With the tribe here on the one uninhabited Secret Island there's a lot less time for drinking and blogging! The once serene bamboo hut is now so littered with children's toys that a late night return from the bar in the dark became more hazardous than it might have been!
The tribe Chief decided that the bar had to go to create a Jungle Rumpus room where the savages could play to their hearts content. So it was with much sadness that the bar was listed on eBay. It was eventually won by someone living two hours away who baulked at the courier costs and wanted me to get a trailer from somewhere, wrap and pack it and deliver it thirty minutes away to a depot!... not likely! Incidentally it would have never seen another Mai Tai as it was going to have a cash register sat on it in a Bikini Shop!
If further proof was needed that a good attitude goes a long way in this world I've since let it go to someone else at a reduced cost who will at least give it some love. Turns out the new owner is one of Sydney's Casino Rumblers. Hope he enjoys the bar as much as I enjoyed the music!
As I mentioned in my previous post the Secret Island is currently under the firm grip of an Icy Winter... 16 degree maximums inside a bamboo hut has me wishing for Summer and/or warmer climes!
I stumbled across the Tikiyaki Orchestra Village Resort and found a really good deal. Not only to you get the keys to room 151 for a week in the sunshine you also get a copy of the Tikiyaki Orchestra's new album Aloha Baby and a whole heap of booty that Tiki aficionados swipe from reputable Tiki establishments ... you know the mugs, ice bucket, matches, ash trays ... need I go on?
Here is a little more about the hotel itself...
"The Tikiyaki Polynesian Village was constructed at great cost on the golden sands of Waikiki Beach. The well known architectural firm of Dewy, Chetham & Howe was contracted to draw up the plans and build the tropical destination. All the interiors were contracted to be designed by I.M. Bland-one of Hawaii's greatest interior designers. I.M. Bland chose the decore of the Shanghai International Trading Company (ShITCO) as the outfitter for the well appointed room. ShITCO was chosen for its hand made Island look featuring carved furniture made of real Polynesian driftwood and other found artifacts."
Aloha Lanes just one of the substandard facilities available to guests!
In 2010, Mr. Ho decided to release a series of albums over the next few years under the title "Exotica for Modern Living." These records will attempt to take the best elements of mid-century living, music, and culture and merge them with modern life to provide listeners with a "retro futuristic" listening experience.
The beautiful artwork by Javier Garcia
The series opened with "The Unforgettable Sounds of Esquivel" featuring 23 musicians playing Mr. Ho's transcriptions of the lost arrangements of Mexico's king of space-age pop. Following this came "Third River Rangoon," featuring third-stream exotica music.I've recently downloaded this and I'm not regretting it... particularly when you can pick up the digital download and CD for $9.99 from their official website.... almost double that on iTunes!
It truly is a wonderful piece of modern exotica. I could give you a review but would rather leave it to the professionals who can far more eloquently articulate what I want to say...
"… Mr. Ho's new album Third River Rangoon, by his shapeshifting ensemble Mr. Ho's Orchestrotica may have been inspired by that subgenre, but it's considerably more magical. It leaves far more to the imagination, a lushly nocturnal collection whose most impressive feat of sorcery is getting a simple lineup of vibraphone, bass flute, bass and percussion to create the sweep of a hundred-piece orchestra. The production is genius…"Lucid Culture. 2011.
"… a perfect cocktail of mid-century 'space age bachelor pad' music deliciously accented with chamber, jazz, classical, and world music…"—Jonathan Perry. Boston Globe. 2011.
Back at the start of May I posted about the imminent opening of Trader Sams at Disneyland. Well the question is, is it any good?
Well what better place to find out than check Critiki . Well it would appear that its well worth the visit, scoring an average of 9.4. Whilst the decor is grabbing the headlines it is disappointing to see that its lowest scores come when reviewer score the drink quality, drink selection and food... all key elements of a quality Tiki Bar. The Critiki review states...
"Trader Sam's is named for the "head" salesman from the Jungle Cruise ride at Disneyland, and the decor is a mix of influence from that ride and the Enchanted Tiki Room, with a little of Walt Disney World's Adventurer's Club thrown in for good measure. Top-notch Disney designers Kevin Kidney and Jody Daily were able to work on some of the decor. There are reports of some interactive elements at the bar.
