RTJ4 is the fourth studio album by the American hip hop duo Run the Jewels, consisting of rapper Killer Mike and rapper-producer El-P. Primarily produced by El-P, the album was released digitally for free on June 3, 2020—two days earlier than the planned June 5 date—through the duo's Jewel Runners imprint in partnership with BMG Rights Management, with physical copies following on the original schedule.[1][2] It features collaborations with artists including Mavis Staples, 2 Chainz, Zach de la Rocha, and Gangsta Boo across its 11 tracks.[3][4] The project generated over $1 million in pre-sale revenue within 48 hours, reflecting strong fan anticipation.[5]RTJ4 debuted at number 10 on the Billboard 200, moving 38,000 album-equivalent units in its first week, including 30,000 in pure sales bolstered by merchandise bundles.[6][7] Critics praised its dense production, lyrical intensity, and thematic focus on power structures and resistance, awarding it a Metacritic score of 89 out of 100 based on 30 reviews.[8] The album exemplifies Run the Jewels' signature blend of bombastic beats and unfiltered commentary on systemic inequities and authority, maintaining the duo's trajectory of independent releases that prioritize artistic control over commercial formulas.[3][8]
Development
Background and Conception
Run the Jewels, the hip hop duo formed by Atlanta-based rapper Killer Mike (Michael Render) and New York-based rapper and producer El-P (Jaime Meline), originated from their collaboration on Killer Mike's 2012 album R.A.P. Music, which El-P produced in its entirety. This creative synergy prompted the duo's inception, leading to the free release of their self-titled debut Run the Jewels on December 18, 2013, characterized by raw energy and early explorations of systemic injustice. Subsequent albums Run the Jewels 2 (October 2014) amplified their aggressive style and thematic depth on power structures, while Run the Jewels 3 (December 2016) refined their approach with heightened urgency in addressing resistance and inequality, establishing a progressive arc of sonic and lyrical intensity.[9]The conception of RTJ4 built on this foundation as the duo sought a culminating statement of resilience amid adversity, with El-P describing it as "the most complete version of what Run the Jewels can be... an evolution from the last three." Initial ideas centered on celebrating survival through unyielding critique, influenced by U.S. political developments from 2016 onward, including Donald Trump's election and resultant social divisions. Killer Mike emphasized reflecting "the world was on fire," channeling personal and collective chaos into themes of endurance.[10]Killer Mike's longstanding activism, intensified by events like the 2014 Ferguson unrest and his endorsements of progressive figures such as Bernie Sanders, informed the album's pre-production focus on systemic corruption and empowerment. To preserve autonomy, Run the Jewels elected to issue RTJ4 via their independent Jewel Runners imprint in partnership with BMG Rights Management, extending their tradition of sidestepping major label constraints for full creative oversight.[10][11]
Recording and Production
Recording sessions for RTJ4 commenced in 2018, with the bulk of work occurring in 2019 across El-P's Brooklyn studio, locations in Atlanta and Los Angeles, Rick Rubin's Shangri-La studio, and New York's Electric Lady Studios.[10][12] Production paused intermittently for touring obligations before resuming after the 2019 tour cycle, culminating in finalization in early 2020.[10] El-P produced all tracks, focusing on raw, unpolished beats derived from analog equipment to achieve a gritty texture.[10]El-P reverted to foundational sampling methods, employing the Ensoniq EPS 16+ sampler for crate-digging and flipping recognizable sources such as Gang of Four's "Ether" and Foster Sylvers' "Misdemeanor," while integrating these with contemporary production tools rather than exclusively vintage gear.[12] This approach yielded dense, aggressive soundscapes characterized by crunchy 16-bit sampling keyboards, building on the duo's prior albums through layered percussion and distorted elements.[12]Killer Mike provided primary vocals and lyrics, with sessions emphasizing spontaneous collaboration.[12]Guest contributors included vocalists Pharrell Williams, Zack de la Rocha, and Mavis Staples, alongside verses from 2 Chainz, Greg Nice, and scratches from DJ Premier, with Josh Homme adding guitar elements; these participations arose organically during studio time.[10][12] The mixing phase accelerated in response to events following George Floyd's murder in May 2020, prioritizing urgency over extended refinement.[10]
Artwork and Visual Elements
