Emmaculate Brings ‘All This Love’ Into a Warm, Soulful House Setting

Emmaculate Brings 'All This Love' Into a Warm, Soulful House Setting

Soul In The Horn has released Emmaculate’s remix of “All This Love,” bringing Bobby DeBarge Jr. and Jaime Woods into a soulful house setting shaped for warm rooms, open-air sessions, and the later stretch of a summer set.

The original DeBarge recording has carried plenty of life since its 1982 release through Motown, largely because its melody and vocal writing have always felt open enough for reinterpretation. Soul In The Horn revisited the song in 2025 with an R&B and jazz version featuring Gary Bartz and Roy Hargrove Jr., and this new remix moves that material toward the dancefloor without losing the tenderness that made the song last.

Emmaculate handles that transition with a steady hand. The rhythm has enough lift for DJs, the arrangement gives the vocals room, and the harmony keeps the record connected to the soul and jazz language surrounding the wider Soul In The Horn series.

How Emmaculate turned “All This Love” into a soulful house record

The remix is built around movement that feels inviting rather than aggressive. Emmaculate gives the track a firm house pulse, rounded low end, bright percussion, and enough space around the vocals for the chorus to keep its emotional clarity.

That balance is important with a song this familiar. The melody already carries the record, so the production does not need to crowd it with unnecessary tricks. Emmaculate builds momentum through arrangement, rhythm, and repetition, allowing each vocal phrase to settle before the groove pulls the track forward again.

The Extended Mix is the clearest DJ option, with extra room for blending and a longer progression through the song’s core ideas. The Radio Mix tightens the arrangement for playlists and shorter listening, while the Instrumental gives selectors and producers access to the harmonic and rhythmic foundation on its own.

Where does this remix fit in a DJ set?

“All This Love” feels suited to the section of a set where the room is fully engaged and ready for something warmer and more vocal. It could follow deeper house records during a gradual rise, bring a soulful pause into a busier disco set, or close an open-air session with a song people already feel some connection to.

Emmaculate’s background across Soulfuric, Nervous, Z Records, Yoruba, and Ultra comes through in the way the remix stays useful for selectors while remaining enjoyable away from the booth. The track has a clear club function, though it still carries enough melody and vocal detail for home listening.

The single is the first preview of Soulinthehorn Act 4: Remixes and Bonuses, the final chapter in the label’s series. The album arrives digitally July 17, followed by a deluxe double-vinyl edition on August 21.

For Soul In The Horn, this remix brings several parts of the label’s identity into one record: musical history, live instrumentation, jazz lineage, vocal soul, and a house groove built to bring people together.