The early word is that the drink quality is higher than one might expect, with syrups from Portland's Trader Tiki in use. If you like the punny performance given by the Jungle Cruise skippers, you'll love the drink names: "HippopotoMaiTai", "Schweitzer Falls" and "Tiki Tiki Tiki Tiki Tiki Rum" are some of the cleverly-named cocktails."
To mark the opening Richard at the Designerland Blog has created and shared a rather nice unofficial Trader Sam's Soundtrack. Get over there and check it out...
I've been doing a little reading around the marketing of Hawaiian music in the 1950's. I found quite an informative article which highlighted its growth, and this Webley Edwards album is a classic example. There are tracks which mark your arrival and departure on the island by boat... you kick back in your favourite armchair and are transported to a Paradise Island aided by the impressive sleeve notes and full colour booklet which acts almost as a travel brochure.
Extract from article...
"Hawaii-inspired music marketed via popular record albums, radio shows, and Hollywood film soundtracks aided Hawaii’s transformation in the popular imagination from a mysterious ‘primitive’ paradise into the 50th U.S. state. Indeed, by constructing and capturing the temptingly tropical so-called ‘sounds’ of Hawaii on the latest hi-fi recording equipment, the music industry offered up Hawaiian music as an achievement of modern technology, promoting these U.S. islands as an acoustic, as well as a tourist, paradise."
"Record albums are useful sights for material culture studies for several reasons. They are durable. Records from the 1950s remain widely available today, collected and coveted by consumers, and recirculate as retro icons. Used records are sold by the thousands in vinyl stores, at record fairs, and on the Internet; and, surprisingly, vinyl has rebounded as a viable niche within the music industry. Furthermore, old records are often re-released on compact disc, thus enjoying a new life. Although images from 1950s and 1960s advertisements usually appear hopelessly dated, record cover designs enjoy new life on compact discs that cash in on ironic trends or retro fashions."
It's been a long time between Mai Tai's for me with things very busy here on the Secret Island. Still as things settle down and we edge towards a Southern Hemisphere winter here there will be plenty of time to dust off the keyboard and again bring to you something to wet those Tiki Tastebuds!
Today I thought that I would take a long board and ride the wave of Wedding fervor that seems to have crashed on to the shore this week. As a former inhabitant of the Royal Island I still take quite an interest in the Royals. I'm not the biggest Royalist but Will and Kate (... sorry Catherine!!) do have the potential to reinvent them in the same way that Princess Diana did so successfully.
Anyway enough of all that. While the destination of their Honeymoon might still be a secret I can think of nothing better than a Honeymoon in Hawaii. Will and Kate not convinced? Well sit back and listen to this....
This album is a treasure that was almost lost, deleted on vinyl the master tapes have only recently been discovered allowing the release of this title on CD. In the Honolulu Magazine feature on the Best 50 Albums of Hawaii; The Hilo Hawaiians, Honeymoon in Hawaii album came in at Number 34, amazing when you consider that the whole thing was recorded in just one session. The album is considered a must have for Hawaiian Music Collectors as it showcases the unique talents of Bunny Brown, Kihei Brown. Arthur Kaua, Mona Kalima, and Buddy Brown at their best.
Les Baxter needs no introduction and in this release he's at his atmospheric best. Each track on this double vinyl sounds like a movie soundtrack from days of old.
Its not all exotica by any stretch but its a great album which more than holds its own. My personal picks are "Blue Jungle", "Bustin the Bongos" (I which it sounds like the player is doing just that!) and will I ever tire of "Quiet Village?"
The Ukulele ... said to mean "jumping flea" in Hawaiian.
The instrument, introduced to the Hawaiian islands by Portuguese immigrants in the 19th century, is undergoing a renaissance. According to a Time Magazine article Hohner Inc., which manufactures the Lanikai brand of ukuleles, saw sales shoot up 300% in 2010.
Why the sudden popularity? Well Hohner's research shows that during the Great Depression, only two instruments showed year-on-year increases in sales: the harmonica and the ukulele, both cheap, compact and easy to learn. History is repeating itself!
Forget everything you know about the ukulele — there, that was easy — and go do a quick Google search. The first video that pops up won't be some grainy clip of Tiny Tim or George Formby but a performance by a hair-gelled 34-year-old Hawaiian named Jake Shimabukuro. In 2006, the ukulele virtuoso's jaw-dropping rendition of the Beatles' "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" hit YouTube and went viral, pulling in more than 7 million viewers.
I even noticed a poster for a Ukulele Orchestra in my local stationery store! I don't have one but one of the savages here on the Island does ... maybe I should give it a go!
