Now that it’s been 16 years since their one and only appearance on the Pop charts (1995’s “Take You There” made a one week cameo at the number 76 spot), it’s easy for some people to forget the immense impact of Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth. At their peak, “Mecca and the Soul Brother” were locking down Sprite endorsements, powering a Run-DMC comeback and watching with the rest of us as dozens of clone producers tried to imitate Pete’s trademark mix of breakbeats, samples and horn loops.
As a display of just how much influence Pete Rock had, he would also later bring the group InI, comprised of himself, his brother Grap Luva, Rob O and I Love H.I.M. to Elektra. And while being connected to, or in Grap’s case related to the man who was arguably Hip Hop’s best producer at the time didn’t hurt, both men had respectively held their own on various posse cuts. After Pete Rock and C.L. split, InI was poised to release The Life I Live on Elektra, but Pete Rock felt the open creative relationship with the higher ups had been compromised.
“When I finished the InI album, there was a guy who was the president who approved of InI and got them signed to Elektra,” Pete Rock explained to RiotSound.com. “But once Sylvia Rhone came into the picture things didn’t work out between me and her. We didn’t have the greatest relationship. She came in with some of her own insights, which I didn’t approve of, and I felt she didn’t understand real Hip-Hop music. She came in with the brand new polished sound, which was, to me, it was like water to skin. It just rolls off of you. It doesn’t stick to you…I felt like me and her, I didn’t feel like we would have a great relationship with our thought processes going in different directions.”
Such being the case, The Life I Live was renamed Center of Attention, but Elektra still shelved the album. The project was eventually re-released by BBE Records, but Pete Rock said that business relationship also soured. After his 2004 album, Younger Soul Brother, Grap Luva tossed around the idea of returning a few times, including his 2010 single, “Work It Out.” And, unless you’ve been hiding under a rock, you know Pete Rock is still doing his thing. The chances of new InI material being released seem rather slim at this point, but a look back at “Fakin’ Jax” is always a plus if you’re nostalgic for a great sample powered by Havoc’s infamous (no pun intended) line from “Give Up The Goods.”
Classic throwback, this track give you that feeling again like you was back in the best era in hip hop history…love that. InI was nice, Pete Rock is the Creator.
Yeah, that’s true, early to mid ’90s were my halcyon days, a magical period in hip-hop music. I copped this Fakin’ Jax 12″, but didn’t get round to hearin’ the LP. YG’z Street Nigga cassette got mad plays too.
It always pissed me off to no avail that i cant buy that cd.
Good shit!!!!!!!! takes me back and makes me think when i listen to todays shit what the fuck has happened to good ol hip-hop!!!
this is the one group that none of my friends know about… its like my secret mistress i make love to everyday =)
about time you featured this classic track
too many rappers nowadays fakin jax
“I kick a dance step you’re soon to discover… yo that’s the kid from ‘Mecca & The Soul Brother” (Grap Luva).
God bless the Underground
u always wanna b in the spotlig ht(right)/center of attention/plus i’d like to mention/INI rocks the spot(right)….nostalgic moments….cant touch this album..PROPS
bumping NO MORE WORDS………..