It
all started with the famous Paradise Garage nightclub, home
of the late great legend Larry Levan. Dance music luminaries
such as Francois Kevorkian and Junior Vasquez credit the Paradise
Garage as a major influence in their styles and even in their
decisions to become DJs. Born of this musical phenomena in
1993, was BPM King Street Sounds. Hisa Ishioka founded the
label to continue the ten year tradition of soulful-spiritual
house music that the dub helped give birth and lend an ear
to in the 80,s A musical harvest that has yielded some of
the sweetest dance records ever, King Street has established
itself as one of the finest and most respected labels releasing
dance music today.
King Street is on the cusp of dance music bringing such sounds
as future soul, Nu jazz, Deep progressive house, and Afro-abstract
excursions to the forefront. Not to mention that, to date,
it remains one of the few consistently strong independent
labels in today,s market.
Our success is a combination of many factors with a focus
on working with some of the hottest dance producers in addition
to aggressively seeking out new talent This combination has
helped us build a solid following for our labels and releases.
Our catalogue of releases reads like a "who,s who in
contemporary dance music" Masters At Work, Roger S.,
David Morales, DJ Pierre, Kerri Chandler, 95 North, Mood II
Swing, Satoshi Tomiie, Al Mack, Lii, Louis, Urban Soul, Deep
Zone, Phillip Damien, Danny Tenaglia, Club 69, Frankie Feliciano,
Cevin Fisher, Ralphie Rosario, Joe Claussell, Mateo &
Matos, Ron Trent, Harry "Choo - Choo Romero, Johnny Dangerous,
Maurice Joshua, Mike Dunn, Christian Scott and Jask, Junior
Vasquez, Lenny Fontana, Matthias Heilbronn adding their names
to the roster. As the UK magazine the Face put it: "Its
repertoire of house producers says it all: the King Street
label is the darling of the nu soul set and proof that the
US still does it best.
At the end of 1996 King Street was recognized by Echoes Magazine
as "Import Label of the Year. This award we accepted
with pride and as a challenge to do even better. In Echoes
November 1998 issue, a four page, in-depth interview with
Roland Clark (a.k.a. Urban Soul) revealed the man behind the
music.
In the beginning of our eighth year, King Streets reputation
has grown even larger and as a consequence, so has its ambitions.
The last year alone saw the release of three new compilations:
The Abstract Afro Lounge Volume I, The Abstract Jazz Lounge
Volume III, Mix the Vibe "Urban Afro Blues: Ron Trent
and Ananda Project,s highly acclaimed "Release album.
to
the left of King Street is NITEGROOVES |