
You'll Never Find Another Love Like Mine
Kenny Summit, Frankie Knuckles & Eric Kupper's Unreleased Anthem (7:40)
Kenny Summit, Frankie Knuckles & Eric Kupper's Unreleased Anthem (7:40)
Kenny Summit's remix of Lou Rawls' classic "You'll Never Find Another Love Like Mine" was so good that Frankie Knuckles himself asked to co-sign the track. Think about that for a second — the Godfather of House Music wanted his name on the record to help it reach a broader audience because he believed in it that much.
It was the very last record Frankie ever played at his final gig at Ministry of Sound before his passing. His last voicemail to Kenny said it all:
"You ready for what's around the corner honey. The disco movement is coming back with a vengeance, and your record — this Lou Rawls edit you did — is the spark that caused the fire. Mark my words, baby."
Now, more than a decade after Frankie's passing, those words have become reality. Disco is more prevalent now than it was during the original Disco Era, and OG crate diggers like Kenny Summit — the edit Kings who've been championing this sound as if it never died — are carrying the torch.
This compilation of joints and jams from the Good For You Records catalog pays homage to the sound that sparked the revolution — the same spirit that inspired the club Compact Disco.
Now entering its third year, Compact Disco has literally changed the face of nightlife in the Monterey area of California — a town better known for its multimillion-dollar beachfront estates, world-class golf, and international tourism. When Kenny Summit opened the club, he put Monterey on the global map for house music heads.
With residents like Chicago's DJ Colette, New York's Mr. V, Bay Area legend Gavin Hardkiss, Dirtybird's Mz Worthy, and a who's who of world-class talent — including Doc Martin, Radio Slave, The Crystal Method, Victor Simonelli, Sunshine Jones, Hector Romero, Jask, Stacy Kidd, J Paul Getto, Audiowhores, and JoJo Flores — Compact Disco's lineups are what dreams are made of.
Clubs rarely, if ever, stick to one genre every night of the week. But Compact Disco opened with one mission, one goal: to preserve the rich history of disco and house music. They're doing it better than any club in the United States — without wavering, without bending to trends, and without the slightest hint of going commercial. Compact Disco stands alone as a beacon of what the house scene could be if club owners put the community first.
Enjoy the music — it's just a small taste of the edits and sought-after bootlegs that get dropped from time to time.
We greatly appreciate your support.
XO
It was the very last record Frankie ever played at his final gig at Ministry of Sound before his passing. His last voicemail to Kenny said it all:
"You ready for what's around the corner honey. The disco movement is coming back with a vengeance, and your record — this Lou Rawls edit you did — is the spark that caused the fire. Mark my words, baby."
Now, more than a decade after Frankie's passing, those words have become reality. Disco is more prevalent now than it was during the original Disco Era, and OG crate diggers like Kenny Summit — the edit Kings who've been championing this sound as if it never died — are carrying the torch.
This compilation of joints and jams from the Good For You Records catalog pays homage to the sound that sparked the revolution — the same spirit that inspired the club Compact Disco.
Now entering its third year, Compact Disco has literally changed the face of nightlife in the Monterey area of California — a town better known for its multimillion-dollar beachfront estates, world-class golf, and international tourism. When Kenny Summit opened the club, he put Monterey on the global map for house music heads.
With residents like Chicago's DJ Colette, New York's Mr. V, Bay Area legend Gavin Hardkiss, Dirtybird's Mz Worthy, and a who's who of world-class talent — including Doc Martin, Radio Slave, The Crystal Method, Victor Simonelli, Sunshine Jones, Hector Romero, Jask, Stacy Kidd, J Paul Getto, Audiowhores, and JoJo Flores — Compact Disco's lineups are what dreams are made of.
Clubs rarely, if ever, stick to one genre every night of the week. But Compact Disco opened with one mission, one goal: to preserve the rich history of disco and house music. They're doing it better than any club in the United States — without wavering, without bending to trends, and without the slightest hint of going commercial. Compact Disco stands alone as a beacon of what the house scene could be if club owners put the community first.
Enjoy the music — it's just a small taste of the edits and sought-after bootlegs that get dropped from time to time.
We greatly appreciate your support.
XO
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