Who is Raxon? Why is his name glued to the Jason Nevins remix? And how does this obscure edit fit into the 30-year legacy of what many call the greatest hip-house remix of all time?
| Feature | RUN DMC (1983) | Jason Nevins (1997) | Raxon Edit (c. 2020) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Old school hip-hop | House / Big beat | Peak-time techno | | BPM | ~96 | 128 | 132 | | Vibe | Angsty, stoic | Euphoric, anthemic | Dark, driving, hypnotic | | Primary Listener | Hip-hop purists | 90s ravers / club kids | Modern techno DJs | | Availability | Wide (all platforms) | Wide (remastered) | Rare (bootleg, blogs) | RUN DMC- Jason Nevins - It-s Like That -Raxon E...
But few could have predicted that 14 years later, a white house DJ would turn this sermon into the biggest dance record of 1998. Jason Nevins was a club promoter and remixer who had honed his craft at the legendary Tunnel and Limelight in New York City. He was part of the "filtered house" wave inspired by Daft Punk and Armand Van Helden. While experimenting in his studio, Nevins stumbled upon the acapella of It's Like That . Who is Raxon
The through-line is the vocal: "It's like that, and that's the way it is." In 1983, it was fatalism. In 1997, it was a unifying shout of recognition. In Raxon’s hands, it is a rhythmic mantra, stripped of context and reduced to pure cadence. The keyword "RUN DMC- Jason Nevins - It's Like That -Raxon E..." is more than a messy search string. It is a map of musical evolution. It traces a path from a South Side Queens rap group to a Long Island house DJ to a Dominican techno producer. Each artist added a new layer of polish, speed, and intensity, yet the core remained unchanged. | Feature | RUN DMC (1983) | Jason