 Sandy Warner looking totally gorgeous on the cover of Primitiva (1958)
 Sandy Warner looking totally gorgeous on the cover of Primitiva (1958)
Agent  Triple P is currently working on his second, and long delayed, piece on  the Pan Am clipper flying boat service to Hawaii before WW2. Given that  there is only so much Hawaiian music one can listen to (about two  tracks is enough for us) then we needed something else to accompany our  efforts (other than the glass of Fitou we are currently drinking). 
 Sandy on Hypnotique (1959)
 Sandy on Hypnotique (1959)
Somewhat  anachronistically, therefore, we are listening to a selection of tracks  from the "exotica" movement, which flourished in the US from the early  fifties until the mid sixties. Ths also gives us an excuse to showcase  the lovely Sandy Warner; record cover girl from the fifties and sixties.  Picking up on the tiki culture that thrived in the post-war US, largely  as a result of US armed forces personnel experiences of the South Seas,  exotica as a musical genre was really created by American composer and  arranger Les Baxter (1922-1996) with his album Ritual of the Savage (1951). 
 
 
 Tiki heaven! 
Sadly, most of Agent Triple P' friends fail to appreciate exotica and only B will listen to it but the Germans have always had a penchant for "easy listening" music!
 Les Baxter
 Les Baxter
Baxter  was born in Texas but had studied at the Detroit Conservatory before  moving to Los Angeles and continuing his studies at Pepperdine College, a  private university then located in South Central Los Angeles (now in  Malibu). Upon finishing his studies, however, he abondoned a potentially  promising career as a concert pianist and became a singer; joining Mel  Tormé's group The Mel-Tones in 1945. 
 
By 1947 he was working as a composer and arranger for Capitol Records. His triple 78 rpm album Music Out of the Moon (1947)  introduced "space-age" pop and was notable for its use of the theremin  and it is, perhaps not surprisingly, still the best selling theremin  album of all time. It became the template for much of the fifties and  sixties "space" music from science fiction soundtracks for films such as  The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) to Telstar by The Tornados. Some tracks presage his exotica music, particularly Mist O' the Moon with its soaring wordless vocals and underlying irregular percussion. Other key exotica albums by Baxter included Tamboo (1956) and The Sacred Idol (1960) but it was Ritual of the Savage that set the template for everything that would follow with its lush strings and exotic percussion. 
 Sandy on Afro-Desia (1959)
 Sandy on Afro-Desia (1959)The  next key figure in the exotica movement was Martin Denny (1911-2005) a  New Yorker who moved to Los Angeles and studied classical piano. In his  twenties he toured South America for four and a half years with the Don  Dean orchestra. It was here that he became fascinated with Latin music  and also started to collect exotic intruments which later appeared in  his recordings. 
Sandy on Exotica Volume II (1958)
After war service he returned to Los Angeles in 1945 where he studied composition and piano at the Los Angeles Conservatory. 
Don the Beachcomber's original Waikiki restaurant
In  1954 Don the Beachcomber (real name Ernest Raymond Beaumont Gantt  (1907-1989), the inventor of tiki restaurants and bars brought Denny to  Waikiki to play in his bar. Denny stayed, formed his own group and  performed under contract at the Shell Bar in Kaiser Hawaiian Village  complex (now the Hilton Hawaiian Village).
 
 Sandy on Exotica Vol III (1959)
The  Shell Bar was located next to a pool and one evening Denny noticed that  every time the band played the frogs in the pool croaked. His bandmates  added fake bird calls to the real frogs as a joke but the next evening  the customers asked for the frog and bird call song and he realised the  sound had a future. He recorded a version of Les Baxter's Quiet Village with added bird calls and "frog" sounds and the record sold over a million copies. 
Sandy on Exotica (1957)
The resultant album Exotica (1957), however, didn't do that well. However, in 1959 to celebrate Hawaii attaining statehood his record company got Denny to re-record Exotica  in stereo and it became a huge hit reaching number 4 in the charts.  Once his contract at the Shell Bar expired he had extended bookings at  the Flamingo and Sands hotels in Las Vegas.
Martin Denny in his nineties
He  lived to see the revival of interest in his work in the nineties and  gave his last perfomance just three weeks before he died at the age of  93. Denny produced 38 albums and sold over 4 million records. 
 Sandy on The Enchanted Sea (1960)
 Sandy on The Enchanted Sea (1960)
The  record company used a model and actress called Sandy Warner on the  cover of Exotica and then hired her for the next 11 Martin Denny albums  as well. In total she appeared on the cover of 16 Martin Denny records  with the photographers constantly changing her looks. Warner was a twin  and, often with her sister Sonia, had and would continue to make, a  number of appearances in films and TV. 
Sandy for Mickey Katz (1959)
Her  success as the Denny cover model led to other album cover commissions  including comedian Mickey Katz (who was the father of Joel (Cabaret) Grey and grandfather of Jennifer (Dirty Dancing) Gray.
 Sandy for Bob Thompson (1960)
 Sandy for Bob Thompson (1960)

