
More than any
other hip-hop group, Run-D.M.C. is responsible for the sound and style of
the music. As the first hardcore rap outfit, the trio set the sound and style
for the next decade of rap. With its spare beats and excursions into heavy
metal samples, the trio was tougher and more menacing than its predecessors
Grandmaster Flash and Whodini. In the process, it opened the door for both
the politicized rap of Public Enemy and Boogie Down Productions, as well as
the hedonistic gangsta fantasies of N.W.A. At the same time, Run-D.M.C. helped
move rap from a singles-oriented genre to an album-oriented one — they were
the first hip-hop artist to construct full-fledged albums, not just a collection
with two singles and a bunch of filler. By the end of the '80s, Run-D.M.C.
had been overtaken by the groups they had spawned, but they continued to perform
to a dedicated following well into the '90s.

All three members of Run-D.M.C.
were natives of the middle-class New York borough, Hollis, Queens. Run (born
Joseph Simmons, November 14, 1964) was the brother of Russell Simmons, who
formed the hip-hop management company Rush Productions in the early '80s;
by the mid-'80s, Russell had formed the pioneering record label Def Jam with
Rick Rubin. Russell encouraged his brother Joey and his friend, Darryl McDaniel
(b. May 31, 1964) to form a rap duo. The pair of friends did just that, adopting
the names Run and D.M.C. respectively. After they graduated from high school
in 1982, the pair enlisted their friend, Jason Mizell (b. January 21, 1965),
to scratch turntables; Mizell adopted the stage name Jam Master Jay.

In 1983, Run-D.M.C. released its
first single, "It's Like That" / "Sucker M.C.'s," on Profile
Records. The single sounded like no other rap at the time — it was spare,
blunt and skillful, with hard beats and powerful, literate, daring vocals,
where Run and D.M.C.'s vocals overlapped, as they finished each other's lines.
It was the first "new school" hip-hop recording. "It's Like
That" became a Top 20 R&B hit, as did the group's second single,
"Hard Times" / "Jam Master Jay." Two other hit R&B
singles followed in early 1984 — "Rock Box" and "30 Days"
— before the group's eponymous debut appeared.

By the time of their second album,
1985's King of Rock, Run-D.M.C. had become the most popular and influential
rappers in America, already spawning a number of imitators. As the King of
Rock title suggests, the group was breaking down the barriers between rock
& roll and rap, rapping over heavy metal records and thick, dense drum
loops. Besides releasing the King of Rock album and scoring the R&B hits
"King of Rock, "You Talk Too Much" and "Can You Rock It
Like This" in 1985, the group also appeared in the rap movie Krush Groove,
which also featured Kurtis Blow, the Beastie Boys, and the Fat Boys.

Run-D.M.C.'s fusion of rock and
rap broke into the mainstream with their third album, 1986's Raising Hell.
The album was preceded by the Top Ten R&B single "My Adidas,"
which set the stage for the group's biggest hit single, a cover of Aerosmith's
"Walk This Way." Recorded with Aerosmith's Steven Tyler and Joe
Perry, "Walk This Way" was the first hip-hop record to appeal to
both rockers and rappers, as evidenced by its peak position of number four
on the pop charts. In the wake of the success of "Walk This Way,"
Raising Hell became the first rap album to reach number one on the R&B
charts, to chart in the pop Top Ten, and the first to go platinum, and Run-D.M.C.
was the first rap act to received airplay on MTV — they were the first rappers
to cross over into the pop mainstream. Raising Hell also spawned the hit singles
"You Be Illin'" and "It's Tricky."

Run-D.M.C. spent most of 1987
recording Tougher than Leather, their follow-up to Raising Hell. Tougher than
Leather was accompanied by a movie of the same name. Starring Run-D.M.C.,
the film was an affectionate parody of '70s Blaxploitation films. Although
Run-D.M.C. had been at the height of their popularity when they were recording
and filming Tougher than Leather, by the time the project was released, the
rap world had changed. Most of the hip-hop audience wanted to hear hardcore
political rappers like Public Enemy, not crossover artists like Run-D.M.C.
Consequently, the film bombed and the album only went platinum, failing to
spawn any significant hit singles.

Two years after Tougher than Leather,
Run-D.M.C. returned with Back from Hell, which became their first album not
to go platinum. Following its release, both Run and D.M.C. suffered personal
problems as Daniels suffered a bout of alcoholism and Simmons was accused
of rape. After Daniels sobered up and the charges against Simmons were dismissed,
both of the rappers became born-again Christians, touting their religious
conversion on the 1993 album, Down with the King. Featuring guest appearances
and production assistance from artists as diverse as Public Enemy, EPMD, Naughty
by Nature, A Tribe Called Quest, Neneh Cherry, Pete Rock, and KRS-1, Down
with the King became the comeback Run-D.M.C. needed. The title track became
a Top Ten R&B hit and the album went gold, peaking at number 21. Although
they were no longer hip-hop innovators, the success of Down with the King
proved that Run-D.M.C. were still respected pioneers. After a long studio
hiatus, the trio returned in early 2000 with Crown Royal. — Stephen Thomas
Erlewine