Jungle Madness
Hypnotique
Martin Denny
Producer: Si Waronker
Vocal Arranger: Hal Johnson, Musicologist
Color Photography: Garrett-Howard
Engineers: Bob Long and Ted Keep
Liberty LRP 3102
1959
Martin Denny - Arranger-Composer, Piano, Celeste
Julius Wechter - Vibes, Marimbas, Percussion
Harvey Ragsdale - String Bass, Marimba
August Colon - Bird Calls, Percussion, Bongos, Congos
Guest Artists:
The Jack Holloran Singers
Barbara Smith - Japanese Koto
John Mechigashari - Japanese Flute – Shakahashi
Francis "Bud" Lee - Japanese Samisen
From the back cover: In Waikiki, where I live whenever I get the chance, a bistro known as the Daggar Bar and its accompanying Bora Bora Lounge has for some time been the mecca of people who enjoy a new type of music. I'm one of the gang that gathers there to hear the fresh, clean tropical sounds of Martin Denny and his group.
Why do I go for Denny's type of music? It's professional, and very expertly put together for the public. It's new, for it uses instruments and rhythms not usually found in modern popular music. It's witty, and much to the taste of people who like a little humor for the long haul.
But in my case, I like it particularly because it reminds me of places I've been, and sounds I've loved. It's really very exciting to see the Denny group perform in Hawaii. The great brass gongs, the Asian instruments (whose names I never can remember), the tropical setting, and the proficiency of the performers make the music a delight for the late wanderer.
This is music to see and on this record there are many new sounds that will force the listener to create his own word pictures. It's music to feel – and Denny is careful to provide in his orchestrations the specific sound of things banging into other things, or scraping across them, or being struck by a human hand.
As you can see, I get a charge out of my friend's music, and this record is a new departure in that for the first time Denny utilizes voices and strings to augment his mood.
This 'blurb' is different from many that you read these days - I'm not getting paid a nickel for it... I just happen to like the music that comes with the package, and I think you will too. – JAMES MICHENER
JAMES MICHENER is one of the outstanding American novelists of our time and is an authority on the people and customs of the islands in the Pacific, Asia and the Orient. The most famous of his books, "TALES OF THE SOUTH PACIFIC," won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1948. It was adapted as a musical play in 1949 by Rodgers and Hammerstein II, and enjoyed a record-breaking run on Broadway and as a motion picture.
His other best selling novels, which have been made into highly successful motion pictures, are "SAYONARA," "THE BRIDGES AT TOKO-RI," and "RETURN TO PARADISE."
Jungle Madness
On A Little Street In Singapore
Voodoo Dreams
Chinese Lullaby
Hypnotique
St. Louis Blues
We Kiss In A Shadow
Summertime
Scimitar
American In Bali
Japanese Sandman