Kwame Kwaten | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Kwame Amankwa Kwaten |
Born | 13 May 1967 |
Origin | London UK |
Genres | Soul Acid Jazz |
Occupations | Musician Producer Manager Consultant |
Instruments | Keyboards |
Years active | 1984 - ? |
Labels | Acid Jazz Records East West America Dome Records |
Associated acts | D Influence |
Kwame Amankwa Kwaten (born 1967, London, England) is a musician, record producer, manager and music industry consultant.
Contents |
Kwame Kwaten started his artistic career in the middle of the eighties at the Warminster Athenaeum [1] as part of the school band Outcry. He spent the next few years learning his trade in many different bands. One of these bands called Rebekkah was formed with his old school friend Andrew Ross from Outcry in 1984. Rebekkah led Kwame and Andrew to a production deal at Courtyard Studios in Oxford where they settled for a year learning the ins and outs of the studio.
Steve Marston was a session saxophone player. Rebekkah used Steve for a session and it was then that Kwaten's friendship with Steve Marston started. Kwame had started working at the Borderline Club in London as a compère employed by Neil Conti of Prefab Sprout and Raye Cosbert when he and Steve formed the band D - Influence with Ed Baden Powell, Sarah Anne Webb and Ned Bigham (who was to leave the band after the release of the first album). D - Influence had taken their demos to record labels without any luck and so they decided to release their own music independently. The first of these recordings was I'm the One which they sold straight to record stores themselves out of the back of a van. Kwame gave one of these records to London DJ Tim Westwood and it was he who played D - Influence first on Capital Radio. A record deal with Acid Jazz Records followed.
D - Influence then signed to Atlantic Records and began recording their album Good 4 We. Their early support had mostly been through new London pirate station Kiss FM. There was no national radio airplay for music from the Acid Jazz scene at the time. This meant that the only way D - Influence could reach a fan base was through live music. So D - Influence toured for some time getting their break being offered the support slot on the Michael Jackson Dangerous Tour. This change in fortune led to many American acts requesting them as a support act. Michael Jackson, En Vogue, Prince, Naughty By Nature, James Brown all had D - Influence as an opening act. The band also played for Björk on her Debut album performance on Later ... With Jools Holland.[2][3]
With no huge hit but a large live following D - Influence own productions started to gain notoriety amongst other musicians and labels. After the release of their self produced album Good 4 We, they started productions and remixes for artists such as Mick Jagger from The Rolling Stones, Seal, Jay Z, Tom Jones, Beverley Knight, Lighthouse Family, Changing Faces or Daryl Hall of Hall & Oates.
Shola Ama was the discovery that broke D - Influence as mainstream producers. The story of her discovery has also become folklore. Kwame Kwaten was refused a cab at Hammersmith Station so he turned and walked in to catch a train. There he heard Shola Ama humming as she walked. He auditioned her on the platform and gave her his business card. She soon became a regular at D - Influence Studios where her first album "Much Love" was recorded. Shola was signed to D - Influence Productions own label Freakstreet and licensed to Warner Bros in 1995 - 1996. Her first album Much Love went on to sell over a million copies worldwide. Although not as popular in the UK, her second album In Return, also produced by D - Influence, went on to break airplay records in France.[4][5]
Kwame was the founder of the biggest European Urban Music Seminar. The seminar was set up to pass on much of what he and many others had learnt about the music business as they saw it. It was, as Kwaten describes it, a "harsh no frills edutainment spectacle" whose numbers swelled from 500 people in 1998 to 15 000 over two days at the Royal Festival Hall in 2004. Many stars from the music world spoke and gave free advice at these events such as Kanye West, Jazzie B, Tim Westwood, Kanya King, Trevor Nelson, Damon Dash, Mathew Knowles, Norman Jay.[6]
Kwame Kwaten is also a foster carer and works for Camila Batmanghelidjh at Kids Company. He also uses his music industry experience to teach commercial music students as a lecturer at the University of Westminster.
Kwame started working as a manager at ATC Management in 2006. He currently looks after Rumer, Master Shortie[7] and Kerry Leatham. Kwame Kwaten also acts as an international consultant at ATC 3 where he manages and advises international acts, brands, actors and actresses on the music business in Europe. ATC 3 has so far helped steer the careers of Aviv Geffen, Preeya Kalidas ( Bend It Like Beckham ; Bombay Dreams ; Eastenders ) and newbies Dekata Project.