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Exotica

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(thing) by creases (5.6 hr) (print)   ?   3 C!s I like it! Mon Feb 18 2002 at 21:14:33

Exotica: – Jazz with a Polynesian Patina


Exotica is an hybrid pop music genre which first appeared in the middle of the Twentieth Century. Of particular note is the aesthetic associated with exotica, which has little to do with its history but everything to do with its historical milieu, and with its attitude. It is essentially a form of small-band jazz characterized by tribal percussion, early synthesizer organ instrumentals, and crazy sound effects including human voices and animal calls.

Musically speaking, exotica arose from a pan-American tradition of big band jazz. Most of the standards of "first wave" exotica are actually, structurally speaking, Afro-Cuban instrumentals. In fact, by the time exotica proper entered the music scene, most exotica conventions had already been defined by Latin composers within mainstream jazz years prior. However, exotica began to come into its own in the 1940's, when conductors like Xavier Cugat began to add unusual instruments and percussion beats to achieve exotic effects. But in the early 1950's, these deviations began to become standardized as an alternative scene. It was in this era that the progenitor of all exotica LP's, Les Baxter's milestone 10" Le Sacre du Sauvage, was released.

However, over the next twenty years, exotica underwent certain definitive changes in the hands of lounge musicians like Martin Denny (whose debut album, Exotica, gave the genre its name) and Arthur Lyman (who had played with Denny's band until his own debut, Taboo), and a tradition was formed. Baxter's and Cugat's larger orchestras were pared down to intimate lounge bands, often with a bizarre array of drums. Bird calls, cat howls, and even human ululation were added to the instrumentals in order to evoke the mystique of the jungle. According to legend, when Denny and Lyman's band were first perfecting their style in open-air subtropical bars, frogs would actually sing along with the beat. It was in these lounges that exotica music wed chemically with the Tiki aesthetic of War-era suburbanite culture, and this is how it came to be associated with Hawai'i and Polynesia despite having little to do with the Pacific in terms of influence, except insofar as it was invented by men who had fought or had friends who had fought in the Pacific Theater during World War II. After the connection was made, though, some artists began to incorporate Hawai'ian instruments like the slack key guitar. Above all, the drums were the engine of exotica. Some have said that the sensual beats served as a "safe" release from strict neo-Victorian mores during the 1950's.

This all served only to make exotica more fun.

As exotica continued to enchant America (and as it continued to sell millions of records), it began to attract the attention of more musicians, and more seminal works of exotica were produced by Michael Magne, Rex Kona, and Sabu Martinez. However, like most indiepop, it eventually became part of America's collective cultural kitsch, and by the late 60's all that really survived of exotica in the imagination of America were some moth-eaten Hawai'ian shirts and backyard luau torches.

And, of course, the records.

In the 1990's, when musicians began experimenting with forms of music from throughout the past century, exotica experienced some amount of revival. Old LP's were remastered for CD, and influenced a whole new generation of musicians. Perhaps the most successful neo-exotica band was Massachusetts lounge-revival quintet Combustible Edison, though Man... or Astro-Man? also did some work with an exotica dimension. In all, this "second wave" exotica has earned itself a quite successful cult status.


http://www.wildsscene.com/music/exotica.html
http://www.kevdo.com/exotica/evolution.html
http://home.texoma.net/~kgreg/exotica.html


(thing) by quincyfree (4.5 y) (print)   ?   1 C! I like it! Tue Feb 26 2002 at 5:47:18

Exotica (1994)

file under drama

This film was directed by Atom Egoyan, and featured as a Canadian film in the Cannes film festival. Through some unfortunate timing, Exotica (1994) appeared around the same time as low-brow movies superficially also centered on the striptease. For Exotica, however, the striptease acts as a metaphor for the film, in which the torturous histories of its characters are slowly revealed.

Let's do this sans spoilers. Exotica features Bruce Greenwood, a middle-aged auditor escaping a dark, haunting past in the arms of a young stripper (Mia Kirshner) in a dimly-lit club that takes the film's name. (The film also features the talents of Elias Koteas, Arsinee Khanjian, and Don McKellar.) As the puzzle slowly unravels, you are forced to reevaluate your first impressions on the characters, particularly Greenwood's. In this way, our own reflexive attitudes and how we condemn or praise those strangers on screen becomes intwined with the film's material.

How do we use sex? As Kirshner slowly disrobes, does she become a passive object of desire, or is there more than one person's fears and desires that are exposed? Exotica joins a note-worthy collection of Canadian films in its survey of loneliness created by societal repression, and how those distances are ultimately crossed with obsession and longing.

Exotica is a lot of fun to watch in both sight and sound. The nightclub is amorphous and largely unlit, save the garishly colored lights that create a lush and disorienting setting. In contrast, scenes shot in the auditor's home and outdoors are reserved and simple in their geometry. The music, composed by Atom's younger sister Eve, does a really great job of complementing the picture. It is one of few soundtracks that I would bother purchasing.

You guys neglect Canadian film. And no, Strange Brew doesn't count.


printable version
chaos

The male libido - or - How I was castrated by the 90's Mia Kirshner Babysitter Lolita Fetishizing schoolgirls
Canada Kicks Ass Perdition Sarah Polley Combustible Edison
Atom Egoyan Mychael Danna grue-bleen paradox Showgirls
E2 Public Relations Issues Kong Island Ketone The Wild Women of Wongo
Perrey and Kingsley Everything Quests: Film Reviews antiderivative Audio Engineering
tiki Cute waitresses Java Leeds Software Distribution
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