Showing posts with label Def Jam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Def Jam. Show all posts

Friday, May 4, 2012

Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys dead at 47

image from answers.com

Adam Yauch, the Beastie Boys rapper known as MCA, died on May 4, 2012. While not yet confirmed, it is assumed he succumbed to cancer. PM He underwent treatment for cancer in his salivary gland in 2009. It was reported in 2011 that he had beat cancer, but Yauch released a statement saying, “While I'm grateful for all the positive energy people are sending my way, reports of my being totally cancer free are exaggerated…I’m continuing treatment, staying optimistic and hoping to be cancer free in the near future.” BB The group has not performed live since Yauch’s diagnosis in 2009.

Yauch was 47. He is survived by his wife Dechen Wangdu and their daughter Tenzin Losel. In addition to being one-third of one of the biggest rap groups in history, Yauch “was heavily involved in the movement to free Tibet and co-organized the Tibetan Freedom Concerts of the late Nineties. In 2002, he launched the film production company Oscilloscope Laboratories.” RS Russell Simmons, whose Def Jam Recordings released the Beasties debut album, Licensed to Ill, said of Adam, he “was incredibly sweet and the most sensitive artist who I loved dearly. I was always inspired by his work. He will be missed by all of us.” BB

With Michael “Mike D” Diamond and Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz started as a hardcore punk group in 1979, but had moved toward hip-hop by the time of 1986’s Licensed to Ill. It became one of the most important albums in rap history, giving the Beasties the distinction of being the first rap group to top the Billboard album chart. As producer Rick Rubin said, “The Beasties opened hip-hop music up to the suburbs…As crazy as they were, they seemed safe to Middle America, in a way black artists hadn’t been up to that point in time.” BB

That album owed much of its success to the iconic hit single, “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party).” The DMDB ranks the song as one of the top 1000 of all time. A DMDB blog entry from December 2011 took an in-depth look at that song.

You Gotta Fight for Your Right to Party

While that first album had a certain campy appeal, the Beasties surprised everyone the next time out with 1989’s Paul’s Boutique, “a critically lauded, sample-heavy record that featured production from the Dust Brothers.” BB

Both of those albums rank in the DMDB’s top 1000 albums of all time, as did their next two releases, 1992’s Check Your Head and 1994’s Ill Communication. All four albums also rank in the DMDB’s list of the top 50 rap albums of all time.

The latter album sported another of the Beasties’ most iconic songs, “Sabotage.” Not only did the song prove the Beasties had an audience beyond rap by ranking as one of the top 100 alternative songs of all time, but the video for the song proved one of the most celebrated in history, ranking in the top ten on the DMDB’s list of the top 100 videos of all time.

Sabotage

This year the Beastie Boys were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Due to his illness, Yauch was unable to attend the ceremony on April 14. Check out The Daily Guru’s blog for a nice tribute about what the Beastie Boys meant to him.


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Saturday, July 26, 1986

Run-D.M.C. charted with its remake of “Walk This Way”

Walk This Way

Aerosmith

Writer(s): Steven Tyler, Joe Perry (see lyrics here)


Released: August 28, 1975


First Charted: November 20, 1976


Peak: 10 US, 7 CB, 5 HR, 5 RR, 1 CL, 7 CN, 85 AU, 1 DF (Click for codes to charts.)


Sales (in millions): -- US, 0.2 UK, 0.2 world (includes US + UK)


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, 29.52 video, -- streaming

Awards for Aerosmith version:

Click on award for more details.

Walk This Way

Run-D.M.C. with Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler & Joe Perry


Released: July 4, 1986


First Charted: July 26, 1986


Peak: 4 US, 9 CB, 10 RR, 8 RB, 8 UK, 7 CN, 9 AU, 4 DF (Click for codes to charts.)


Sales (in millions): 1.0 US, 0.4 UK, 1.45 world (includes US + UK)


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, 94.8 video, 651.47 streaming

Awards for Run-DMC version:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

“Walk This Way,” about a high schooler losing his virginity, was sung at a fast speed with emphasis on rhyming. The title was inspired by a line in the Mel Brooks’ movie Young Frankenstein. WK While initially released as the second single for Aeromsith’s 1975 album Toys in the Attic, the song didn’t become a hit until after two singles from fourth album, 1976’s Rocks, charted. Then the late-1976 reissue climbed to #10 in the U.S. and established “Walk This Way” as one of Aerosmith’s signature songs and a staple of classic rock radio. A decade later, Aerosmith had fallen on hard times, unraveled by drug and alcohol problems. An attempted comeback with 1985’s Done with Mirrors did little to regenerate interest. However, a New York-based rap group would revive the song – and Aerosmith’s career.

DJ Jam Master Jay of Run-D.M.C. frequently cut back and forth between two copies of “Walk This Way” to allow MC’s Run and DMC to add rhymes to the instrumental. When the trio started work on their Raising Hell album, producer Rick Rubin – a fan of metal and rock – suggested they remake the song.

The resulting cover is often credited as breaking rap into the mainstream, as it was the first rap song to hit the top 5 of the Billboard Hot 100 chart. WK The song was instrumental not only in introducing rock into rap music, but opened the possibilities for non-rap acts to include the genre in their music.

The song also put Aerosmith back in the spotlight, not just because the band had been covered, but because singer Steven Tyler and guitarist Joe Perry participated in the remake. “Perry acquitted himself quite well, as usual, and Tyler’s snotty snarl prospered in the hip-hop context.” DM The pair also appeared in the classic video which pitted them against Run-D.M.C. as neighbors trying to out-blast each other. By the video’s end, they all perform together on stage.


Resources:


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First posted 7/6/2012; last updated 6/18/2023.