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Arthur Lyman - Hawaiian Sunset '2019

24bit
Hawaiian Sunset
ArtistArthur Lyman Related artists
Album name Hawaiian Sunset
Country
Date 2019
Genre
Play time 32:44
Format / Bitrate 24 BIT Stereo 2429 Kbps / 96 kHz
Media WEB
Size 116; 502 MB
PriceDownload $4.95
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Tracks list

Vibraphonist Arthur Lyman’s (1932–2002) dreamiest album of all
times is undoubtedly Hawaiian Sunset, released in 1959 on Hi-Fi Records. If you
are not fond of the encapsulating, soothing and mellifluous aura the Exotica
genre is able to provide, then by all means, do not invest your time, as only
the opener might be of interest to you. Everyone else who loves Exotica for all
its multifaceted styles, but is most enchanted by the Ambient pieces of the
exotic realms can rightfully denominate Hawaiian Sunset as the holy grail of,
err, Ambient Exotica (the genre of course, not this website). It is one of the
rare albums with the adjective Hawaiian in its title that does not encompass the
sun-dried Hapa Haole style, shedloads of steel guitars and an all too overt use
of ukuleles. No, Hawaiian Sunset turns out to be a superbly languorous LP, so
much so that it is undoubtedly Arthur Lyman’s dreamiest and most coherent
album of the 50’s, heck, of all times! It is a dream come true for fans
of the mellow Exotica style. It is certainly whitewashed and silkened, true, but
by no means bland or overly formulaic.
 
Arthur Lyman and band – Alan Soares on the piano and glockenspiel, John
Kramer as the bassist and ukulele player as well as percussionist Harold Chang
– gather a whopping 13 songs, almost all of them essential pieces that
are statistically found on every second Hawaiian album. Even if one only has a
vanishingly low interest in the Exotica genre, an encounter with varying
interpretations of the presented material is inescapable. So where is the key
difference? Naturally, it is Lyman’s performance on the vibes; whereas it
is played in a vivid martelato style on Bahia (1959), it is the boost of both
the decay and sustain of this instrument which, in tandem with the legato tone
sequences and Alan Soares’ solemn piano, create an enchantment and
carefree aura that is second to none. Since Arthur Lyman depicts a Hawaiian
Sunset, there are barely any bird calls on the album. Likewise, the pool of
instruments is rapidly thinned, and deliberately so, as the link to the humble
Hapa Haole genre has to be maintained. It is thus Lyman’s quietest, most
sumptuous and least vivid album. And that is a good thing for a change!
 
Johnny Noble’s Hawaiian War Chant opens the album, but Arthur
Lyman’s version is decidedly different from many others in that he tries
to truly mediate between an enchanted cove-like setting and a wilder but still
only mildly frantic drum section. The prologue already unchains the vivid
concoction of sizzling maracas, snare drums and bongos and merges it with
Lyman’s mellifluous-doleful dichotomy on the vibes; they are almost
spectral and moon-evoking in their timbre, and while the nocturnal mystique of
Moon Over A Ruined Castle off his 1958 album Bwana Ā is never reached,
Hawaiian War Chant comes pretty close. Alan Soares’ piano underpins the
main melody together with John Kramer’s double bass accents and Harold
Chang’s staggering drums. The ensuing percussion section is so successful
due to the natural reverb and decay. The Henry Kaiser geodesic aluminum dome
offers the best stage for this prolific take.
 
Hawaiian War Chant is splendidly layered, the many different drums are not used
in a gimmicky way, but really add verve and plasticity to a tune which can sound
awfully false and pale in the wrong hands. But here, it works really well, and
from this point on, the actual dreamscape of Hawaiian Sunset begins, namely with
Harry Owens’ classic Sweet Leilani. Of great interest are the many
twinkling wind chimes and glockenspiels which scintillate around the solemn
piano chords and soothing polyphony of the vibes. Alan Soares even plays a plain
old acoustic guitar on this unexpectedly upbeat tune. However, since every
element sparkles gently, the vividness is deeply opaque and well-camouflaged.
 
