Archive for the ‘Meet the Band’Category

W7 Musician Profile: Abe Lagrimas Jr. (drums, vibes)

In continuing with our promo reels for each WAITIKI 7 musician, this next video highlights the sparkling talent of Abe Lagrimas Jr. who co-founded WAITIKI with Randy Wong in 2003. Abe mainly fills the drum chair in W7, though he has been known to play vibes when duty calls. The video below has clips of him doing both! Check it out.

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09

06 2009

Hangin’ with Zaccai Curtis, pianist for The WAITIKI 7

We had the chance to sit down with Zaccai Curtis a few weeks ago when he came to Boston on tour with Cindy Blackman’s Explorations Band. Check out the video below… it’s got some teaser audio from the upcoming CD Adventures in Paradise, as well as rare performance footage from W7’s International Debut last summer at Festival Wassermusik (Berlin, Germany).

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08

06 2009

Vibes demo reel

Just made this demo reel featuring some of Jim Benoit’s vibes work for The WAITIKI 7. We interviewed Jim a few weeks ago about his take on exotica and W7’s new album… check back soon for clips from those tapes.

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23

04 2009

Bird Calls!

One unique and immediately identifiable aspect of exotica are the bird, monkey, frog, and other-worldly animal calls voiced by band members. The tradition behind these sounds began circa 1955, when a Puerto Rican percussionist named Augie Colon began playing with a jazz group led by Martin Denny. Denny’s band performed nightly at the Shell Bar in Waikiki, which featured an outdoor stage surrounded by lush, tropical vegetation—and naturally, frogs, crickets, and birds. As a youth, Augie had learned to voice an array of animal and bird calls (his uncles would take him hunting for wild boar and game-birds). One night, Augie began responding to the frogs and birds with his own calls; Denny and the audience loved the effect it added to the music, and thus the tradition was born. Soon after, the other band members began inventing their own exotic animal calls. The calls became such an important part of the music that when Martin Denny re-recorded his 1956 album Exotica for stereo in 1958, he meticulously noted which calls were done when, so that (at least in terms of bird calls) the two versions would line up exactly.

Augie’s extraordinary contribution to exotica lives on in The WAITIKI 7 through his son Lopaka Colon. Here’s a clip of Lopaka demonstrating two of his favorite bird calls:

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And a short demo reel of him performing live:

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20

04 2009
  • About The WAITIKI 7

  • The WAITIKI 7 are helping to define a new movement in Exotica.

    Dedicated to the preservation and resurgence of Exotica music, and the related tiki culture, W7 is modeled after the classic groups of Martin Denny, Arthur Lyman, and Gene Rains. The WAITIKI 7 is the only modern group that performs exotica completely live and acoustic—just like in the 1950s.
  • Band Members: