Old School Salute: Run-D.M.C.’s Classic Debut
Wow 25 years ago today an album came out that changed my life. Growing up in Queens, Run-DMC was simply the shit to me. They could do no wrong. The word idolize doesn’t even begin to explain my devotion to them. Besides Michael Jackson, they were the first music act that I was truly a fanatic of. Every record they put out was life-changing to me. “It’s Like That.” “Sucker MC’s.” I remember riding in a car back and forth from baseball practice with my best friend Frank Valentin reciting the lyrics to “Rock Box” as loud as possible. We just couldn’t believe someone was rhyming over guitars. Guitars!
Back then, Run-DMC’s success was hip-hop’s success. They had the entire culture on their back and not only did they carry it, they broke the doors down to the mainstream and made it clear that hip-hop wasn’t a fad. And it all began with this self-titled debut. I used to stare at the album cover like a mental patient. Why was Run written over the top of a picture of DMC and vice versa? Why was Jam Master Jay’s picture on the back of the album when they made a whole song about him? How could they make such a mistake I thought? It bothered me. Ha!
But thankfully the sounds here soothed me. They jacked Kurtis Blow on the jolting jumpoff “Hard Times,” recycled the classic lyrics from “Here We Go” on “Hollis Crew” and closed the album with two brilliantly bizarre tales of blinding hope (“Wake Up”) and love-me-or-leave-alone swag (“30 Days”). The record was superbly short and was never complete until you picked the needle off the vinyl and played it all over again. Twice as nice!
My wife always teases me that I don’t have an emotional response to music but this LP proves her wrong. Thankfully I fell in love with a woman who loves “Wake Up” and “30 Days” even more than I do. Although Darryl and Joe would go on to make a better album (if you haven’t heard Raising Hell then go to hell) there’s nothing like the first time. I truly felt a part of a movement that was gonna change the world. And it did.
Yo this joint change music forever, before this a whole rap album was considered a silly ideal. Hiphop was fightin for respect and this album became the anthem young black america…..east cost west coast the whole nine and these cats wasn’t considered hard just dope (maybe Jay was hood) but the vibe was all love. Even battles wasn’t beef just my block is liver than your block….everybody was broke! lol
LOL @ Why was Run written over the top of a picture of DMC and vice versa?…
I did too…