An inspired choice by an unamed person led to Kenny Thomas recording the track with producer-extraodinaire Ian Green and releasing it as his third single in 1991 and in a masterstroke of unparalelled genius, Simon Dunmore got called in to provide a remix.
Simon Dunmore started as a DJ in 1982 and got involved with A&R in 1989. His soul-boy background in West London led inevitably to his working in a record shop (Soul & Disco Centre, Rayners Lane), promoting his gigs and also getting involved in journalism with Blues & Soul, magazine.
His views were very fresh and modern for the day and his suggestion that Ce Ce Rogers - Someday was a soul record that should get played on the Northern Soul scene earned him a death threat! He laughs about it now,
"Whenever I dip into the modern soul scene these days those guys are still playing exactly the same records. I couldnt ever imagine not being interested in new music."His first A&R job came at Cooltempo, where he signed Juliet Roberts, working with a varied roster that included the likes of Arrested Development, Gangstarr, Adeva and Shara Nelson. During that time he also remixed tracks for the label, some under the pseudonym of Touchdown.
For Simon, house music was a natural progression from jazz, soul and funk and he embraced the new era with open arms. Its an attitude he retains, looking forward, not back, taking Defected Records from strength to stregth though never forgetting his musical roots.
A good song is a good song and with Booker T writing it, you can't really go wrong. Kenny Thomas is a fair vocalist and his work is of a good standard, even if it is very Pop flavoured. The Touchdown Mix fixes that and more, Dunmore has served up a slice of highly refined, top quality soul. For me personally, Kenny Thomas does not get any better than this!
- 7" A
- 12" A
- Touchdown Mix
Filename: Kenny Thomas.rar Filesize: 22.79 MB
Extra Trivia:
Kenny still performs, by public demand, in venues, theatres, clubs and soul weekenders throughout the UK and Europe.
Classic track for me, one of most played in tha clubs in Brazil, "vera Cruz Club" at suburbana avenue.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing these mixes and the great bio on Kenny and Simon Dunmore. A lot of it is new to me.
ReplyDeleteConfession time. Most of this info is out there somewhere. I just collect it together and put it with what I know was happening at the time? ;-)
ReplyDeleteTo me the Touchdown mix is one of the best mixes of a UK tune... the mellow sax an strings is straight off the Bladerunner OST ( Bladerunner Blues).
ReplyDeleteIMHO the touchdown mix should be played directly after the BRunner blues tune... it just sounds like a natural progression....a mega mellow, extended version....
Nitro
Now you mention it Nirish, how well that would work. Soul Chill Out intro, OMG!
ReplyDeleteActually, it's about time somebody covered that joint with real instruments and shit. Imagine The Brandford Marsalis Quartet doing this piece, a real mute horn and no fuzzy section toward the end. Damn!
;-)