Published at 02/06 2016

Kenya - Let Me (Sean McCabe Remixes)

Kenya - Let Me (Sean McCabe Remixes)


10 06 2016

Zedd12240

Deep House




The original R&B version of "Let Me" was the lead single for Chicago born Kenya's debut LP on Expansion Records. The album reached #1 on the UK Soul chart and stayed there for four consecutive weeks.

"Let Me" caught the ear of ZR so we've licensed it and employed Sean McCabe to give it a brand new 4/4 treatment. 3 mixes, straight up sophisticated soulful house on the Extended Mix, a more tracky housed up Let me out Dub, whilst the Classic Soul mix is more laid back utilizing some of the originals musical elements.

These days not many producers or labels want to invest in this style, as its expensive to make and has marginalized exposure. so if you are feeling it, don't just give us a good reaction on here, please support and chart it wherever possible.



SUPPORT FROM: DeejayKul, Dan Curtin, Glenn Underground, atfc, Ronnie Herel, Mike Allin, Ron Carroll , The Reflex, Faze Action, J Paul Getto, Bruce Tantum, freemasons, Husky, craig bartlett, Jeff Jefferson, Richard Earnshaw, Seamus Haji, david dunne / Triple Dee, Craig Stewart, Paul Trouble Anderson, Norbert Borchers, David Harness, Czboogie, DJ Meme, Gramophonedzie, Mannix, Groove Assassin, Kristi Lomax, Lenny Fontana, Andy Norman, Hector Romero , Ginger Tony, rainer trueby, Ricky Morrison, Neil Pierce, Booker T, sam divine, Mike Vitti, Tensnake, sarah favouritizm, Colin Curtis, Pete Haigh, RedSoul, Soulmagic, gareth sommerville, Graeme Park, Louis Benedetti, Robert Owens, Raul Cortes, Casio Social Club, Aaron Dae, Julius Papp, Jask, DJ Jacko, johnn fiasco, Mousse T., John Jones, StoneBridge, Keith Martin, CJ Mackintosh, kenny carpenter, Malachi (Graham Audiowhores)...


Legendary Uk producer Dave Lee/Joey Negro founded Z Records back in '91, as the natural successor to his highly influential first label, Republic Records, which remains for many, the foundation stone of the UK house scene. It was on Republic that Dave first introduced the UK to such classics as Phase II's “Reachin'” and Turntable Orchestra's “You're Gonna Miss Me”. These tracks nestled snugly alongside his own early productions such as Raven Maize's “Forever Together”, still viewed as an unfading classic house track to this day. Using Z primarily as an outlet for his own material, Dave has continued to champion all things funky and soulful with a consistently high level of quality underground releases. The last few years has seen the label establish its own successful production complex which has given rise to huge electronic anthems such as Jakatta’s “American Dream” and Joey Negro’s “Make a Move on Me” among its many commercial hits. Indeed, Dave's prolific quality output on Z is matched only by the innumerable aliases he adopts, with Jakatta, Joey Negro, Sessomatto, Akabu, The Hed Boys, Doug Willis, Mistura, Z Factor and The Sunburst Band being some of the more popular ones. Though Z and its sister production house (Z Productions) still continues to showcase the prodigious production talents of Dave Lee, the label has also featured the work of other respected luminaries such as Masters At Work, Blaze, Basement Jaxx, Erro, Copyright, Jazz’n’Groove, Bini & Martini, The Blackbyrds, Osunlade, Motif and Mark Knight. As a result, and not surprisingly, Z has become a byword for consistently great music among lovers of soulful electronic music across the World.