Waitiki 7
Signature Experiences

The WAITIKI 7 Returns

 The WAITIKI 7 Returns

Three nights:  Friday, May 23 – Sunday, May 25, 2025

 

Back by popular demand, The WAITIKI 7 will captivate audiences with their “Exotica” music—a blend of easy listening instrumentation and faraway soundscapes—at House Without A Key for Memorial Day weekend.

Featuring world-class drinks and unforgettable music in a perfect island setting, this experience is not to be missed! To reserve your table, please call 808-518-2019.

A $7.00 per person entertainment cover charge will apply.

Waitiki 7 cocktails

Waitiki 7 cocktails

Waitiki 7

Waitiki 7

The Waitiki 7

The Waitiki 7

 

Coincidentally, Halekulani played a pivotal, early role in the Exotica legacy: In 1954, Arthur Lyman, then working as a desk clerk at Halekulani, crossed paths with pianist Martin Denny. Denny offered Lyman a place in his band, and the rest, as they say, is history.

Martin Denny’s music catapulted to the mainstream, with both him and Arthur Lyman gracing national television shows like American Bandstand, Andy Williams, and Steve Allen. Denny’s 1959 hit single, “Quiet Village,” soared to #4 on Billboard’s charts, while his “Exotica” album eventually claimed the #1 spot. Local vibraphonist Arthur Lyman’s hit, “Yellow Bird,” peaked at #4 on the Billboard Charts in 1961.

WAITIKI 7 initially formed as a quartet in Boston, MA, twenty years ago in 2003, when Wong and jazz drummer Abe Lagrimas Jr. were college students at New England Conservatory/Harvard University and Berklee College of Music, respectively. The name, a fusion of “Waikiki” and “Tiki,” embodies their passion for the genre. During the 1990s lounge revival, Wong and Lagrimas discovered a void: there were few groups specializing in Exotica, none composed of conservatory-trained professional musicians.

The group boasts seven first-call musicians, four of whom hail from Honolulu: Jazz drummer Abe Lagrimas Jr. (Kamasi Washington, Eric Marienthal, Kenny Endo), bassist Randy Wong (of the Hawaiʻi Symphony Orchestra and President/CEO of the Hawaii Youth Symphony), percussionist and exotic bird caller Lopaka Colon (son of original Martin Denny percussionist and bird caller Augie Colon), and violinist Dr. Helen Liu (of the Hawaiʻi Symphony Orchestra and Galliard String Quartet). Completing the ensemble are flutist/saxophonist Tim Mayer (Artistic Director of the Orquesta Nacional de Jazz de Mexico), NYC-based Latin jazz pianist Zaccai Curtis (Eddie Palmieri, Donald Harrison), and Pittsburgh-based vibraphonist Jim Benoit (also timpanist of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra), and special guests The Galliard String Quartet and Japanese marimbist Mika Mimura Erickson.