How “Walk This Way” Changed Aerosmith’s Career Forever

Run-DMC's Darryl McDaniels and Aerosmith's Steven Tyler performing together in the iconic

via Run DMC / YouTube

Aerosmith’s heyday appeared to be a thing of the past in 1986. The band that had dominated the rock world of the 1970s was losing fans, their most recent albums were not doing well, and they were struggling with substance misuse in their personal lives. However, everything changed when a producer named Rick Rubin, who was 22 at the time, called.

โ€œWhat Is Rap?โ€ A Managerโ€™s Honest Question

Rubin had a wild idea. He wanted Aerosmith to re-record one of their old hits, โ€œWalk This Way,โ€ with a rising rap group called Run DMC. When Aerosmithโ€™s manager Tim Collins first heard the pitch, he responded with a genuine question: โ€œWhat is rap?โ€ Rubin explained the concept, and Collins realized this might be the kind of big break the band desperately needed, especially in the MTV era, where the right video could catapult an artist to superstardom.

Rubin had already founded Def Jam Records and had an eye for innovation. He saw potential in mixing the raw edge of Aerosmithโ€™s rock with the power and rhythm of Run DMCโ€™s hip-hop. The idea was bold, maybe even a little weird โ€” but it worked.

A New Spin on an Old Classic

โ€œWalk This Wayโ€ originally came out in 1975, landing Aerosmith in the Billboard Top Ten. But a decade later, it wasnโ€™t exactly dominating radio. Thatโ€™s when Jam Master Jay of Run DMC stepped in. He had already been using the songโ€™s riff in his DJ sets, though he mistakenly thought โ€œToys in the Atticโ€ was the name of the band.

Still, the groove stuck, and Rubinโ€™s plan brought the two genres crashing together. The new version of โ€œWalk This Wayโ€ became an MTV staple, breathing new life into Aerosmithโ€™s career and helping Run DMC cross over to mainstream (and mostly white) audiences. Suddenly, rap was getting serious airplay, and Aerosmith was relevant again.

The Power of Collaboration

The success of the song mirrored what Eddie Van Halen did for Michael Jacksonโ€™s โ€œBeat Itโ€ just a few years earlier โ€” proving that rock and pop (or in this case, rap) could coexist and even thrive together. โ€œWalk This Wayโ€ helped Run DMCโ€™s Raising Hell go platinum and earned them a spot on the cover of Rolling Stone.

Meanwhile, Aerosmith was back in business. Their next album, Permanent Vacation (1987), sold five million copies โ€” ten times more than their last record. With new fans and fresh momentum, the band soared into the late โ€™80s alongside other stadium acts like Bon Jovi and Guns Nโ€™ Roses.

The Track That Opened Doors

The unlikely pairing set off a wave of genre-blending collaborations. Public Enemy linked up with Anthrax, and later, nu-metal bands like Limp Bizkit and Linkin Park rode that same crossover wave (with less impressive results). Still, it all started with this one track โ€” a daring mix that still holds up today.

With a band eager for a second chance and a young producer with vision, the gamble paid off. History has shown that sometimes all it takes to make a big difference is one wild idea and a lot of confidence.

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