Run D.M.C.

Run D.M.C.

Genres: Hip-Hop, rap, old school, 80s, hip hop

About Run D.M.C.

Run-D.M.C. was a hip hop group founded by the late Jason "Jam Master Jay" Mizell that included Joseph "Run" Simmons and Darryl "DMC" McDaniels. The group had an enormous impact on the development of hip hop through the 1980s and is credited with breaking hip hop into mainstream music. The three members of Run-D.M.C. grew up in Hollis, Queens, New York, USA. The band signed a record deal with Profile Records in 1983, and Run's older brother, Russell "Rush" Simmons, signed Run-D.M.C. to his newly formed management company Rush Productions that same year. On their first major United States tour, the group set new fads by performing dressed in baggy black clothing, Adidas Sneakers (always with shoelaces removed), and Fedora hats. Their mainstream success continued as the group performed at the famous Live Aid concert in 1985, and their 1986 album ''Raising Hell'' became the highest-selling rap album in history (this record was later broken as rap gained more popularity with artists like Notorious B.I.G. and Eminem), reaching number 3 on the ''Billboard magazine'' album charts and selling over 3 million copies. The album featured the famous cover version of Aerosmith's "Walk This Way", a rap-rock collaboration performed with Aerosmith members Steven Tyler and Joe Perry. The song was the first hip-hop track to make the Top 10 on Billboard's singles charts. Run-D.M.C. were renowned for breaking new ground in rap music. "It's Like That" and "Sucker MC's" (1983) were the first hip hop tracks that relied on electronic beats and nothing else. "Peter Piper" (1986) was the first rap record in which the DJ cut up a record (in this case, "Take Me to the Mardi Gras" by jazz musician Bob James. Run-D.M.C. became the first rap act with a platinum album and multi-platinum album, as well as the first rappers to appear on the cover of ''Rolling Stone'' magazine, to receive a Grammy nomination and to appear on Saturday Night Live] and American Bandstand. After a period of lackluster commercial success after the ''Raising Hell'' album, the group made a comeback in 1993 with their album ''Down With the King'', which made Billboard's Top 10 for album and the Pete Rock assisted single "Down With the King". Jam-Master Jay was shot and killed in October 2002, leading Run-D.M.C. to announce their retirement. For a complete biography and the most up-to-date information on Run DMC, visit www.RunDMC.com.

Taken from Last.fm

616,173 listeners  ·  5,640,844 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

17
stations playing
7
countries
25
tracks tracked
most active station (The Russian Federation)

Radio Stations sorted by tracks on rotation

Run D.M.C. — Top 25 songs

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Run D.M.C. It's Like That (Drop The Break Radio Edit)
Run D.M.C. It's Not Funny
Run D.M.C. King Of Rock (Live, From Live Aid)
Run D.M.C. Walk This Way
Run D.M.C. Jam-Master Jammin'
Run D.M.C. Christmas In Hollis (Clean)
Run D.M.C. Christmas Is
Run D.M.C. Tougher Than Leather
Run D.M.C. You Be Illin'
Run D.M.C. Run's House
Run D.M.C. Bob Your Head
Run D.M.C. It's Like That
Run D.M.C. Down With The King
Run D.M.C. Christmas In Hollis
Run D.M.C. Peter Piper
Run D.M.C. Rock Box (B-Boy Mix)
Run D.M.C. Jay's Game
Run D.M.C. You Talk Too Much
Run D.M.C. Darryl And Joe (Krush-Groove 3)
Run D.M.C. Here We Go (Live At The Funhouse)
Run D.M.C. King Of Rock
Run D.M.C. Not Just Another Groove
Run D.M.C. Christmas In Hollis [fdl]
Run D.M.C. (It's) Tricky (vs. Jason Nevins)
Run D.M.C. It's Tricky
It's Like That (Drop The Break Radio Edit)
It's Not Funny
King Of Rock (Live, From Live Aid)
Walk This Way
Jam-Master Jammin'
Christmas In Hollis (Clean)
Christmas Is
Tougher Than Leather
You Be Illin'
Run's House
Bob Your Head
It's Like That
Down With The King
Christmas In Hollis
Peter Piper
Rock Box (B-Boy Mix)
Jay's Game
You Talk Too Much
Darryl And Joe (Krush-Groove 3)
Here We Go (Live At The Funhouse)
King Of Rock
Not Just Another Groove
Christmas In Hollis [fdl]
(It's) Tricky (vs. Jason Nevins)
It's Tricky