There may have been no more influential a label in the late 1980s than Def Jam Records. Founded by Rick Rubin, Def Jam launched the careers of The Beastie Boys, LL Cool J, and dozens more hip-hop pioneers. But its beginnings were humble. The earliest Def Jam releases list the mailing address â5 University Pl. #712.â Current and former NYU students out there may recognize this addressâitâs a dorm room in the universityâs Weinstein Residence Hall, where in 1984, Rubin set up shop and began trying to reproduce the sound, as Rolling Stone writes, of âthe raw performances he heard in clubs and the wild parties he threw.â
In the short Rolling Stone documentary above, âRick Was Here,â see the pioneering producer revisit his origins, returning to his old dorm for the first time in 30 years. He talks about the âvery specific feelingâ of early hip-hop, and his desire to shift the focus of hip-hop records from R&B backing tracks to the DJ, who was all-important in live performances. Def Jamâs first release, T La Rock and Jazzy Jayâs âItâs Yours,â remains a classic of the genre. At the time, says Rubin, âit didnât sound like anything else,â and through that record, Rubin met Russell Simmons, already âa big fish in the small pond of hip hop.â Simmons brought along a host of artists and gave Rubin more credibility in the community. Now the two are superproducers and moguls, but their origin story is one of scrappy determination that sparked a musical revolution.
The short film also features interviews with Simmons, LL Cool J, the Beastie Boys’ Adam Horowitz, and some of Rubinâs former dorm-mates and accomplices. For more on Def Jamâs early years, MetaFilter points us toward the histories Def Jam Recordings: The First 35 Years of the Last Great Record Label and Russell Simmons autobiography Life and Def: Sex, Drugs, Money, + God.
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Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
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Rick Rubin Revisits the Origins of Def Jam Records & the NYU Dorm Room Where It All Began
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