nature Boy (2:26)
3. The Baton of Andre Brummer - Tumba (2:11)
4. Darla Hood - Silent Island (2:39)
5. Martha Raye with Phil Moore Orchestra - Lotus Land (3:02)
6. Baha'i Victory Chorus - Nightengale of Paradise (1:45)
7. Carmen - Isle of Love (2:35)
8. The Monzas - Forever Walks a Drifter (3:09)
9. Akim - Voodoo Drums (2:21)
10. Fred Darian with Bill Loose Orchestra - Magic Voodoo Moon (2:45)
11. Don Sargent & his Buddies - Voodoo Kiss (1:57)
12. Joan Joyce Trio - Captured (2:52)
13. Pony Sherrell - Tobago (2:36)
14. Darla Hood - My Quiet Village (2:15)
15. Jerry Warren & the Valids - Enchantress (3:07)
16. The Centuries - Polynesian Paradise (2:06)
17. The Potted Palm - My House of Grass (2:13)
18. The Castiles - Enchantment (2:36)

Disc 3
1. Five Glow Tones - Quiet Village (2:42)
2. Modesto Duran & Orchestra - Silent Island (2:37)
3. Ross Anderson Chorus & Orchestra - Tam-bu Theme (2:33)
4. Bobby Christian - Caravan (2:08)
5. Bruce Norman Quintet - Arabian Rhythm (2:11)
6. The Slaves - Hari's Harem (2:11)
7. Arnie Derksen & Chise - Similou (1:48)
8. Three Bars featuring Nicky Roberts - Caribbean Cruise (2:49)
9. Robert Drasnin - Chant of the Moon (2:33)
10. Blue Jeans - Moon Mist (3:03)
11. Artie Barsamian - The Enchanting Melody (3:07)
12. Eddie Kochak & Hakki Obidia - Jazz in Port Said (2:16)
13. Gene Sikora & The Irrationals - Tanganyika (1:51)
14. Bobby Paris - Dark Continent (2:19)
15. Walter Bolen - Lion Hunt (2:30)
16. Jimmy McGriff - Jungle Cat (4:45)
17. Chico Jose - Locura (Madness) (1:36)
18. Clyde Derby - Lost Island (3:08)
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Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 5A113636FFD676F02AC63927840ED2FFA93874B6
FILE: 17 - Atlantis.flac
Size: 10007522 Hash: 03323BFB6FFC50E28A15ACC09C5BCE2B Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 32E178C65D3F55B279B6739FC46E6A2DEFE190DF
FILE: 16 - Blue Castaway.flac
Size: 10520720 Hash: DDEBAE5CF7D1FB87E259805A0B0B08DB Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 141BFE28DA5B3716745708C02CE0CE335D50FBDD
FILE: 15 - The Voodoo Walk.flac
Size: 16518177 Hash: D114DD4418E634053708FF5BAB99DA27 Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: DE80934FCEAD282F46F191D4F165B88DC4F5D95E
FILE: 14 - Night Walker.flac
Size: 12718884 Hash: F86021B5C5D32C8AC4EAF3C0176AE662 Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 0EE8411BC58030BCD0CE8BEC624A71FD7FC30A9D
FILE: 13 - The Arabian Knight.flac
Size: 10476202 Hash: 1862478283140EE9A53C53700A85DA45 Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 0AF14E12DFD218C1210E02C63E5199D0A12FEB0D
FILE: 12 - Slave Girl.flac
Size: 8582470 Hash: 7AD0DD7F9B7DA48099CD2D09A4909A25 Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 030484CB776ED900E9745E63BE461993AE2DC942
FILE: 11 - The Jaguar Hunt.flac
Size: 12970161 Hash: 203C47EB7925C6C1D360B363B05E00CD Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: F1C9FF0122667F647416ECF60916BAA37BC8ED10
FILE: 10 - Sound of Mecca.flac
Size: 12356849 Hash: DDEDA853C0A8BDC876BECBA5FE74B58F Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 9AD218D9F0414B8C21DA17A95739471CEE5214C0
FILE: 09 - Cobra.flac
Size: 8806717 Hash: 28C974E133B78BB2A6E4A5A916BE8BBA Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 99%
Signature: A681F7E5EC2A07A616269F249184F4DB925918CD
FILE: 08 - Live with the Moon.flac
Size: 21966327 Hash: 743FBEB5D87C021DEAB7858EF9C4EDF7 Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 51C3722BD2C4056FCA24459AB34BBEF14B33E8A4
FILE: 07 - Jungle Guitar.flac
Size: 8671778 Hash: DE46F83D40A21FA3988B4CEF35181619 Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 2E641CE69D0EF05CCDA2ED35292949927BACE8AE
FILE: 06 - Chant of the Jungle.flac
Size: 7188181 Hash: 42563B5DB9A8B3EA141D9B840F30A531 Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: F2D1F4C42E87BCFF6345BCC475BC63F93D14FAB9
FILE: 05 - Midnight in Montevideo.flac
Size: 12238748 Hash: 97D3FE1984B5A022F7CEDD3447830207 Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: D8A31833F374F4DE147FC9E0CFB798A56DC86CF2
FILE: 04 - The Moon of Manakoora.flac
Size: 21756145 Hash: 77992EB08B8BA42F54FC9F2FB446F2D1 Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 99%
Signature: C7AB047EC88C97AE67CA4F3A12D47C2252B2A645
FILE: 03 - Driftwood.flac
Size: 16962244 Hash: 1731FED04819F1789D81EA70DB67362F Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 5736B7CC603E1CF047815D09A176AAB9CF555266
FILE: 02 - Marooned.flac
Size: 10132982 Hash: 79C773F91CBA64A1B300C5FC39EC631E Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: AF87093D0F06698B85320DCF3DAB1496DBCD30EB
FILE: 01 - Blue Oasis.flac
Size: 8565091 Hash: FB8686ED4EBA6FC4341B49B44931D3BF Accuracy: -m8
Conclusion: CDDA 100%
Signature: 04801D4272F168F1DD4E228BAE7D8923726B8288