: The track’s success culminated in a Grammy nomination for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group in 1992. Collectibility and Versions
: A 6-minute club odyssey that leaned into the house music aesthetic. : The track’s success culminated in a Grammy
For enthusiasts and collectors, the Borgers-influenced era is marked by several distinct versions found on labels like FFRR and Next Plateau Records : His 1991 remix—often appearing on European pressings under
Borgers, a Dutch producer and remixer known for his work in the New Jack Swing and early house movements, took the track's educational message and polished it for the dance floor. His 1991 remix—often appearing on European pressings under titles like the —stripped away some of the laid-back funk of the album version, replacing it with a more urgent, percussive drive that defined the era's transition from hip-hop to hip-house. A Global Hit replacing it with a more urgent
: The remix helped keep the song in high rotation, amplifying its message during a critical period of the HIV/AIDS crisis. This eventually led the group to release a direct rework titled "Let's Talk About AIDS" in 1992.