Your browser is out-of-date!

Update your browser to view this website correctly. Update my browser now

×

Pioneering Rap Producer Larry Smith Dead

By Clive Young. Larry Smith, producer of landmark rap hits by Run-DMC, Kurtis Blow, Whodini and others, died Friday, December 19 at the age of 63. Smith had suffered health complications in recent years after a 2007 stroke left him partially paralyzed and unable to speak, but his pioneering work in the early 1980s helped transform rap from a novelty offshoot of disco to one of the most prevalent forms of music today.

Pioneer hip-hop producer Larry Smith.

Photo: We Love Larry Smith Facebook Page

Larry Smith, producer of landmark rap hits by Run-DMC, Kurtis Blow, Whodini and others, died Friday, December 19 at the age of 63. Smith had suffered health complications in recent years after a 2007 stroke left him partially paralyzed and unable to speak, but his pioneering work in the early 1980s helped transform rap from a novelty offshoot of disco to one of the most prevalent forms of music today.

Born in 1951 in St. Albans, Queens, Smith early on made a name for himself as a touring multi-instrumentalist backing other artists, usually as a bass player. In 1979, he teamed up with music journalists J.B. Moore and Robert Ford to create a Christmas record for Kurtis Blow, “Christmas Wrapping;” that success paved the way for another hit with the artist, Blow’s classic “The Breaks.” The hits soon led to producing singles for acts like Jimmy Spicer and “Love Bug” Starski, and ultimately to working with fledgling rap trio Run-DMC, who he co-produced with the act’s then-manager, Def Jam co-founder Russell Simmons.

Run-DMC’s debut single, “It’s Like That”/”Sucker MCs,” ushered in a leaner, meaner sound for hip-hop, eschewing the use of musicians to focus almost exclusively on the lyrics and beat. Smith minimalist production gave the tracks an edgy, gritty feel that belied the fact they were made on equally minimalist budgets at the late Greene Street Recording in New York’s SoHo district.

The distinct, aggressive sound was of necessity as they couldn’t afford musicians, though when Smith did add them in, it was to massive effect. Run-DMC’s later work with producer Rick Rubin resulted in the 1986 smash “Walk This Way”—a reworking of Aerosmith’s classic that arguably saved the rock band’s flagging career—but the Rap/Rock template was invented and brought to life by Smith on the group’s first two albums, Run-DMC and King of Rock. On them, session guitarist Eddie Martinez (Mick Jagger, David Lee Roth, Robert Palmer) wailed away on “King of Rock” and “Rock Box.”

“Rock Box” was particularly of note as its video became the first rap clip allowed to appear on then AOR-oriented MTV; Smith, who wrote the heavy riff, can be seen in the clip playing bass behind Run-DMC and driving his car, first immortalized in “Sucker MCs” with Run’s couplet, “Larry put me inside his Cadillac/The chauffeur drove off and we never came back.”

Smith moved on to work with Whodini, knocking out a string of hits for the trio, including “Five Minutes of Funk” and the group’s trademark “Freaks Come Out At Night.” However, as the Eighties wore on, the musician-less hip-hop sound Smith helped create went too far for the producer who had come up as a working bass player. As sampling was adopted universally across the genre, Smith found himself uncomfortable with the practice from a moral and creative standpoint, and by the mid-Nineties, had largely dropped out of music production.

Smith’s passing on December 19 came the same day that Run-DMC played its first show in New York City in more than a decade at WBLS’s Christmas In Brooklyn concert. From the stage of the Barclays Center arena, Joe “Run” Simmons announced to the crowd, “”My man, Larry Smith, he produced these records. It’s sad but fitting he passes away on the day I return to a big stage like this… I love you Larry, I hope you’re watching from Heaven and I’m making you proud.” Darryl McDaniels (“DMC”) opted to pay his respects via social media, tweeting “Rest In Beats, Larry Smith. Music In Your Heart. Hip Hop Was Your Gift to The World! No one does it better!”

We Love Larry Smith Facebook page
https://www.facebook.com/WeLoveLarrySmith

Close