From 2004 onwards, he began to scale back his DJing due to tinnitus, but simultaneously launched a second career as a businessman, co-founding a company that runs a chain of live music pubs across London.
During his spare time, Carter began making his own tracks, which caught the ear of Mark Jones, the founder of the Wall of Sound record label.
[3] At around the same time, Carter was one of the regular DJs at The Heavenly Social, a Sunday evening club in the Albany pub on Great Portland Street in central London.
[3][4] In 1995, Carter left Wall of Sound and signed with Heavenly Records to produce dub and dancehall-influenced dance music under the name of Monkey Mafia.
[4] In 1999, Carter moved back to Wall of Sound and its new subsidiary Nu Camp to release "Women Beat Their Men", a house record under the new pseudonym of Junior Cartier.
[4] In 2004, he co-founded 580 Limited, a company which owned several live music pub venues, initially across the UK but later solely in London.