One of very few solo singles by Keni Lewis (Kenneth St. Lewis) has been reissued on vinyl 7" by Epsilon. The
      pretty obscure "B'ae Brother" (only 3 listed on Popsike and never sold on Discogs) was recorded in Washington D.C, in 1969 as his debut solo single which had vocal and instrumental sides.
  As far as I can tell he only released another two solo singles in the
      early 70s (both Northern/Modern Soul in-demanders ("Drug Traffic" / "Whats Her Name" 1970 and "What's Your Sign" / "Ain't Gonna Make It Easy" 1973) and another in 1977, "Record City", as Keni St. Lewis.
  He was a member of several 60s groups The Dreams (D.C. Sound), The
      Cairos, The Enjoyables (both on Shrine) and The Chancellors (Cap City) all
      of which had limited success except on Northern Soul
      dancefloors. 
  However, he is best known for his songwriting skills and has 400+ credits
      on Discogs, with the most recognisable when teamed with Freddie Perren on
      several hits for Tavares e.g. "Heaven Must Be Missing An Angel", "Don't Take Away The Music" in the mid 70s. He also penned several songs for artists on Eddie
      Singleton's, now legendary, Shrine label in the mid 60s such as
      D.C.Blossoms, The Cairos, Shirley Edwards, The Counts and The Cavaliers as
      well as established artists like Billy Butler, Gene Chandler, The O'Jays,
      The Sylvers, The Coasters and more. 
Available now from Epsilon.
      Incidentally a superb Northern Soul dancer from him (?), "Not The Marrying Kind", was unearthed on an
          unreleased acetate which was bootlegged
          in 2016 and also appeared on white test press copies around 2007. Pete
          Smith pressed up 150 copies with Mark Lloyd "When I'm Gonna Find Her"
          (UK Parlophone 1966) on the flip. He sold approx. 30 and then passed
          them on to John Manship to sell (SoulSource). The acetate is believed to have been found/owned by Allan
          Kitchener and Rob Thomas and Andy Rix played it out.
    
      To throw in a little curved ball. The song was released by
          Federal Green in 2018 as Leroy Taylor (who released a single on
          Shrine (another unreleased turned up later) and  "Oh Linda" on
          Brunswick in 1967). They sound the same to my ears and I heard Richard
          Searling say that he believed that it may have been a song written by
          Keni Lewis for another artist. So is the singer on the acetate Keni
          Lewis or actually Leroy Taylor, I would guess Leroy Taylor is the singer and perhaps
          the acetate had the writer's name on it which is why it was originally thought to
          be Keni Lewis?
| Explicit: | N | 
| Genre/Style: | Northern Soul / Reissue | 
| Format: | Single | 
| Media: | 7" | 
| Label: | Epsilon | 
| Cat No: | EPS012 | 
| Date: | 12/03/2022 | 
| Value: | £17.50 (Incl UK P&P) | 









 
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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