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Pre-teenage R&B sensations in the early '90s, <a href="spotify:artist:4XDxFeclKBCFPb30yQlRUH">Immature</a> were formed in Los Angeles by producer/mentor <a href="spotify:artist:3TlB1FDLy2iy2K1VTsB048">Chris Stokes</a> around barely ten-year-olds <a href="spotify:artist:1goOx6gnQdUllLfSMsL4Rt">Marques "Batman" Houston</a>, Jerome "Romeo" Jones, and Kelton "LDB" Kessee. The trio recorded its debut album, On Our Worst Behavior, for Virgin in 1992 and scored a modest R&B hit with "Tear It Up" (from the animated film Bebe's Kids). After moving to MCA for 1994's Playtyme Is Over, <a href="spotify:artist:4XDxFeclKBCFPb30yQlRUH">Immature</a> scored with the pop hits "Never Lie" and "Constantly," pushing the album into gold territory. The trio then appeared in the <a href="spotify:artist:7mldB9nEb6VC2cUj7EcgFw">Kid 'n Play</a> film House Party 3. Third album We Got It also did well, though no single cracked the Top 40; "Feel the Funk," from the movie Dangerous Minds, came the closest, at number 46. For their fourth LP, The Journey, <a href="spotify:artist:4XDxFeclKBCFPb30yQlRUH">Immature</a> flirted with changing their name -- the obvious choice was Mature -- but decided to focus the change in direction on the music. The Journey did well on the R&B charts, but failed to translate to a pop success. They switched to IMx for 1999's Introducing IMx, but their sound wasn't much different than before. The new millennium saw the release of a greatest-hits package, issued in February 2001. ~ John Bush, Rovi

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