Sandy on the cover of her own album!
She also had a nightclub act and eventually produced a record of her own: Steve Allen Presents Fair and Warner. Martin Denny contributed the liner note:
In  the person of Sandy Warner you will find a versatile and unusual  combination of beauty and talent. She has graced the covers of all my  "LIBERTY" albums as the "EXOTICA" girl. In fact, it was a standing gag  among most D-J's that they were unaware there was a record in the  album-liner until some time later. Sandra is a lot of woman and to top  that has a warm and gracious personality. Her background in show  business is most impressive. Not only has she appeared in several top  Motion Picture Productions, but she is considered one of our top models  and is also a talented dancer. For some time, she toured the nightclub  circuit extensively with her twin sister -- Sonia. The girls toured with  such notables as Danny Kaye, plus many other famous TV and Picture  personalities.
Now, at last, Sandra emerges as a vocalist. When I  was asked if I would write these liner notes for her album I thought it  was a fitting switch. In this album Miss "EXOTICA" herself emerges as a  talented performer whose voice and personality merit the attention her  lovely face has attracted heretofore.
Settle back, relax and listen to the "EXOTIC" Sandy Warner 
 Sandy for Artur Romero from the same shoot as her Primitiva cover
 Sandy for Artur Romero from the same shoot as her Primitiva cover
 Sandy for Lord Russell's Bongo Percussionists
 Sandy for Lord Russell's Bongo Percussionists
 
 Sandy for Ethel Azama from the same shoot as Hypnotique
The  final member of the exotica triumvirate was Arthur Lyman who was  actually born in Hawaii. His father gave him a marimba as a child and by  the age of 14 he was good enough to turn professional. 
 
 Arthur Lyman and his group
Whilst  working as a clerk at the Halekulani hotel in 1954 he met Martin Denny  who, after hearing him play, offered him a job in his band. It was  Lyman, he claimed, who started the bird calls at the Shell bar which  started the whole craze. Lyman left Denny's group and formed his own,  going on to record 30 albums. His most successful album was Taboo  (1958)which sold over 2 million copies. Most of Lyman's recordings (and  some of Denny's) were recorded in the Kaiser Hawaiian Village's  geodesic dome. 
 
 The Kaiser geodesic dome at Hawaiian Village. It was demolished in 1999
The  Kaiser Hawaiian Village resort was the brainchild of industrialist  Henry J Kaiser who founded the Kaiser Shipyard which built many of WW2's  Liberty ships and pioneered mass production and pre-fabrication  techniques for shipbilding resulting in one Liberty ship being completed  in four days. He also set up Kaiser Steel and Kaiser Aluminium and was  part of the consortium that built the Hoover Dam. Kaiser wanted an  auditorium at the Hawaiian Village so bought the licence to build  Buckminster Fuller's geodesic domes. His aluminium plant built the  components and shipped them to Hawaii. Kaser eagerly flew out to the  site to watch construction in 1957 only to find, when he arrived, that  the whole 146' diameter structure was complete: it had taken less than  22 hours to build. 
 Sandy on Quiet Village (1959)
Sandy on Quiet Village (1959)
The  dome turned out to have wonderful acoustics but Lyman's recordings were  boosted by a specially constructed one-off 3 1/2 inch tape recorder  built by his engineer which gave wonderfully clear recordings which are  demonstration quality even today. When the recordings were re-mastered  for CD in the nineties the quality of the recordings were such that a  simple transfer without any digital tweaking was all that was needed.  Lyman recorded live with no overdubbing after midnight to avoid  background traffic noise but sometimes in his recordings you can hear  the sound of the cooling dome creaking as it settles.
 Sandy on Romantica (1961)
 Sandy on Romantica (1961)
So  of the three who should you sample? Baxter's orchestra is larger giving  it a big-band sound the others don't have. Despite the charms of Miss  Warner Denny's music often strays over into the oriental and can be a  little too wacky with its exotic bird calls and what have you.  For sheer quality of recording and perfomance it is Arthur Lyman that  Triple P prefers but a mixture of all three makes for a very satisfying  143 track playlist on our iPod.
 Sandy on Exotic Sounds Visit Broadway (1960)
 Sandy on Exotic Sounds Visit Broadway (1960)
 Sandy on Forbidden Island (1958)
 Sandy on Forbidden Island (1958)So,  mix a Mai-Tai put on some music by Baxter, Lyman or Denny and gaze at  the lovely face of Sandy Warner because truly you are in paradise!
 
  Sandy on Exotic Sounds from the Silver Screen (1960)
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