Monroe Musings

Monroe Musings by Tiffany Alanoori  Girls

Posted by nrg at Jan. 7, 2021
Monroe Musings by Tiffany Alanoori

Monroe Musings - Tiffany Alanoori Photoshoot
24 jpg | 1000*1500 | 4.54 MB
American model
Marilyn Forever: Musings on an American Icon by the Stars of Yesterday and Today

Boze Hadleigh, "Marilyn Forever: Musings on an American Icon by the Stars of Yesterday and Today"
English | 2016 | ISBN: 1630762636 | EPUB | pages: 144 | 5.1 mb
VA - Technicolor Paradise: Rhum Rhapsodies & Other Exotic Delights (2018)

VA - Technicolor Paradise: Rhum Rhapsodies & Other Exotic Delights (2018)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log, scans, booklet) - 783 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 517 MB
2:17:31 | Jazz, Pop, Easy Listening, Mambo, Pacific, Surf, Space-Age, Lounge | Label: Numero Group

It was a musical cocktail born in a marketing meeting: Two parts easy listening, one part jazz, a healthy dollop of conga drums, a sprinkling of bird calls, and a pinch of textless choir. Serve garnished with an alluring woman on the album jacket for best results. Liberty Records co-founder Si Waronker called it Exotica; the soundtrack for a mythical air conditioned Eden, packaged for mid-century, tiki torch-wielding armchair safariers. In the five years after Exotica—Martin Denny’s 1957 landmark Liberty debut—arrived, hundreds of other ethnographic forgeries washed up in record racks all over the U.S., bearing titles like Sophisticated Savage, Sacred Idol, Chant of the Jungle, Polynesian Paradise, Exotic Paradise, Taboo, Primitiva, Forbidden Island, Afrodesia, Hypnotique, Percussion Exotique, and a barrel’s worth of other portmanteaus. “All of those ica and itiva endings I came up with because I thought I was being cute,” Waronker said. “And I don’t know why, but nobody got wise.”
VA - Technicolor Paradise: Rhum Rhapsodies & Other Exotic Delights (2018)

VA - Technicolor Paradise: Rhum Rhapsodies & Other Exotic Delights (2018)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 594 MB
2:17:31 | Jazz, Pop, Easy Listening, Mambo, Pacific, Surf, Space-Age, Lounge | Label: Numero Group

It was a musical cocktail born in a marketing meeting: Two parts easy listening, one part jazz, a healthy dollop of conga drums, a sprinkling of bird calls, and a pinch of textless choir. Serve garnished with an alluring woman on the album jacket for best results. Liberty Records co-founder Si Waronker called it Exotica; the soundtrack for a mythical air conditioned Eden, packaged for mid-century, tiki torch-wielding armchair safariers. In the five years after Exotica—Martin Denny’s 1957 landmark Liberty debut—arrived, hundreds of other ethnographic forgeries washed up in record racks all over the U.S., bearing titles like Sophisticated Savage, Sacred Idol, Chant of the Jungle, Polynesian Paradise, Exotic Paradise, Taboo, Primitiva, Forbidden Island, Afrodesia, Hypnotique, Percussion Exotique, and a barrel’s worth of other portmanteaus. “All of those ica and itiva endings I came up with because I thought I was being cute,” Waronker said. “And I don’t know why, but nobody got wise.”