Fourteen years later, American electronic producer Jason Nevins radically overhauled the track for the electronic market. Nevins sped up the tempo, injected a heavy, looping big-beat house groove, and weaponized the vocal hooks. Released late in 1997, the Run-D.M.C. vs. Jason Nevins Vinyl Single skyrocketed to #1 across the UK, Europe, and Australia, selling nearly 5 million copies and forever bridging the worlds of hip-hop and electronic dance music. 3. The Modern Club Reconstruction: The Raxon Edit
Raxon stripped out the bright commercial elements of Nevins' version. He replaced them with: Run DMC vs. Jason Nevins - It's Like That (Raxon Edit)
Fast forward to the 2020s, and the track has found its way into the crates of elite techno and progressive house DJs. The most prominent modern version is the (frequently searched as "Raxon E"). run dmc jason nevins its like that raxon e repack
You are looking for a modernized, DJ-friendly version of Jason Nevins' legendary 1997 remix of Run-DMC, repackaged (likely by or attributed to the edit-style of Raxon) to fit contemporary sound systems.
Stream Run DMC vs. Jason Nevins - It's Like That (Raxon Edit) by IDJunkie | Listen online for free on SoundCloud. SoundCloud Run DMC vs. Jason Nevins - It's Like That (Raxon Edit) The Modern Club Reconstruction: The Raxon Edit Raxon
Leo grabbed the DAT and ran — through the stockroom, up the fire escape, onto the rain-slicked roof of the Lower East Side. Vex’s men swarmed below. Leo’s only weapon: a portable DAT walkman and a pair of Sony MDR-V6 headphones.
Leo slid the DAT into the shop’s ancient player. The first snare hit sounded like a car door slamming in an empty warehouse. Then Jason’s signature filter sweep — but corrupted, bleeding red. Then D.M.C.’s voice, slowed then sped up: It was a warning.
It wasn’t a remix. It was a warning.