The cover artwork for RTJ4 depicts the duo's signature emblem—a fist clutching a pistol—in a 3D polygonal style, rendered with a super-shiny black finish that reflects colors from previous albums, including black, red, gold, and blue.[13] This design was photographed by Timothy Saccenti, with 3D hand modeling by Sam Rolfes and lettering by Nick Gazin.[14] The creation process involved 3D printing the model, applying multiple coats of paint at an auto body shop, and capturing it with a 150-megapixel Phase One camera using Schneider lenses, followed by compositing multiple lighting passes in Photoshop for enhanced detail.[13]Symbolizing an artifact unearthed from a distant future, the artwork blends primal symbolism with technological futurism, drawing inspiration from 1980s science fiction aesthetics such as those in Tron and Blade Runner.[13]El-P, one half of Run the Jewels, explained that the intent was to evolve the emblem into a timeless, basic shape, stating, "I wanted it to feel like something that you could dig up in a thousand years."[13] Photographer Saccenti described it as "kind of the penultimate Run The Jewels artifact," emphasizing a high-end, museum-quality presentation.[13] This abstraction marks the emblem's progression toward universality, shifting from detailed representations in earlier works to a less defined form evoking broad defiance.[15]The visual style maintains consistency with prior Run the Jewels covers through iterative evolution of the core fist-and-pistol motif, fostering a narrative arc of rebellion rendered in bold, stylized forms rather than overt political imagery.[13] Packaging for the standard 2xLP vinyl edition features heavyweight neonmagenta discs, an 8-page booklet with track listings, lyrics, liner notes, and original photography, plus a digital download.[16] A deluxe 4xLP edition expands this with the main album on neonmagenta vinyl and an instrumental version on metallic gold vinyl, presented in a gatefold sleeve alongside the booklet.[17] These elements reinforce the album's thematic cohesion without venturing into explicit messaging.[13]
Music and Lyrics
Genre, Style, and Production Techniques
RTJ4 exemplifies hardcore hip hop, a subgenre marked by aggressive lyrical delivery over bombastic, abrasive instrumentals that prioritize intensity and confrontational energy. The album's sonic palette draws from underground rap traditions, incorporating distorted synths, pounding drums, and sub-bass frequencies to create a visceral, high-impact listening experience typical of the duo's output.[18][19]Stylistically, tracks feature rapid, interlocking flows from Killer Mike and El-P, often delivered at breakneck paces over beats that blend industrial grit with hip-hop bounce, including bouncy percussion, swirling sub-bass, and subtle synth layers for rhythmic propulsion. Tempos across the album generally fall in the 82–98 BPM range, contributing to a relentless, forward-driving momentum that evokes the raw urgency of early 1990s East Coast rap while incorporating modern electronic flourishes like slight distortion and layered textures.[20][21]Production is dominated by El-P, who executive produced the entire project and handled primary beats, reverting to 16-bit sampling via an EPS 16+ sampler for a crunchy, lo-fi edge that enhances the album's potency without sacrificing clarity. Techniques include heavy distortion on elements like synths and percussion, alongside co-productions on select tracks featuring additional performers for expanded sonic depth, such as string arrangements and performer contributions. This approach yields a polished yet unrefined aesthetic, with beats functioning as immersive environments rather than mere backdrops.[12][22][14]In evolution from prior Run the Jewels albums, RTJ4 retains the core formula of brutal, concise aggression—mirroring the punch-per-minute density of RTJ2 and the tenacity of RTJ3—while advancing through greater instrumentalvariety and refined sampling integration, resulting in a more mature balance of raw power and structural sophistication.[23][24]
Lyrical Themes and Content
The lyrics of RTJ4 predominantly explore themes of resistance to perceived authoritarian overreach, critiques of racial and economic injustice, and assertive displays of personal defiance and survivalism. Killer Mike and El-P employ vivid, confrontational imagery to depict systemic oppression, particularly targeting law enforcement and elite power structures, as articulated in tracks like the opener "ooh la la," where they evoke evasion of militarized police pursuits.[25] This anti-authority stance recurs across the album, framing interactions with institutions as existential battles, with lines emphasizing collective uprising against entrenched inequalities.[26]Racial injustice features prominently, often through references to police violence and its disproportionate impact on Black communities. In "walking in the snow," Killer Mike raps, "And every day on evening news they feed you fear for free / And you so numb you watch the cops choke out a man like me / 'Til nothin' left is a skeleton can't hear him breathin'," invoking the final words of Eric Garner from his 2014 death in police custody and anticipating similar incidents like George Floyd's in 2020.[27] Such content draws from real events, including high-profile cases of officer-involved deaths, where data indicate approximately 1,000 fatal police shootings annually in the U.S., with Black individuals comprising about 24% of victims despite being 13% of the population.