Listen to Run The Jewels, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!

Hip-Hop/Rap

United States of America

Run The Jewels

Top Songs on Shazam

This Week
All Time
Shazam Global Chart Top 50 AppearancesAll songs and collaborations from Run The Jewels that have reached the Top 50 of the Shazam Global Chart
OVERVIEW
2Top 50 Entries
Track artwork for track titled Let's Go (The Royal We) [Music From The Motion Picture Venom] by Run The Jewels
Track artwork for track titled ooh la la (feat. Greg Nice & DJ Premier) by Run The Jewels
19Days in Top 50
Run The Jewels has landed 2 songs in the Top 50 of the Shazam Global Chart, peaking at No. 19! Across those appearances, Run The Jewels has spent a combined 19 days on the chart.
SONG
PEAK POSITION
DAYS IN TOP 50
TOP 50 DEBUT
#1910Oct 6, 2018
"Let's Go (The Royal We) [Music From The Motion Picture Venom]" by Run The Jewels peaked at No. 19 on the Shazam Global Chart, where the song spent a total of 10 day(s) in the Top 50.
Released
2018
Total Shazams
668K
Days in Top 50
10
Top 50 Debut
Oct 6, 2018
"Let's Go (The Royal We) [Music From The Motion Picture Venom]" by Run The Jewels peaked at No. 19 on the Shazam Global Chart, where the song spent a total of 10 day(s) in the Top 50.
Released
2018
Total Shazams
668K
Days in Top 50
10
Top 50 Debut
Oct 6, 2018
#349Apr 1, 2020
"ooh la la (feat. Greg Nice & DJ Premier)" by Run The Jewels climbed to No. 34 on the Shazam Global Chart, spending 9 day(s) in the Top 50.
Album
RTJ4
Released
2020
Total Shazams
1M
Days in Top 50
9
Top 50 Debut
Apr 1, 2020
"ooh la la (feat. Greg Nice & DJ Premier)" by Run The Jewels climbed to No. 34 on the Shazam Global Chart, spending 9 day(s) in the Top 50.
Album
RTJ4
Released
2020
Total Shazams
1M
Days in Top 50
9
Top 50 Debut
Apr 1, 2020

Artist Playlists

About Run The Jewels

Listen to Run The Jewels, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
Hometown
United States of America
Formed
2013
Genre
Hip-Hop/Rap

Artist Links
The fact that rappers Michael “Killer Mike” Render and Jaime “El-P” Meline were first introduced by an executive at the Cartoon Network doesn’t make for the most mythic hip-hop supergroup origin story. But that unlikely power-brokered setup is oddly fitting for a duo that have since transcended their underground origins to become one of the most outspoken, media-savvy voices in rap since the glory days of Public Enemy and one of the most visible brands since the Wu-Tang Clan. Before that fateful meeting in 2011 (precipitated by their individual participation in Adult Swim’s popular singles-club program), the Atlanta-based Killer Mike and Brooklyn-bred El-P were both towering figures in the indie-rap trenches—the former came up as a member of the extended Outkast family, the latter was a member of ‘90s alt-rap trio Company Flow and cofounder of the hallowed Def Jux imprint. But the union between the two created an immediate big-bang effect that launched them into the mainstream. From their 2013 self-titled debut through 2020’s RTJ4, Run The Jewels established themselves as a brash, ‘90s-nodding antidote to a post-Drake era of introspective MCs, favoring the sort of rapid-fire interplay, electro-blasted boom-bap productions, and righteous indignation that appealed to old-school heads and headbangers alike. (Few other crews would think of roping in Pharrell and Rage Against the Machine’s Zack de la Rocha on the same track, as they did for 2020’s anti-capitalist screed “JU$T.”) At the same time, RTJ’s crossover success has thrust Killer Mike’s long-standing community activism into the national spotlight, making him a frequent commentator on newscasts and late-night talk shows, and positioning Run The Jewels as the unofficial house band for the Black Lives Matter revolution.
Influenced by Run The JewelsRun The Jewels has influenced the music of Knox Hill, Savile Row, Wzrdh47 and more.

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