Run Dmc- Jason Nevins - It-s Like That -raxon E... Link -
Nevins replaced the minimalist hip-hop beat with a high-energy house groove. He utilized: A driving 4/4 house kick drum. Up-tempo, syncopated basslines.
At the intersection of these worlds lies a unique musical lineage: the original 1983 boom-bap of , the 1997 big-beat explosion courtesy of Jason Nevins , and the modern, dark-techno reinterpretation by Raxon .
Share your favorite memories of this song or let us know what you're listening to right now! RUN DMC- Jason Nevins - It-s Like That -Raxon E...
like Futur Festival, often alongside artists like Maceo Plex and Diplo. Vinyl Release
Each artist respected what came before while imposing their own sonic fingerprint. And that is the way it is – a track never truly dies; it simply waits for the right producer to reincarnate it for a new dancefloor. Nevins replaced the minimalist hip-hop beat with a
Before the synths, before the thunderous 4/4 kicks, there was a drum machine, a bassline, and a message.
Fast forward to 1997. The music landscape was fragmented: hip-hop was becoming glossy (Puff Daddy, Mase), and electronic music was splitting into underground techno, mainstream house, and the aggressive, sample-heavy genre (Prodigy, Chemical Brothers, Fatboy Slim). At the intersection of these worlds lies a
“I heard Raxon drop this at a rooftop party in Dubai. The vocals came in soft... everyone lost it. Context is everything.” –
: Following high demand in club circuits, the edit is slated for a physical release on vinyl under the catalog number DSTRXTD001 JASON NEVINS
The search query (likely incomplete, hinting at “Raxon Edit” or “Raxon Remix”) points to a fascinating evolution of dance music. This article dissects each layer of that keyword: the raw hip-hop origins, the Nevins big-beat explosion, and the Raxon techno reinterpretation.
Enter Jason Nevins, a relatively unknown New York producer and DJ. He obtained the acapella of “It’s Like That” and built a new instrumental from scratch: