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Run and DMC also made changes in their rapping style (heavily influenced by Rakim) as techniques such as alliteration, polysyllabic rhyming, and internal rhyme are found in songs like "I'm Not Going Out Like That," "Radio Station", and the title track. The group also introduces storytelling to their arsenal in "Ragtime".
The album of the same name is sharply divided between some of the best music Run-DMC ever made and some of the worst. ... the incredible “Beats to the Rhyme,” but “Ragtime” and the Monkees ...
The premise of the song is that no matter who is performing at a concert or wherever they go, Run-DMC owns the "house" and always heads the bill. Run makes references to the trio's influence on hip-hop with the lines "They said rap was crap/But never had this band" and "'Til the ruler came, with a cooler name/Made ya dance and prance and draw ...
The Best of Run–DMC (2003) Ultimate Run–D.M.C. ... It contains 18 tracks as well as a bonus DVD with 14 music videos. Track listing ... "Beats to the Rhyme" – 2 ...
The album's sparse beats and aggressive rhymes were in sharp contrast with the light, party-oriented sound that was popular in contemporary hip hop. With the album, Run-D.M.C. came to be regarded by music critics as pioneering the movement of new-school hip hop of the mid-1980s. [1]
It was 1982. Darryl “DMC” McDaniels had just graduated from high school, and his group Run-DMC with Joseph “Run” Simmons and Jason “Jam Master Jay” Mizell was garnering significant ...
Together Forever: Greatest Hits 1983–1991 is the first compilation album by American hip hop group Run-D.M.C. It was released in 1991 and was complemented by a greatest hits video collection (released separately). Some pressings included an uncensored version of "Beats To The Rhyme" as heard in the film "Tougher Than Leather".
Run-D.M.C. chronology; Crown Royal (1999) High Profile: The Original Rhymes (2002) Greatest Hits (2002) ... "Beats to the Rhyme" "Jam Master Jay" "Hard Times"