The co-founder of the legendary Def Jam label, producer
Rick Rubin was among the key figures behind the commercial and artistic rise of
hip-hop, lending his signature
rap/metal style to many of the biggest records of the pre-gangsta era. Born
Frederick Jay Rubin on Long Island, NY, in 1963, he was attending New York University when he and Russell Simmons founded Def Jam in 1984. Operating the company out of
Rubin's dorm room, they bowed with the
T La Rock and
Jazzy Jay single "It's Yours," issued in association with Partytime/Streetwise. By 1985 Def Jam entered into a distribution deal with Columbia, and the label also produced its own
rap movie, Krush Groove;
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The co-founder of the legendary Def Jam label, producer
Rick Rubin was among the key figures behind the commercial and artistic rise of
hip-hop, lending his signature
rap/metal style to many of the biggest records of the pre-gangsta era. Born
Frederick Jay Rubin on Long Island, NY, in 1963, he was attending New York University when he and Russell Simmons founded Def Jam in 1984. Operating the company out of
Rubin's dorm room, they bowed with the
T La Rock and
Jazzy Jay single "It's Yours," issued in association with Partytime/Streetwise.
By 1985 Def Jam entered into a distribution deal with Columbia, and the label also produced its own
rap movie, Krush Groove; however, even from the outset,
Rubin's interests extended well beyond
hip-hop, and he raised more than a few eyebrows producing
Hell Awaits for the
thrash band
Slayer later that same year.
Rap broke worldwide in 1986 as a result of two landmark LPs,
the Beastie Boys'
Licensed to Ill and
Run-D.M.C.'s
Raising Hell, both of which
Rubin produced. A year later, he also helmed
Yo! Bum Rush the Show, the debut record from arguably the most pivotal act in
hip-hop history, the renowned
Public Enemy. That same year, he also scored a major hit with
Electric, by British rockers
the Cult.
Rubin and Simmons' partnership soon ended in acrimony, however, with the former exiting Def Jam to found his own label, dubbed Def American. The company's early signings indulged
Rubin's tastes, ranging from longtime favorites
Slayer to shock comic
Andrew Dice Clay to the controversial gangsta rappers
the Geto Boys; he never drifted far from his roots, however, and after serving as executive producer on
Public Enemy's seminal
It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, he helmed
LL Cool J's
Walking With a Panther, and even directed the
Run-D.M.C. movie Tougher Than Leather.
In 1991, Def American scored one of its biggest hits yet with
Sir Mix-a-Lot's
Mack Daddy, which launched the monster "Baby Got Back." That same year,
Rubin also produced
the Red Hot Chili Peppers' breakthrough effort,
Blood Sugar Sex Magik. He returned in 1993 with
Mick Jagger's
Wandering Spirit, and on August 27 of that year officially dropped the "Def" prefix from the label's name, holding a traditional New Orleans funeral to retire the now-outdated term. In 1994,
Rubin produced
Johnny Cash's comeback effort, like the label itself titled simply American Recordings; he also helmed
Tom Petty's
Wildflowers, leading to increased concern that he had lost touch with the youth market. These worries were furthered by
Rubin's next major project,
Donovan's
Sutras. Indeed, as the decade drew to a close, American's future appeared dim -- not only did longtime flagship artist
Danzig exit the label's ranks, but more recent signings like
the Jayhawks and Crown Heights failed to meet commercial expectations. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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