[28] However, empirical analyses controlling for encounter contexts—such as suspect resistance, crime rates, and location—reveal no statistically significant racial bias in the decision to shoot, though disparities persist in non-lethal force applications.Personal bravado and resilience underscore many verses, blending hyperbolic boasts with narratives of overcoming adversity, as in "JU$T," where the duo and guests like Pharrell Williams interrogate capitalism's role in perpetuating inequality: "The most dangerous thing you can do to a nigga is to educate him / And the most dangerous thing you can do to a nigga is to not."[29] This raw, militant energy conveys unyielding agency amid hardship, reflecting the artists' self-described role as societal commentators on corruption and inequity.[26]While the lyrics' emphasis on institutional blame highlights verifiable patterns of disproportionate policing in high-crime areas, they often generalize law enforcement encounters as uniformly predatory, sidelining complexities like officer risks—FBI data report around 50-60 felonious killings of officers yearly, frequently in violent crime responses—and causal drivers of crime beyond policing, such as family instability.[30] Studies consistently link single-parent household prevalence to elevated crime rates, with cities dominated by two-parent families exhibiting 30-50% lower violent crime levels, independent of economic factors alone; this suggests deeper structural contributors like family breakdown, which account for more variance in offending than purely institutional narratives.[31][32] Such portrayals, though energizing in their militancy, risk overstatement by underweighting these empirically supported correlates, potentially framing reform as solely punitive rather than multifaceted.
Promotion and Release
Singles and Pre-Release Marketing
The lead single from RTJ4, "yankee and the brave (ep. 4)", was released on March 24, 2020, continuing the duo's thematic series of tracks depicting Killer Mike as "the Yankee" and El-P as "the Brave" in a dystopian narrative spanning their previous albums.[33][34] The track features aggressive production and lyrics addressing systemic oppression and resistance, with El-P teasing snippets on social media beforehand to generate buzz.[34]Follow-up single "ooh la la" featuring Greg Nice and DJ Premier followed on March 27, 2020, showcasing upbeat, sample-heavy production with themes of triumph over adversity.[35] Its music video, directed by Lamar Sorrento and shot under COVID-19 quarantine restrictions, depicted chaotic, apocalyptic imagery reinforcing the album's speculative fiction elements, and was released on April 27, 2020.[36] The duo promoted it via Instagram and streaming platforms, emphasizing collaborative energy to heighten anticipation without commercial tie-ins.[37]"JU$T" featuring Pharrell Williams and Zack de la Rocha served as the third pre-release single, dropped on May 1, 2020, with funk-infused beats critiquing capitalism and authority. Accompanied by an audio visualizer, it built on the singles' momentum through social media shares and artist endorsements, tying into broader discussions of economic inequality in interviews.Pre-release efforts centered on organic digital promotion, including tracklist reveal and pre-order announcements on May 12, 2020, via the duo's social channels and label Jewel Runners, offering bundles with merchandise to fans.[38] El-P and Killer Mike conducted targeted interviews with outlets like Rolling Stone, framing the project as a culmination of years of unreleased material amid global uncertainties, while avoiding overt commercialization. This approach leveraged the duo's established fanbase for viral sharing, with singles amassing millions of streams prior to the album's scheduled June 5 launch.[38]
Release Strategy and Distribution
RTJ4 was scheduled for official release on June 5, 2020, through Run the Jewels' independent imprint Jewel Runners in partnership with BMG Rights Management, following an announcement on May 12, 2020, that included pre-order options for fans.[38][39] The rollout emphasized a multi-format approach, prioritizing digital distribution via streaming services and downloads to maximize accessibility, while physical production was planned for later in the year to align with manufacturing timelines.[40][41]Digital versions were distributed globally through platforms such as Spotify, Apple Music, and others, enabling immediate worldwide availability upon launch without regional delays typical of physical logistics. Physical formats included standard compact discs and double vinyl LPs, with the latter featuring heavyweight neon magenta pressing, an 8-page booklet containing lyrics and photography, and a bundled digitaldownload code.[16][42] These editions were made available via the band's official merchandise store and partnered retailers like Rough Trade, with production focused on standard runs rather than ultra-limited variants initially.[43]Pricing strategies reflected industry norms for independent hip-hop releases, with vinyl editions listed at $34.98–$35 and CDs at $14.99, positioning the album competitively for direct-to-consumer sales through the official site, which offered free shipping on orders over $100 to encourage bundled purchases.[16][44] BMG's involvement facilitated broader retaildistribution for physical copies, scheduled for September 2020 rollout, ensuring logistical efficiency while maintaining the duo's control over core merchandising.[45]