Charles E. King’s Imi Au La ‘Oe (Queen Serenade) follows with
Kramer’s ship horn-resembling alto flute and a slowly meandering
ukulele-backed vibraphonescape that gleams and trembles dreamily, absorbing the
listener and taking him or her into a beguiled island. The sunset marker of the
album title is once again carefully interwoven into the arrangement, with the
sparkling chimes resembling the glinting light of the moon on the waves near the
beach. A cliché in itself, true, but Lyman and band transfigure it into a
gorgeous dreamlike state. An Ambient Exotica track if there ever was one!
 
While Johnny Noble’s My Tane puts Alan Soares’ aqueous piano
droplets and cascades into the limelight which are then prominently supported by
vibe bursts and Kramer’s double bass blebs, Arthur Lyman’s own
Whispering Reef Lullaby offers a fantastically wondrous synergy of faux-seagull
cries, golden-shimmering ukulele twangs of silk and hyper-gentle vibe waves with
lucent glockenspiels. The moony melody is tremendously mollifying, and even
though an intimate arrangement like this is featured time and again on Hawaiian
Sunset, it never gets boring to me. Song Of The Islands (Na Lei O Hawaii),
originally written by Charles E. King, closes side A with the expected dreamy
vibraphone chords, but soon surprises with an uplifting bongo groove which only
distracts ever so slightly from the reverie and stops soon enough anyway in
order to let the rhythm ukuleles and lead glockenspiels shine all the more. Side
A succeeds with a string of 6 magnificent tracks, with only the opener Hawaiian
War Chant living up to the adventurous expectations of Lymans fans.
 
Side B launches with the teensy 68-seconds-vista of the traditional Hawaiian
ditty Hi’lawe. The soundscape changes dramatically, the band plans a
single stop at this sunny territory which is based on handclap-like woodblocks,
an acoustic guitar plus a ukulele and an iridescent glockenspiel in the
background. Well, this shanty is too short and an all too distinctive break, so
I tend to ignore its bonfire concept. It really is non-essential for Hawaiian
Sunset and can be seen as the bonus track to branch off.
 
The next compositions move back to balmy territories: whereas Walter
Blaufuss’ and Gus Kahn’s Isle Of Golden Dreams realizes the same
old but truly enchanting formula of backing ukulele twangs, vibrating vibraphone
gusts and glitzy glockenspiel blebs, it is the rendition of Lani Muk
Sang’s Mapuana (meaning wind-blown fragrance) which boosts the tempo a
bit as the band unleashes a hummable melody on the vibes. Alan Soares’
majestically liquedous piano waves and the softly insinuated Jazz segues work
really well in this almost Pop-related surrounding, but the greatest achievement
is the fact that the band sails around the dangerous Jazz cliffs; no convoluted
rhythm is included, it is really only hinted at over the course of Mapuana. It
is hard for me to describe, but rest assured that this wonderful song fits
perfectly into the endemic sphere. The same can be said for the divine
traditional majesty of Waipio. It turns to a lacunar masterpiece in
Lyman’s hands. The soundscape is highly familiar: ukuleles, vibes, double
bass melodies and blurry kettle drums in the far distance. Nothing more, nothing
less, even the glockenspiels are missing. What makes Lyman’s Waipio so
fantastically great is the room for every instrument to breeze. The black
nothingness – for there is no hall – is filled with translucency
and brightness, the reverb of the softly quavering vibes conflates with the
distance. Absolutely essential and one of my most favorite Lyman lullabies!
 
The remaining three offerings cannot beat the grace of Waipio, but are
thankfully based on the same coherence that is so seldom broken on this record.
And a treat is coming right up: Arthur Lyman’s own tongue twister called
Kawohikukapulani picks up where Waipio left and literally offers more of the
same, only changing nuances in the arrangement. One of them is the oxymoronic
punchier dreaminess of the vibes. The tones burst powerfully, only to vaporize
in a rapturous mirage of tranquility. If I did not love Arthur Lyman’s
soothing pieces so much, I would by now shake my head in disdain due to the
overly glaring similarity and repetition of the formula, but as I have stated
before, I am completely lured and sedated and will not complain when Ambient
oozes out of every fissure of the provided tracklist.
 
