Early 1980's songs like "Showdown" featuring The Furious 5 and The Sugar Hill Gang, "The New Rap Language" featuring The Treacherous 3 and Spoonie Gee and "Rappers Reprise" featuring The Sequence and The Sugar Hill Gang were all extremely well received, partly because fans could hear their favorite groups interacting on the same songs. Those songs were feel-good party songs and very early confirmation that rap collaborations could bear fruit.
In 1984, Profile records assembled their in-house producer Pumpkin, Dr. Jeckyll & Mr. Hyde (featuring a young Andre Harrell), The Disco 4, The Fresh 3 MCs, Scratch On Galaxy, and singer Fly Ty-Rone as Pumpkin And The Profile All-Stars. The result of that union, "Here Comes That Beat," modernized the posse cut, taking the subject matter from partying and having a good time to more aggressive braggadocio, and simultaneously serving as a dedication to the late super producer and musician Pumpkin.
In 1985, the movie Krush Groove was released, and its soundtrack featured "Krush Groovin'" (which also appeared in the movie's closing scene). "Krush Groovin'" featured The Fat Boys, Kurtis Blow, Run-DmC and Sheila E. (The Krush Groove All Stars) all of whom starred in the movie. The combination of so many big-name artists on one song and the momentum from the extremely successful movie proved once more that the posse cut could play a big part in rap recordings. In 1986, Marley Marl performed the scratches on the Eddie F produced "Uptown's Kickin It" which featured Heavy D, Groove B. Chill, Woody Rock, The Brothers Black and Finesse & Synquis. "Uptown's Kickin It" with its popular video, pushed the posse cut even further into the consciousness of rap fans.