Early Release Amid Social Unrest
Run the Jewels advanced the digital release of RTJ4 from its announced date of June 5, 2020, to June 3, 2020, coinciding with escalating protests against police brutality in the United States following the death of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, in Minneapolis.[46][47] The decision came amid widespread demonstrations that intensified after Floyd's killing by police officer Derek Chauvin, with Killer Mike, one half of the duo, delivering a public address to protesters in Atlanta on June 1 urging nonviolent action and economic self-reliance.[48]El-P announced the early drop via Twitter approximately one minute prior to its availability on streaming platforms and as a free download from the band's website, stating the move was prompted by the immediacy of the crisis.[46][49]The band positioned the accelerated release as a direct response to the social upheaval, with the album's content—largely recorded in the preceding 18 months—addressing longstanding issues of institutional power, racial injustice, and state violence in tracks like "Walking in the Snow" and "Juvenile Hell."[50][26] This timing created an apparent prescience, as lyrics critiquing police tactics and societal inequities aligned closely with protest demands, though the material predated Floyd's death and reflected the duo's consistent thematic focus across prior albums.[26] The free digital download option, available for the initial period akin to the band's tradition with previous releases, aimed to maximize accessibility during unrest but also amplified reach without immediate revenue barriers, potentially linking promotional strategy to real-time events.[46][49]Causal factors in the release shift appear rooted in the band's explicit intent to intersect art with unfolding crises, as articulated by El-P's pre-drop message emphasizing urgency over scheduled rollout.[49] However, the alignment invites scrutiny of whether the decision optimized visibility amid a narrative of systemic racism amplified by media coverage of the protests, which some analyses later contested for overstating uniform causality in policing outcomes absent broader empirical controls for variables like crime rates and socioeconomic factors.[46] Mainstream outlets largely framed the move positively as solidarity, reflecting institutional leanings toward endorsing protest-driven interpretations, though the album's unchanged, pre-event composition underscores a non-reactive artistic core rather than tailored opportunism.[47][26]
Reception
Initial Critical Reviews
Upon its release on June 5, 2020—following an early free digital drop on June 1 amid nationwide protests—RTJ4 received widespread critical acclaim, aggregating to a Metacritic score of 91 out of 100 based on 30 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim."[8] Reviewers frequently highlighted the album's urgent energy and prescience, with Rolling Stone awarding it 4 out of 5 stars and describing it as "perfectly apt for 2020," praising its agit-rap intensity and seamless integration of political themes with bombastic production despite being recorded prior to the George Floyd protests.[51] Similarly, Pitchfork granted an 8.3 out of 10 and Best New Music status, commending how the duo "re-engineer[ed] their music to its most critical components," stripping excess for a focused essence that amplified their raw, self-referential style.[25]Production elements drew particular praise for their dynamism and innovation; Variety called RTJ4 a "triumph of all sorts of unexpected syntheses," uniting disparate moods, styles, and eras through El-P's futuristic beats and Killer Mike's incisive delivery, positioning it as the group's strongest work yet.[3] Critics noted the album's timeliness in addressing systemic inequality and police brutality, with NPR framing Run the Jewels as a "speaker box for society," their longstanding critiques of corruption resonating amid 2020's unrest without feeling opportunistic.[26]Some reviews tempered enthusiasm with critiques of formulaic elements and diminished levity; Slant Magazine gave it 4.5 out of 5 stars but observed that the album's deepened political commitments resulted in less of the "madcap humor" from prior releases, prioritizing solemnity over earlier playfulness.[52] While mainstream outlets, often aligned with progressive viewpoints, emphasized the lyrical potency, fewer contemporaneous critiques from conservative perspectives emerged, though some independent voices questioned the efficacy of the duo's rhetoric in fostering tangible change beyond cathartic expression.[23] Overall, initial responses underscored RTJ4's technical prowess and cultural relevance, with minor reservations on novelty amid its high conceptual stakes.