While Australia battles through a heatwave, category five cyclones and floods, friends of The Secret Island in the US are rugging up against the extreme cold. What a crazy world. To take our minds off the weather for your listening pleasure I present Exotica Today by Martin Denny, a 1966 Liberty Records release.
Think Martin Denny... think Exotica! When his first record, "Quiet Village," was released, Martin Denny immediately became the spokesman for paradise.In this particular album, he selected some of the most popular tunes of the time and have them a beating with the Exotica stick. For true fans of exotica he may have not gone far enough, but for those wanting a lounge feel with the odd bird call then this is for you! My pick is "The Shadow of Your Smile" which has more than a hint of Quiet Village about it.
For your listening pleasure I bring you all the way from 1960 Les Baxter's Teen Drums.
Part of the marketing of rock & roll as youth music back in the day meant trying to figure out how to sell kids and what were the sounds that they would dig. The record labels tapped everyone for ideas. One of those people was Les Baxter he had already established himself as one of the princes of Exotica and a duke of easy listening. He had backed Nat King Cole & Frank Sinatra. He helped create Yma Sumac's classic the Voice of Xtabay. His classic exotica records, Ritual of the Savage and Tamboo!, were released. He was a success. Still, Capitol tapped him for a teen record and Les Baxter's Teen Drums was made.
One of the great record sleeves.
Les Baxter recorded these swinging tracks with various Pacific Coast drum stars, jazz, Afro-Cuban, Brazilian and Porto-Rican skin-thumpers. No music was written. They all simply sat down in a studio on Hollywood's Vine Street and started pounding. Les came up with a batch of mad percussion effects, even farther out than those he achieved in "Skins". He's one of California's hottest bongo-beaters and he dashes about the streets in a turquoise Thunderbird with a souped-up engine.
A follow-up to the popular Skins! of 1957, Les Baxter's Teen Drums marks a return to pure beat territory. "Ting Ting Ting" and "Brazil Nuts" start the album off with furious bongo bashing busy rhythms, but then things slow to a more sedate pace as Teen Drums delivers its skeletal arrangements and tightly restrained beats. “I dig” swings along nicely but my pick is “Calypso.” Les Baxter's Teen Drums is exotica of sorts, perfect for the average space-age bachelor's cocktail party or simply load the surf boards (.. and the bongos!) for the perfect listen on your next surf safari.
This animated sequence by John Moore features Baxter's I Dig as its soundtrack. Take a look and listen... its a good indication whether you'll get with the beat of Teen Drums!
I recently came across some trailers for a short film tiled "Tikimentary" which went on to become a longer movie screened at the 2010 Hukilau. Tikimentary is
A road-movie searching for the ultimate Tiki experience. Take a trip through San Diego's Tiki Oasis, The Hukilau, in Fort Lauderdale and the Luau By The Lake, in fabulous Lake George. An intimate portrait of this new exotic urban tribe: the so-called "tikiphiles". They drink tropical drinks, dress in vintage clothes, listen to Exotica music, but most of all: are a big and colorful family. Starring: Tiki Kiliki, Otto Von Stroheim, Baby Doe, Marina The Mermaid, King Kukulele, Shag, Lenore "Tikilicious" & Steve Koppleman, Joe & Nicole Desmond, Harold Golen, Paul & Kelly Patterson, Suzanne Long, Sandy Future, Amy Eggers, Kiki Lenoue, David Lenoue.
Here are a couple of trailers to wet your appetite:
"The average person doesn't get it, they don't understand."
"Tiki casts a spell on you!"
"We are all looking for a paradise to escape to."
It was directed by Duda Leite, a Brazilian independent filmmaker currently living in São Paulo. He has directed some “cult” short films like “Serial Clubber Killer” (1994) Best Short Film at Mix Brazil, “Selma & Denise” (1995), “After the Fox” (1999) – Official Selection at OutFest in Los Angeles and Frameline Festival in San Francisco, and “Resmungo” (2002) which aired on MTV Brazil.The final version of the movie is currently available for watching on MUBI.com.
Here's a little something to lift a little of the Winter gloom for those of you in the Northern Hemisphere. Turn the heating up really high, dig out the Aloha shirt, pour a Mai Tai and listen to this.
