787. ‘It’s Like That’, by Run-D.M.C. vs Jason Nevins

Check this out… Just a couple of weeks after Norman Cook worked his magic on Cornershop’s ‘Brimful of Asha’, American house DJ Jason Nevins has his wicked way with a hip hop golden oldie…

It’s Like That, by Run-D.M.C. vs Jason Nevins (their 1st and only #1s)

6 weeks, from 15th March – 26th April 1998

I remember this being huge, an omnipresent hit that spring. And six weeks at number one is a very impressive run for the late-nineties (only one song will beat that total in 1998). But listening now, I’m a bit stumped trying to work out why it was quite so popular… It’s a bit repetitive, a sledgehammer beat that goes on, and on, with a less stardust sprinkled by Nevins compared to Fatboy Slim. Some of the transitions are predictable, and the original Run-D.M.C. vocals feel off in the mix.

Not that it’s bad, or that I don’t enjoy it on a certain level, or that it doesn’t unleash a heady wave of nostalgia listening to it again in 2024. I just mean that I can’t really locate the reason that it became the year’s 3rd best-selling single and – even more impressively – the only record to ever hold a Spice Girls’ song off number one in the UK (this was released in the same week as ‘Stop’, which it beat to the top by well over 100,000 copies).

The original ‘It’s Like That’ had featured on Run-D.M.C.’s debut album in 1984, and was released as the LP’s first single. It’s a call-to-arms – a spikier, more cynical ‘What’s Going On’ for a new decade: Unemployment at record highs, People coming, People going, People born to die… Don’t ask me because I don’t know why, It’s like that, And that’s the way it is… What’s interesting about the original is that the 1998 hit is there, fully formed. If anything, the beat is even heavier. Nevins does little more than tart it up with a standard dance rhythm and some up-to-date flourishes (which admittedly is also what Norman Cook did on ‘Brimful…’, I just like that song better).

The one notable thing that Nevins does add is the sped-up Run DMC and Jam Master Jay! break, along with a bit off beatboxing. That’s the part I most remember, perhaps the hook that sold this as a hit. But in actual fact it last barely ten seconds, before that relentless beat comes slamming back in. (I always assumed that ‘Jam Master Jay’ was Jason Nevins, but he was actually the DJ in Run-D.M.C, who was sadly shot dead in 2002.)

Not surprisingly, this would be both Run-D.M.C.’s and Jason Nevin’s biggest ever hit. Nevins has only returned to the Top 10 one further time, although he’s gone on to work with stars like Nelly and Ariana Grande. For Run-D.M.C., this was their second Top 10, a decade on from ‘Walk This Way’ – in which they and Aerosmith fused rap with rock, much like Nevins was fusing rap and dance on this record.

Is it too early to call this the Age of the Remix? It is true that we’ve had two in quick succession, and that remixed hits will be more noticeable at the top of the charts as the century turns. I think it’s the fact that this is the first ‘versus’ record to make #1, as opposed to a plain old ‘featuring’ or an understated ‘&’. It feels so very turn of the twenty-first century (though a quick scan has shown me that there will actually only be a couple of other ‘someone versus someone else’ number ones between now and 2005.)

7 thoughts on “787. ‘It’s Like That’, by Run-D.M.C. vs Jason Nevins

  1. I don’t really like RUN DMC’s version of “Walk This Way” that much – it’s fine but the Aerosmith original is incredible – but RUN DMC have some awesome songs like “King of Rock” and “It’s Tricky”. But for rap rock pioneers, I’m more a Beastie Boys fan myself.

    This original version of “It’s Like That” is pretty good. This remix? Eh. I don’t really see how this could be so popular enough to be the 3rd most popular song of the year.

  2. Run DMC didnt generally really impress me much except in the collabs with Aerosmith (fab) and this – I rather liked the dance beats, it made the chanting less annoying and more catchy. I’m prob one of the few that recalls their charity Christmas track, though – Christmas In Hollis was one of the few original songs on a charity Special Olympics album called A Very Special Christmas, various artists doing classic xmas songs, like, ooh forgotten names like Madonna (Santa Baby), Stevie Nicks (Silent Night) Whitney Houston (Do You Hear What I Hear) U2 (Christmas Baby Please Come Home) Springsteen (Merry Christmas Baby) Eurythmics (Winter Wonderland) Pretenders (Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas) and more huge 80’s stars – pretty good and none of them ever get christmas playlisted on Streamers to let some different christmas oldies get a look in the Xmas charts.

  3. Just not my style… I think I’m finally back for a while…no more traveling for a long time….I hope.

  4. Never got this one, either. It’s extremely inferior to the original in every way imaginable. Even back in the day, it was my go-to definition for an unnecessary remix, because it doesn’t add anything, only detract.

    The video instantly triggered memories of having seen it on television back on the day, it must have been on pretty heavy rotation on those stations. So it even has a little more value to me today than it did back in the day: the clip is a fun flashback to what felt cool in the late ’90s.

    • Yes I instantly remembered the video too. I’ve found that many of the videos to the recent number ones have had a nostalgic value to them: Aqua’s long black leather coats in ‘Turn Back Time’ were very late-nineties, for example.

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