Accolades, Rankings, and Year-End Lists
RTJ4 earned recognition as one of the top albums of 2020 across multiple publications, particularly in hip-hop and broader music rankings, reflecting its critical impact amid the year's social upheavals. NME named it Album of the Year, praising its timeliness and intensity.[53] Similarly, Australia's Double J selected it as the best album of the year for capturing 2020's rage and relevance.[54] In hip-hop-specific lists, it topped Hip Hop Golden Age's ranking of the genre's best albums.[55]The album placed prominently in general year-end polls but varied in broader aggregates. Rolling Stone ranked it sixth among the 50 best albums of 2020.[56] It appeared in Billboard's top 50 staff picks, NME's top 50, and Mojo's top 75.[57][58][59] Early aggregates on forums like Acclaimed Music showed it leading 2020 lists as of December, though Gold Derby's year-end compilation placed it 14th overall.[60][61]Despite this acclaim, RTJ4 received no nominations at the 2021 Grammy Awards, including for Best Rap Album, prompting criticism from the group and observers who viewed the omission as overlooking its cultural resonance.[62] No other major industry awards, such as BET Hip Hop or MTV VMAs, were won for the album.[63]
Long-Term Assessments and Criticisms
In retrospective discussions marking the album's fifth anniversary in June 2025, enthusiasts on hip-hop communities praised RTJ4's production ferocity and lyrical urgency as consistent with Run the Jewels' discography strengths, yet expressed frustration over the prolonged absence of a follow-up RTJ5, which remains unreleased as of October 2025 despite early recording sessions announced in 2022.[64][65] Delays have been linked to pandemic-related interruptions, solo endeavors by Killer Mike and El-P, and shifting priorities, with fan queries intensifying in late 2024 without firm resolution from the duo.[66]Critics from varied ideological perspectives have questioned the album's reliance on rhetorical agitprop over nuanced causal analysis in its political tracks, such as "Walking in the Snow" and "Jutic," which decry police violence and systemic racism but simplify contributing factors like family structures, urban decay, and incentive misalignments in law enforcement without empirical substantiation.[67] This approach, while galvanizing in 2020's unrest, has drawn hindsight rebuke for echoing slogans like "defund the police"—implicitly aligned with Killer Mike's public advocacy—whose real-world trials in cities including Minneapolis and Austin correlated with homicide spikes exceeding 30% in 2020-2021 and subsequent policy reversals by 2023, as budgets were not only restored but expanded amid public safety deteriorations unsupported by reallocations yielding measurable violence reductions.[68][69] Such outcomes underscore a disconnect between the album's absolutist framing of policing as inherently predatory and data indicating police handle over 80% of calls involving non-violent social services, where defunding disrupted responses without viable alternatives scaling effectively.[68]Long-term legacy metrics reveal sustained but comparatively muted engagement, with RTJ4 accumulating fewer Spotify streams than predecessors like RTJ3 by mid-2025, suggesting its cultural resonance has not translated into equivalent replay value despite initial acclaim for timeliness.[70][71] This tempered endurance contrasts hype portraying the album as a definitive protest artifact, prompting assessments that its impact hinges more on ephemeral social echoes than enduring artistic innovation or policyinfluence, as evidenced by the remixproject RTJ Cuatro in 2022 failing to reignite broader discourse.[72]
Commercial Performance
Sales Data and Certifications
