
Get On Down
Run DMC - Tougher Than Leather (Translucent Blue Vinyl)
Regular price £27.00 Save £-27.00Product Description
-
Repressed
On
translucent
blue
vinyl!
Too
many
people
sleep
on
Tougher
Than
Leather,
Run-DMC’s
fourth
album.
But
hear
us
out
as
we
plead
the
case
for
this
amazing
LP.
By
1988
there
was
a
lot
more
competition
in
the
rap
game
–
Public
Enemy,
Boogie
Down
Productions,
Eric
B.
&
Rakim,
Ice-T
and
many
more
had
given
Hollis,
Queens’
prodigal
sons
lots
of
competition.
But
Joe,
Darryl
and
Jay
were
still
at
the
top
of
their
game,
and
hip-hop
fans
should
never
let
this
classic
–
chiefly
produced
by
their
Queens
neighbor,
DJ
and
multi-instrumentalist
Davy
D[MX]
–
get
lost
in
their
crates.
For
starters,
the
album’s
first
single,
“Run’s
House”
b/w
“Beats
To
The
Rhyme”
is
arguably
the
most
powerful
one-two
punch
of
the
trio’s
career,
showing
contenders
to
the
rap
throne
that
they
could
still
destroy
a
beat,
tag-teaming
with
power
at
any
speed.
Not
to
be
lost
in
the
shuffle,
fans
were
also
reminded
on
both
sides
that
JamMaster
Jay
remained
one
of
the
world’s
best
DJs,
flexing
the
pinnacle
of
what
would
be
called
“turntablism”
a
decade
later.
Both
songs
show
a
musical
telepathy
between
all
three
that
has
rarely
been
equaled.
The
second
single,
“Mary,
Mary,”
driven
by
an
infectious
Monkees
sample,
took
a
different
approach,
shrewdly
ensuring
that
pop
fans
who
jumped
on
the
Raising
Hell
bandwagon
had
something
to
chew
on.
But,
like
“Walk
This
Way,”
the
song
wasn’t
just
bubblegum
–
there
was
an
edge
to
it,
and
the
lyrical
gymnastics
were
very
real.
It
wasn’t
selling
out,
it
was
allowing
fans
to
buy
in.
“Papa
Crazy,”
driven
in
concept
and
by
a
sample
from
the
Temptations’
“Papa
Was
A
Rolling
Stone,”
followed
a
similar
pop-leaning
path.
Overall,
the
lyrical
content
on
the
album
was
a
step
up
from
the
group’s
first
three
LPs.
It’s
easy
to
infer,
looking
back,
that
they
were
feeling
the
heat
from
their
younger
competitors
in
the
rap
game.
The
genre
was
changing
fast,
and
they
were
up
to
the
challenge.
On
cuts
like
“Radio
Station”
they
bring
substance
to
the
grooves,
by
attacking
Black
Radio
for
its
continual
denigration
of
rap.
“Tougher
Than
Leather”
reminds
the
world
that
they
were
still
the
Kings
of
Rock,
with
hard
guitars
to
drive
the
point
home.
And
“They
Call
Us
Run-DMC”
and
“Soul
To
Rock
And
Roll”
both
bring
things
back
to
their
early
days,
with
sure-fire
park
jam
rhymes
and
killer
cuts.
Tougher
Than
Leather,
which
went
platinum
up
against
a
lot
of
competition,
perfectly
bookends
the
‘80s
output
of
one
of
the
decade’s
most
important
groups.
It
encompasses
the
full
range
of
the
trio’s
capabilities,
and
reminds
us
that
Run-DMC
should
never
be
forgotten
as
both
pioneers
and
party-rockers.
And
so,
we
say,
long
live
Joe,
Darryl
and
Jay!
A1.
Run's
House
A2.
Mary,
Mary
A3.
They
Call
Us
Run
DMC
A4.
Beats
To
The
Rhyme
A5.
Radio
Station
A6.
Papa
Crazy
B1.
Tougher
Than
Leather
B2.
I'm
Not
Going
Out
Like
That
B3.
How'd
Ya
Do
It
Dee
B4.
Miss
Elaine
B5.
Soul
To
Rock
And
Roll
B6.
Ragtime
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