He produced almost every track on Center of Attention, and his younger brother Grap Luva formed a crucial part of the group.
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.”[2]Following the disputes with Sylvia Rhone, Pete Rock's relationship with Elektra Records quickly turned sour, which led to his distribution deal with them ending, along with the demise of Soul Brother Records.
As a result, two releases he was working on at the time (InI's Center of Attention and Deda's The Original Baby Pa) never came out due to legal complications surrounding the ownership of the masters.
[3] In 2003, it finally saw an official release after being included on Lost & Found: Hip Hop Underground Soul Classics, a double LP of Pete Rock's mid-1990s production work, originally canceled by Elektra Records.
After Center of Attention got shelved, the group members went their separate ways, with only two of them staying in the music scene to pursue solo careers.
Grap Luva released a few limited 12" singles in the new millennium and aspired toward achieving his true interest in being a b-boy and producer.
He appeared, and produced on various albums and singles from artists such as DJ Spinna, J-Live, Pete Rock, Lone Catalysts, Kev Brown and Marley Marl.