RTJ4 accumulated 38,000 equivalent album units in its first week of release in the United States on June 5, 2020, comprising 30,000 pure album sales primarily driven by merchandise bundles and 8,000 streaming equivalent units.[6][73] This figure marked a notable increase from the debut performance of the duo's prior album, Run the Jewels 3, which sold 23,000 units in its opening week in December 2016.[74]Prior to the early release, pre-order sales for RTJ4 exceeded $1 million within 48 hours of launching in late May 2020, reflecting strong fan anticipation despite the album's independent distribution model under Jewel Runners and BMG Rights Management.[75] The decision to offer the album for free download amid the George Floyd protests shifted revenue emphasis toward voluntary purchases, donations, and bundled physical editions, with fans contributing nearly $100,000 in the initial hours post-release through supported payment options.[76]As of October 2025, RTJ4 has not attained any RIAA certifications for sales or streaming thresholds, consistent with the duo's history of prioritizing artistic output and direct fan support over traditional commercial milestones across their catalog. Comprehensive long-term sales totals remain undisclosed in public industry reports, underscoring the challenges of quantifying consumption in an era dominated by streaming and non-monetized free distribution.
Chart Achievements
RTJ4 debuted at number 10 on the USBillboard 200 chart for the week ending June 13, 2020, marking Run the Jewels' highest charting album and their first entry in the top ten on that ranking.[6][77] The position reflected equivalent album units accumulated in under 48 hours following the unanticipated early digital release on June 3, 2020, with streaming equivalents comprising a significant portion amid limited traditional sales tracking.[78]Internationally, the album entered the UK Official Albums Chart at number 18 for the week of June 12, 2020, representing the duo's strongest UK debut to that point.[79] It also achieved a top 10 position on the Official Irish Albums Chart.[80] In Australia, RTJ4 reached number 25 on the ARIA Albums Chart dated June 15, 2020.[81]The release timing, coinciding with widespread social unrest in the US, amplified organic streaming and digital engagement, contributing to the album's chart entries despite its initial free distribution model.[73]
Live Performances and Touring
Associated Tours and Shows
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Run the Jewels' promotion of RTJ4, released on June 5, 2020, initially relied on virtual and limited live appearances rather than extensive touring. Their first full performance of the album occurred during Adult Swim's "Holy Calamavote" livestream special on October 18, 2020, broadcast from an empty venue with production elements including a light show and virtual guest appearances by collaborators such as 2 Chainz, Pharrell Williams, and Zach de la Rocha.[82][83] The event, sponsored by Ben & Jerry's, featured the duo performing all 11 tracks of RTJ4 in sequence, emphasizing voter mobilization themes tied to tracks like "JU$TI£E" and "ooh LA LA".[84] They also appeared at the virtual Adult Swim Festival on November 13-14, 2020, delivering sets incorporating RTJ4 material amid broader festival programming.[82]Full-scale tours were postponed until pandemic restrictions eased, with Run the Jewels resuming sporadic live dates in 2022, including arena shows that integrated RTJ4 tracks into setlists alongside earlier material.[85] By 2025, their most prominent touring activity linked to RTJ4 emerged as the opening act for Wu-Tang Clan's "Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber" farewell tour, commencing June 6, 2025, in Baltimore and spanning 27 North American dates through arenas such as Madison Square Garden (July 16) and TD Garden (July 11).[86][87]Run the Jewels' sets on this tour typically lasted 45-60 minutes, blending RTJ4 staples like "YANKEE AND THE BRAVE (ep. 4)" and "Walking in the Snow" with high-energy production featuring pyrotechnics, LED visuals, and DJ Trackstar's scratches, drawing crowds exceeding 15,000 per venue based on arena capacities.[88]Setlists for these performances prioritized RTJ4's dense, politically charged tracks, often closing with "Don't Die" to evoke the album's themes of resistance, while adapting to shared billing by condensing runtime compared to headlining shows.[89] The tour's execution highlighted Run the Jewels' live prowess, with Killer Mike and El-P maintaining physical intensity despite no new original material since 2020, and attendance figures reflecting sustained fan interest in the album's catalog amid the duo's announced retirement trajectory.[90]
Impact on Fan Engagement
