Hip Club Groove

[3] As well as Mackenzie and Bowles, the group's original lineup also included Sixtoo and Gordski, who both left the band before its full-length debut album but remained occasional collaborators.

Another sometime collaborator was "Stinkin' Rich" Terfry, who later became better known as solo hip hop artist Buck 65.

[4] The band released the EP Cool Beans in 1993 on No Records,[5] before signing to Sloan's Murderecords for 1994's Trailer Park Hip Hop.

[7] Hip Club Groove released their second and final album, Land of the Lost, on Funtrip Records in 1996.

The band broke up soon after, and Higgins and Mackenzie went on to join Len as touring musicians; they performed on a few tracks on Len's 1999 album You Can't Stop the Bum Rush, where Higgins retained the name DJ Moves but Mackenzie was known as D-Rock.