[2] In a review on AllMusic.com, Richie Unterberger gave the album four stars and praised it for the variety of instruments used: "Say what you will about the cheesiness of this pseudo-world music, Denny deserves some sort of credit for bringing instruments like the m'bira, Burmese gongs, koto, Buddhist prayer bowls, and 'primitive log from New Guinea' into the mainstream.
"[3] Upon the album's release, Austin Faricy wrote in the Honolulu Star-Bulletin: "It is no more primitive than a Salvador Dali painting, but it is persuasive, and we warrant that if you play it in the privacy of your boudoir, you will find yourself dancing your own secret idea of the exotic.
"Burma Train" (Martin Denny, Hal Johnson) – 2:59 2.
"Buddhist Bells" (Martin Denny, Hal Johnson) – 3:00 5.
"Dites Moi" (Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II) – 2:37 5.