Live performances of tracks from RTJ4 have consistently generated high levels of audience interaction, with reports describing crowds as highly energetic and responsive to the album's aggressive, protest-oriented sound. For instance, during the 2020 "Holy Calamavote" livestream debut of the full album, featuring guests like Zack de la Rocha and Josh Homme, viewers engaged actively through virtual participation, mirroring the record's intensity and encouraging real-time calls to action such as voting.[91] In subsequent tours, including support slots on Rage Against the Machine's 2022 reunion dates, Run the Jewels elicited fervent crowd responses, with attendees noting the duo's ability to "whip crowds into a frenzy" through synchronized chanting and physical moshing aligned with songs like "Ooh LA LA."[92][93]The announcement of the 2025 "Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber" tour, where Run the Jewels serve as special guests for Wu-Tang Clan's North American leg starting June 6 in Baltimore, sparked significant online excitement among fans, evidenced by rapid ticket sales and positive pre-tour buzz on platforms like X (formerly Twitter).[94][95] Early shows on this tour, such as the June 18 Phoenix date, drew crowds that converted initial unfamiliarity into enthusiasm, with attendees purchasing merchandise post-performance and describing the energy as electric.[96] Fan-driven activities, including shared videos of live chants and covers of RTJ4 tracks like "JU$T," further extended engagement beyond venues, though these remain anecdotal extensions rather than formalized trends.[97]While the politicized elements of Run the Jewels' sets—often incorporating critiques of systemic issues—have drawn some fan criticism for perceived overemphasis, leading to isolated sentiments of alienation among those preferring apolitical entertainment, the duo's shows typically minimize overt lecturing to sustain broad appeal.[98][99] This approach has coincided with growth in their loyal base, as indicated by Ticketmaster ratings averaging 4.7 out of 5 from over 95 reviews for recent performances, reflecting sustained enthusiasm despite occasional pushback on lyrical activism.[100] Overall, RTJ4's live renditions have reinforced a dedicated following through interactive spectacle, outweighing niche disaffections.[101]
RTJ Cuatro
Background and Motivation
RTJ Cu4tro originated as a collaborative reimagining of Run the Jewels' 2020 album RTJ4, with the project announced on October 21, 2022, and released on November 11, 2022, via Jewel Runners and BMG Rights Management.[102][103] The album reworks all 11 tracks from the original, enlisting an exclusively Latin American roster of rappers, producers, singers, and musicians to reinterpret the material through regional musical lenses.[104] Curated and co-executive produced by El-P (as El-Producto) and Nick Hook, it emphasizes authentic Latin influences, including reggaeton rhythms and Spanish-language vocal adaptations, as seen in tracks like "caminando en la nieve," a version of "Walking in the Snow."[102][104]The concept stemmed from prior standalone Latin remixes of RTJ4 songs, notably Mexican Institute of Sound's take on "Ooh LA LA" and Toy Selectah's on "JU$T," which prompted Run the Jewels to commission a comprehensive overhaul rather than isolated flips.[72] This built on the duo's history of remix projects but marked their first full-length effort centered on Latin American collaboration, distinct from parody or thematic extensions in prior releases.[105]Run the Jewels framed RTJ Cu4tro explicitly as a remix album, not a sequel or new original work, motivated by a desire to filter RTJ4's hip-hop foundations through Latin America's diverse sonic palette for cultural cross-pollination and renewed accessibility.[104][106] By partnering with artists like Bomba Estéreo, Lido Pimienta, and reggaeton contributors, the project sought to broaden the album's appeal via Spanish-infused versions and genre fusions, introducing the core themes and beats to Latin-speaking audiences while honoring regional creativity.[107][104]
Composition, Remixes, and Collaborators
