Kenny Dixon Jr.
50 top tracks
Kenny Dixon Jr.
50 top tracks
Albums
![DJ-Kicks (DJ Tennis) [Mixed Tracks] — cover art by Kenny Dixon Jr.](/frogtoon_logo.png)
DJ-Kicks (DJ Tennis) [Mixed Tracks]
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Sweat Mix
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Soul Sounds
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Soul Sounds EP
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Emotional Content
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Vibes New & Rare Music - Part 4
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Spectrum
Kenny Dixon Jr.

The Moody Trax
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Should've Known
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Moody Trax
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Three Chairs 2
Kenny Dixon Jr.

Three Chairs
Kenny Dixon Jr.
Biography
AKA Moodymann...Read more on Last.fm
Read more
AKA Moodymann
Kenny Dixon, Jr.'s outspoken views on the state of black techno and his aversion to publicity put him in a league occupied by few Detroit producers other than Underground Resistance supremo "Mad" Mike Banks, though his tech-house productions as Moodymann are soulful in a league few could expect. Dixon began producing early in the '90s, and inaugurated his own KDJ Records in 1994 with the Moody Trax EP. Following singles like "The Day We Lost the Soul" and "I Can't Kick This Feelin When It Hits" proved one of the best fusers of short, soulful disco samples to the harder minimalist Detroit techno. Further singles for After Midnight, Music Is..., and Carl Craig's Planet E Records (including the brilliant Dem Young Sconies EP) solidified Dixon's place in Detroit techno, though his stance on promotion remained firm. Much of his KDJ output appeared on 1997's A Silent Introduction, while the following year's Mahogany Brown brought much new material. Forevernevermore, released in 2000, collected more of his KDJ material and added several new tracks as well. <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Kenny+Dixon+Jr.">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
