Oral history of Aerosmith and Run-DMC's "Walk This Way"


In 1986, Aerosmith and Run-DMC collaborated on a remake of the former's 1970s song "Walk This Way." Masterminded by producer Rick Rubin, then 22, the resulting jam was a gamechanger for both hip hop and rock. Over at the Washington Post, Geoff Edgers put together a fascinating oral history of the instant classic:

Steven Tyler: I loved rap. I used to go looking for drugs on Ninth Avenue and I would go over to midtown or downtown and there would be guys on the corner selling cassettes of their music. I'd give them a buck, two bucks, and that was the beginning of me noticing what was going on in New York at the time….


DMC: Rick gives us this yellow notebook pad. He tells us, "Go down to D's basement, put the needle on the record." We go down to my basement and put on the record and then you hear "Backstroke lover always hidin' 'neath the covers" and immediately me and Joe get on the phone and say: "Hell no, this ain't going to happen. This is hillbilly gibberish, country-bumpkin bulls—."


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