Kenny Smith - Keep On Walkin Baby We Have Each Other
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Download
Filename: kenny-smith-keep-on-walkin-baby-we-have-each-other.rar- MP3 size: 12.4 mb
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Tracks
Track | Duration | Preview |
---|---|---|
We Have Each Other | 2:52 | |
Keep On Walkin' Baby | 2:22 |
Video
Kenny Smith - We Have Each Other (HD)
Kenny Smith - Keep on Walkin' Baby - 1966 Garage Soul - Chess Records
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Formats
- Vinyl
- 7"
- 45 RPM
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About Kenny Smith
Kenny Smith is a soul singer, musician, songwriter, and producer, active in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Owner of the label and the and publishing companies.
Kenneth Patten Smith was born in Maysville, Kentucky, in 1938. His mother died before he had reached one year of age and he, along with his sister and father, moved up river to the Queen City not too long after, settling in the Walnut Hills neighborhood.
Kenny's first singing group was called The Enchanters and was composed of a group of friends from Withrow High School, from which Kenny graduated in 1956. Kenny sang second tenor, and the group had a slot opening for Tiny Bradshaw on an eastern tour. The Enchanters won a talent contest on the local Harris Rosedale variety television show, the grand prize being a Longines wrist watch. Unable to figure out how to divide the prize four ways, the group sold it and split the profits. Reputedly, the group recorded for Deluxe, a subsidiary of Cincinnati's King label, filling in for and using the name of the popular R&B group The Charms.
His first, true forays into the music industry came at Castle Farms, a legendary venue that played host to local performers such as The Drivers, The Casinos and the aforementioned Charms. Carl Edmondson from Fraternity Records heard Kenny perform at Castle Farms and told him that he liked the way he sounded. Kenny's first release under his own name was "Deep In My Heart" on Fraternity Records, produced by Carl Edmondson and written by Kenny himself.
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Having gotten his foot in the door with Fraternity, Kenny started writing and producing for the label as well as recording. He wrote and produced songs for the Charmaines and the Casinos, as well as being co-arranger with Edmondson on "Hey-Da-Da-Dow" by the Dolphins, which made it into the Billboard charts.
, the guitar. I couldnt afford to pay anybody to play it, so I wind up learning how to play guitar myself, so I could do my own stuff."
Kenny would go on to write and produce for many other acts in the years to come including Albert Washington, Leroy and the Drivers, Gerri Diamond, The Casinos, Win Mennifee, Eddie Whitehead, Soul, Inc. and basketball legend Oscar Robertson.
One of Kenny's proudest achievements was his song "Think Before You Walk Away". The song was originally recorded by Kenny's friend Herman Lewis on Stone Blue records. Lewis, a.k.a Herman Griffin, was at one time married to Motown singer Mary Wells and was intimately connected with the Detroit music scene. Through Herman's efforts, "Think Before You Walk Away" was re-recorded by The Platters, one of the biggest vocal groups of the day. Kenny's own recorded output for Fraternity comprised of numerous singles including tracks leased out to majors Chess and RCA.
Kenny is best remembered for one song in particular "Lord, What's Happening To Your People?". Issued in 1971 as the first and only release on Kenny's own Goldspot label, (originally titled "Lord, What's Happened?"), the record was written to cash in on a particular trend that Kenny describes as the "Jesus-rock era." "It was just a market or a trend that was going on at the time, so I thought it would fit," Kenny explains. Some label owners from Chicago thought that it would fit as well. They picked up "Lord..." to re-release on their General American Records imprint.
However, General American had bigger things in mind for Kenny than the Billboard charts. They made him the Publishing Director of the company and the host of their new television show: Soul Street. Soul Street, for which Kenny also wrote the opening and closing themes, was broadcast in 36 markets around the country and featured a range of guests from local artist Tommy Wills, to more well known acts such as Lynn Collins, the Ohio Players, Little Royal, the Detroit Emeralds, Gladys Knight and James Brown. Soul Street ran for ten episodes, the first nine of which were hosted by Kenny. Behind the scenes, things were falling apart for GAR. A new host was brought in for the tenth episode, and that was it as the studio pulled the plug on the show due to unpaid bills.
Kenny was out of his element in the television studio. Used to the gritty and aggressive atmosphere of the nightclub, the cold, sterile television set was an environment with which Kenny was unfamiliar. With this in mind, Kenny , by now a seasoned performer, went back to what he knew and became a regular on the regional club scene.
However, "Lord, What's Happened" would provide Kenny with recognition yet again in a strange and unexpected way. The song failed to ride the gospel-rock wave that Kenny had tried to latch onto in the U.S., but it got a second shot at success across the Atlantic in the dance clubs of Northern England.
A couple of years after its release in the States, the British Northern Soul scene discovered the record and it became an anthem at the legendary Blackpool Mecca. Demand for the single from British DJ's and collectors was high enough that in 1976 that Kenny was tracked down by the infamous French rare soul dealer and producer Simon Soussan.
The original contract between Kenny and Soussan's Soul Galore Disco-Sound Productions details how Smith was paid $300 in advance for the right to reissue "Lord What's Happened" for the Northern Soul market and a promise of royalties to come for any copies pressed up and sold. Look more closely, however, and one notices that it is doubtful that any "commercial" copies were ever pressed up, because Soussan had 1000 to 1500 "promotional" copies made beforehand, after which there'd be no need for any commercial copies.
As with many revered performers of the past, financial success eluded Smith. But his name was firmly fixed in the canon of rare soul artists. He would have further contact with the Northern Soul collectors and DJ's through other records. His very rare release on the Flo-Roe label, "One More Day" has become a hot item for collectors only recently.
Lately, connoisseurs of a harder funk sound have latched onto "Go For Yourself
Real Name
- Kenneth Patton Smith
Name Vars
- K. Smith
- K.Smith
- Ken Smith
- Kenneth Smith
- Kenni Smith
- Kenny
- Kenny Smith w/ Group
- Smith
Comments
I'm glad I found this❤??✨
Guitar beltin xx