It speaks of the lure of tropical Hawaii, where it is always Springtime; and it whispers of romance. All its enchantment is captured in these high fidelity recordings for your enjoyment and pleasure. It conjures up pleasant dreams, and, like a mating call, it invites you to come and play in Hawaii. Hawaiian hospitality awaits you. You too would want this fine album of Hawaiian melodies in your music library. AUTHENTIC Hawaiian Melodies: Recorded in Hawaii by 49th State Hawaii Records.
John Kameaaloha Almeida - the "Dean of Hawaiian music" was a blind composer, musician, vocalist, entertainer, and teacher. He was born under a bush while his mother was gathering maile in Pauoa Valley. His blindness was attributed to the maile sap on his mothers hands, although advances over the past century in knowledge of childhood vision loss indicate a more likely cause to be congential blindness!
His compositions, at least 300, mostly inspired by women, were songs of love and romance, and enhanced his reputation as a casanova.
I had a few minutes spare time this morning so I went thrifting, I'm normally fairly open minded when I enter these places - Australia doesn't offer quite the same odds of stumbling across a real find but it is worth it ... for the thrill of the chase at least!
Whilst trawling through the vinyl (Why is it that every thrift store has the same five records?)I came across an Hawaiian release which captured my imagination...
... they don't package them like that anymore! ;0)
With Elvis’ birthday on the 8th of January the local satellite TV movie channels were full of Elvis movies. They’re not normally something I’d be too interested in, but the mention of Hawaii grabbed me. Released in 1961 Blue Hawaii was the first of three Elvis movies to be filmed in Hawaii. Much of it was filmed in the grounds of the Coco Palms which was the oldest hotel on the Garden Isle of Kaua`i, and was at the time the world's most famous Polynesian resort. When Hurricane Iniki struck in September 1992, the Coco Palms was shut down indefinitely as repairs proved too costly and the entire island struggled with recession. The property, located on the southeast shore of Kaua`i, has been left to decay now for over a decade as is still closed.
Blue Hawaii was one of Elvis' most successful films, grossing $10,440,453 worldwide in 1962 alone. In the movie Chad Gates (Elvis) returns from the Army, and is happy to be back in Hawaii with his surf-board, his beach buddies, and his girlfriend. His father wants him to go to work at the Great Southern Hawaiian Fruit Company, but Chad is reluctant. So Chad goes to work as a tour guide at his girlfriend's agency. Yup that’s the plot… I won’t spoil the ending but you’ll see it coming soon enough!
It is argued that this film set the tone for Presley's future film career — pretty locations, gorgeous girls, dull plots, and mediocre songs, and that I’m afraid pretty much sums it up. It is worth a watch as the beautiful Hawaiian paradise unfolds like a travelogue throughout. It offers some interesting insights into Hawaii of the early 1960’s as well as its fashion and lifestyle of the time.
As far as the soundtrack goes the original 1961 album release of "Blue Hawaii", had 14 songs on it. - "Blue Hawaii" features the title song, "No More", "Can't Help Falling In Love", "Rock-a-Hula-Baby", "Moonlight Swim", "Hawaiian Wedding Song", plus more. "Steppin' out of Line", the original, was the one bonus track already released. This version was released later by RCA complete with alternate versions. There are some Elvis versions of some Hawaiian classics, some songs which had words re written for them as well as some pure Elvis cheese!
Stanley Wilson was a key figure in Hollywood's music industry in the 1950s and 1960s, and rarely recorded specifically for record audiences, however his Pagan Love album is considered a classic piece of Jungle Exotica. In the late 1950s, he joined the new television arm of Universal Studios as head of creative activities, which meant he was in charge of putting music behind all of the studio's productions, hiring and assigning composers, arrangers, orchestrators, and conductors. In this position, Wilson employed many of the other arrangers and composers most notably, Juan Garcia Esquivel, with whom he composed the signature melody that accompanied the Universal emblem at the end of all the studio's shows.
Here's a quote from the sleeve notes...
One of the most colorful and important facts of Pagan Life is the Courtship Ritual. But while the idea of Ritual is common to all primitive societies, pagan love rites run a startling gamut. From the death defying land diving of the New Hebrides through the perilous ballet of the Malayan Pinchak knife fight to the innocent witchcraft of Zulu love magic. Composer and conductor Stanley Wilson here artfully weaves these varied threads of aboriginal amour into richly colored music alive with brilliant and impressive sounds. Blending western instruments with those of the south seas, he has created love themes which are at once exotic and familiar. Alternately sensual, sublime, melodramatic, and comic. these pieces were first conceived by Stan as the score for a colorful documentary called the Mating Urge! "Here the music stands alone as a magnificent evocation of "Pagan Love"
No self respecting Tiki fan would be without their own copy of the Book of Tiki by Sven Kirsten which is widely considered the Tiki Bible.
