Influenced in his teen years by Prince Paul's work on
De La Soul's legendary album 3 Feet High and Rising, N.Y.C. native
Charles Misodi Njapa became 88-Keys and made it his mission to become a hip-hop producer. First he became an intern and then an engineer at West Hempstead's famous recording studio The Music Palace, where he began networking and working with rappers like
Large Professor,
Nas,
Q-Tip, and
Pete Rock. The big break came in 1998 when one of his productions landed on the
Mos Def and
Talib Kweli album Black Star. The next year his remix of
Macy Gray's "Why Didn't You Call Me" took things higher, and then in 2001 a track on
Beanie Sigel's The Reason introduced him to
Jay-Z and the
Roc-A-Fella family. Work for the likes of
Musiq (Soulchild) and
the Pharcyde took the producer to 2008 and his debut full-length, The Death of Adam. Released by the
Decon label, the album was executive produced by
Kanye West and featured guest shots from
Bilal,
Little Brother,
Kid Cudi, and
Redman. ~ David Jeffries, Rovi