After recording four albums for the small, independent Los Angeles label Liberty Records, Hollywood arranger/composer
Dominic Frontiere got work from the major labels in 1959, organizing
the Mighty Accordion Band, which released the LP
They Said It Couldn't Be Done on Capitol, and signing on with Columbia Records to make
Pagan Festival: An Exotic Love Ritual for Orchestra.
Arthur Lyman had recently scored a substantial hit with
Taboo, and
Martin Denny was preparing his chart-topping
Exotica, ironically for Liberty;
Pagan Festival was conceived in the same exotic style. The liner notes spoke of the music's "interpretation of ancient Inca rituals, superstitions, and the romance and mysteries of their colorful civilization," but the blending of musical styles was not limited to that of the ancient Latin American culture (if anyone even knew what that would sound like).
Frontiere let his imagination run wild, and he brought in sounds from the South Pacific to Eastern Europe. From his work in the movie studios as well as his formal training, he had a broad knowledge of musical styles and a willingness to mix and match to achieve desired effects, without regard to musical purity. So, here a female choir wafted in and out along with string sections, brasses, and reeds, creating a patchwork quilt that somehow held together. Of course, somewhere in there,
Frontiere also found use for his own chosen instrument, the accordion. Did the Incas play accordions while performing their pagan rituals? Perhaps not. But
Frontiere's music charmed like a particularly entertaining Hollywood score for a movie set in some faraway place, but shot on a backlot. It may not have been historically accurate, but it was a lot of fun to listen to.