I was therefore expecting a lot from The Sound of Tiki a seventeen track cd featuring some interesting selections of exotica music.
Having been fortunate to have met both (and seen perform) the two foremost practitioners of Exotica music, Martin Denny and Arthur Lyman before they joined the Big Luau in the Sky, urban archeologist Kirsten is now applying his vast knowledge of Tiki culture to throw new light on the themes and concepts of Polynesian pop. By assembling a cornucopia of songs and visuals that evoke the time of Tiki, this compilation brings the escapist fantasies of yesterday back to today's much too real world. Contains a 52-page booklet with beautiful colorful rare images and insightful text that complements the musical experience.
My picks from it are the Don Ho - Hawaii 5-0/Quiet Village Medley and House of Bamboo by Andy Williams, neither of these feature in the YouTube sampler. Still available from Amazon and good record stores.
101 Strings was the brand for a highly successful easy listening symphonic music organization, with a discography exceeding a hundred albums and a creative lifetime of roughly thirty years. Record label mogul David L. Miller came to prominence by releasing the first Bill Haley & His Comets’ records in 1952-1953 on his own Essex label in the United Kingdom.
Following the rise of popular mood music artists Mantovani and Jackie Gleason Presents, Miller subcontracted the Northwest German Radio Orchestra of Hamburg conducted by Wilhelm Stephan to play in-house arrangements of popular standards. The first 101 Strings album was released in late 1957; an astounding 24 titles were released in 1958. These records were pressed by Miller’s own plants and released through his own distribution channels such as grocery stores, part of the reason why they are so common in dusty thrift store record piles.
In 1964, Miller sold the franchise to Al Sherman, a successful record label distributor, who renamed the label Alshire (based in Los Angeles, California) and moved recording to London. The Alshire era is characterized by large-scale expansion of product, attempts to branch out into younger markets and, beginning in 1969, eventual stagnation despite some late efforts from Les Baxter released under the 101 banner!
This pre the stagnation (in my opinion)release titled Romance of Hawaii...
Conjures up pictures of surf on sun drenched beaches, azure skies, shimmering corals, blue lagoons, lush jungle and exotic flowers!
Mele Kalikmaka everyone ... have fun out there. While we're in the mood check out this video from the Californian self proclaimed purveyors of Hula-billy the Hula Girls, which incidentally was shot at Don the Beachcombers! I know that they have been working on some commercials for them so I'm sure this would have been recorded at the same time.
For you Hawaiian music historians the song was written in 1949 by Robert Alex Anderson and recorded by Bing Crosby & The Andrews Sisters in 1950. If you're already in the mood for a Christmas movie the song is featured in National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation!
The Hula Girls - Official Website.
For your listening pleasure I have Like Bongos! a Time Records release from the 2000 Series.
I found it quite difficult to find out much about this record. However I do know that it does feature Johnny Pacheco: Latin all-star, chief exponent of the pachanga, and (at this early date) sideman Latin percussionist. Some of these tracks featured on other Time Record releases, particularly "Monterrey" and "Bongolina."
... I'm not the biggest bongo fan in the World however the version of "Caravan" is worth the download alone. You too will Like Bongos!
For your listening pleasure from The Secret Island today we have Sweet Leilani from Hal Aloma, one of the most versatile and popular Hawaiian artists.
The slightly less exotic sounding Harold David Alama began his career with his brother Sam Alama at the Alexander Young and Moana hotels in Honolulu. He then went to New York with Lani McIntire and played at the Hotel Lexington's Hawaiian Room for nearly four years. He played at New York's Luau 400 for seven years and joined Tommy Dorsey's band for several years. He toured extensively and was the band leader at the Polynesian Village for the grand opening of Disney World. He appears with Tommy Dorsey in the MGM film Ship Ahoy.
Hal was also a composer and sixty five of his songs were recorded, including 'Echoes of the South Pacific,' 'Lokelani,' 'Wiki Wiki Mai,' 'Pretty Maori Girl' and 'When It's Luau Time in Hawaii.' This release features and is titled "Sweet Leilani" a song from the 1937 film, Waikiki Wedding. Which at the time won an Academy Award for Best Original Song and was popularized by Bing Crosby who recorded it in 1935.