In the mid-1980s, rock music and hip-hop existed in completely different worlds. One was built on electric guitars and stadium tours, the other on turntables and street storytelling. Few could have imagined that these two genres would collide in a way that would reshape music history. And at the center of that unlikely moment was Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry—who, at first, didn’t understand it at all.
The idea came from visionary producer Rick Rubin, who saw potential where others saw confusion. His proposal was simple but radical: have hip-hop group Run-DMC reinterpret Aerosmith’s 1975 rock track “Walk This Way.” At the time, rap music was still fighting for mainstream recognition, and the thought of blending it with classic rock seemed almost absurd to many in the industry.
For Joe Perry, the concept felt especially strange. He had little familiarity with hip-hop and struggled to see how the genres could possibly fit together. Looking back, he admitted that he initially thought the collaboration sounded foolish. The rhythm, the delivery, the entire structure of rap music was foreign to him, and it clashed with everything he knew about rock.
Yet despite the skepticism, the band agreed to give it a try.
When the sessions began, something unexpected started to happen. Run-DMC didn’t just cover the song—they transformed it. Their sharp, rhythmic delivery replaced traditional singing, while Perry’s iconic guitar riff remained the backbone. The contrast between the two styles created a raw, electrifying energy that neither genre could achieve on its own.
The recording process itself became symbolic of the collaboration. In the now-famous video, a wall literally separates the rock band from the hip-hop group, only to be broken down as the song progresses. It wasn’t just a visual choice—it reflected the real divide that existed between the two musical worlds, and the bold step required to bring them together.
When the track was released in 1986, it didn’t just succeed—it exploded. The song climbed the charts, introduced hip-hop to new audiences, and reintroduced Aerosmith to a younger generation. For a band whose career had been fading, it was nothing short of a revival. Suddenly, they were relevant again, not just as rock legends, but as pioneers willing to take risks.
For Joe Perry, the collaboration became a turning point. What once seemed confusing and even misguided revealed itself as groundbreaking. It showed him that music didn’t have to stay within rigid boundaries—that innovation often comes from stepping into the unknown.
The success of “Walk This Way” changed more than just one band’s trajectory. It opened the door for future collaborations between genres, helping to bridge cultural gaps and redefine what mainstream music could sound like. Rock and hip-hop were no longer isolated—they could coexist, influence each other, and create something entirely new.
In the end, the song Joe Perry once doubted became one of the most important recordings of his career. It proved that sometimes the ideas that seem the most unlikely are the ones that leave the biggest impact, forever altering the sound of an era.