Ke Kali Nei Au is the third and final take on a song by Charles E. King.
Launching with another ship horn flute akin to Imi Au La ‘Oe (Queen
Serenade), the spiraling piano aorta of the prologue is the actual signature
element of this song which then changes back to the mellowness of ukuleles,
droning bass melodies and vibes, with only scattered appearances of the piano.
The final Harbor Lights, written by Gordon Kennedy and Hugh Williams, is the
famous thirteenth track of Hawaiian Sunset, and a superb closing track. Although
the idea wears thin, the band uses it for the obviously last time: an
instrumental ship horn appears several times, but now in the form of a mighty
string bass, totally blown out of the proportion the track provides. Wonderfully
whirring vibes float through the air, it is a quiet harbor in the end, even
though the ship horn appears in another four instances.
 
All right, Hawaiian Sunset might be denominated the most boring of Arthur
Lyman’s albums due to the seemingly eternal stream of blissful
dreamscapes. One magic arrangement follows the other, with only slight breezes
of vividness and voluminousness carefully intertwined. And indeed, in contrast
to Lyman’s vivacious Bahia (1959) or the innovative hodgepodge of his
exotic debut Taboo (1958), Hawaiian Sunset can be seen as dull, lulling and a
one-trick pony that comprises of the same vibraphone placenta and the
circumambient plinking triangles time and again. But I don’t mind, not at
all, especially so when I compare it to the humongous amount of other
Exotica-related albums that have the terms Hawaii or Hawaiian in their title.
Instead of coming up with the 800th sun-laden blue sky panorama, Arthur Lyman
poeticizes the classic as well as the ephemeral Hapa Haole material and
transcodes the colors of the sunset and the blue-tinged night scenes of forlorn
beaches into each and every note.
 
This is Ambient Exotica, this is what I had in mind when I searched for a
comprehensible name for this humble website. To me, Hawaiian Sunset turns out to
be the utmost perfect album that could lure listeners of electro-acoustic
Ambient music into the Exotica realms. Only the powerful opener Hawaiian War
Chant and the sudden sunburst of the whimsical Hilawe alter the intrinsic
soundscape a bit, but even these two examples remain in Ambient realms. And dont
get me started on Mapuana, Whispering Reef Lullaby and Waipio (the latter of
which Lyman already played on Martin Dennys 1957 release of Exotica)… they
are masterpieces of the humblest kind!
 
While I tremendously love Hawaiian Sunset and the wonderful transformations of
the same old material that is found on every second vintage Exotica record, its
shortcomings are fully transparent: the sparse use of exotic percussion, the
lack of many instruments, the single-time appearance of Lymans bird calls and
the neverending stream of likeminded tracks with a similarly intimate scope
might turn off many a listener who otherwise speaks in glowing terms of the
bands ever-changing stylistic range. Im sorry to say that you do not find
variety here. Only consistency and coherence are on board. While Arthur Lymans
actual non-exotic debut Leis Of Jazz (1957) was all too jazzy and less exotic to
my ears, it turns out that Hawaiian Sunset offers the same cohesion. But this
time, I fall prey to its magic. Maybe it is vice versa in your case? 

Tracklist:
01. Arthur Lyman - Hawaiian War Chant (Remastered) (3:42)
02. Arthur Lyman - Sweet Leilani (Remastered) (1:56)
03. Arthur Lyman - Imi Au La Oe (Kings Serenade) (Remastered) (2:20)
04. Arthur Lyman - My Tane (Remastered) (2:15)
05. Arthur Lyman - Whispering Reef Lullaby (Remastered) (2:29)
06. Arthur Lyman - Song Of The Islands (Na Lei O Hawaii) (Remastered) (2:43)
07. Arthur Lyman - Hilawe (Remastered) (1:10)
08. Arthur Lyman - Isle Of Golden Dreams (Remastered) (2:41)
09. Arthur Lyman - Mapuana (Remastered) (2:06)
10. Arthur Lyman - Waipio (Remastered) (2:41)
11. Arthur Lyman - Kawohikukupulani (Remastered) (2:26)
12. Arthur Lyman - Ke Kali Nei Au (Remastered) (3:00)
13. Arthur Lyman - Harbor Lights (Remastered) (3:15)