“I made 'Headbanger' for Ice Cube [who was my friend]. But I never got it to him. I never got the chance to give it to him. That was the last song before 'Crossover' was made."
“We were in the studio one day, and we needed a crew record. So I threw the beat on. And we started yelling. The session just went that way. The beat made you amped. I was just so aggressive. I was thinking about The Bomb Squad when I made that record. We had it set up like a Tempations thing, with the four mics set up. Just screaming. It was hard to EQ that record because you had the leakage [from one microphone to the others] like back in the day. But we did it that way, and it came out fine. [Performing the vocals live together] made it very exciting."
Business Never Personal should've been simply the latest feather-in-the-cap for EPMD. Sermon's craft was peaking and both rappers had mastered their distinctly monotone style; while also delivering Redman and K-Solo. Everything was cresting, but their personal relationship would begin to deteriorate quickly. Members of the Hit Squad collective were grumbling about Smith, who was head of EPMD's production company. There were gripes about finances. Just before the album's release, Smith was the victim of a home invasion. No one was hurt, but a rumor spread quickly that Sermon had been involved. And Smith was aware that one of the assailants was a friend of Erick's. Sermon would subsequently be arrested and questioned by authorities on the matter, but no charges were filed. It was an unexpected fissure in the once-stable union between the two emcees, and the drama proved to be the final blow for EPMD. "Crossover" had been their biggest hit to date, but EPMD would break up just months after the release of the "Headbanger" single in October 1992.
"EPMD departed for personal reasons," Smith would say un-ironically in THE SOURCE in 1993. "We had a major blowout in the cockpit between Erick and I that wouldn't have allowed me to be in there 115%, like I had always been with EPMD."
The bond seemed to be irrevocably broken.
"The problem that we are dealing with is something that only he and I can understand," Smith added. "People speculate, but they'll know the real on how me and E worked."