RTJ Cu4tro reimagines the 11 tracks of RTJ4 through collaborations with Latin American producers, who adapt the originals by integrating regional genres such as cumbia, bomba estereo, and electronic percussion, resulting in layered beats that emphasize rhythmic grooves over the source material's harder-edged hip-hop aggression.[104] Each track retains the core structure and vocal performances of Killer Mike and El-P from RTJ4 but features reworked instrumentals, with many titles translated into Spanish—such as "Yankee y el Valiente" for "Yankee and the Brave (ep. 4)" and "Fuera de Vista" for "Out of Sight"—and additions like new verses from guest rappers.[108] The project was co-executive produced by El-P and Nick Hook, who oversaw the curation of remixes to infuse authentic Latin American sonic elements without altering the original lyrics' English delivery in most cases.[104]Key production alterations include TROOKO's handling of the opener and third track, incorporating denser bass and tropical synths; Mexican Institute of Sound's remix of "Ooh La La," which adds cumbia-inflected horns and a verse from Mexican rapper Santa Fe Klan; and Toy Selectah's version of "JU$T," blending moombahton rhythms with the track's existing funk samples featuring Pharrell Williams and Zack de la Rocha.[108] Other notable shifts feature Bomba Estéreo reworking "Never Look Back" with electro-cumbia pulses, Son Rompe Pera applying experimental quebradita breaks to "The Ground Below," and Mas Aya's fusion of indie folk and drum patterns on "A Report to the Shareholders," all prioritizing percussive interplay and regional instrumentation like congas and flutes over RTJ4's synthetic aggression.[108]Collaborators span Mexico, Colombia, Brazil, Venezuela, and beyond, with rappers including Akapellah (Venezuela) on "Walking in the Snow," Apache and Pawmps on the same track, Baco Exu Do Blues (Brazil) on "Fuera de Vista," and El Individuo (Colombia) on "Goonies vs. E.T."; singers such as Sarah La Morena (Spain/Mexico) and Lido Pimienta (Colombia) providing melodic hooks; and musicians like Adrian Terrazas-Gonzalez (Mexico) on flute for the closer, Iggor Cavalera (Brazil) on drums for "No Save Point," and Javier Arce adding guitar textures.[104] These contributions introduce Spanish-language ad-libs and verses in select spots, enhancing cultural specificity while preserving Run the Jewels' thematic core, as coordinated across 10 primary remixers for a cohesive yet diverse reinterpretation released on November 11, 2022.[108]
Reception and Evaluation
RTJ Cu4tro garnered mixed critical reception, with reviewers appreciating its effort to spotlight Latin American artists while faulting inconsistencies in cohesion and flow relative to the source material of RTJ4. Pitchfork commended the project's role in elevating underrepresented Latinx talents from regions including Colombia, Mexico, and Venezuela—such as Bomba Estéreo on a transformative "never look back" remix featuring tropicália influences and Son Rompe Pera's experimental contributions—but critiqued the overall lack of unity, stating that the disparate sonic approaches prevent it from functioning effectively as a standalone album, unlike the tightly sequenced original.[105]Critics noted that while individual tracks demonstrated innovative cultural fusion, such as the saxophone-driven reinterpretation of "Goonies vs. E.T." by Nick Hook and Danny Bars, the remix format occasionally softened RTJ4's aggressive, high-energy edge, introducing elements like reggaeton rhythms and piano that diluted the duo's signature intensity and led to perceptions of novelty fatigue among some listeners familiar with prior Run the Jewels output.[105] User aggregates reflected broader positivity, with Album of the Year compiling scores averaging around 80/100 from contributors who praised the impressive production and additive features from collaborators like Santa Fe Klan, viewing it as a rewarding, if supplementary, extension rather than a core evolution.[109]Empirically, RTJ Cu4tro exhibited diminished reach compared to RTJ4; its total Spotify streams hovered at approximately 14.8 million by late 2025, a fraction of RTJ4's sustained hundreds of millions driven by mainstream radio play and viral singles like "ooh la la," while failing to secure notable positions on major charts such as the Billboard 200, underscoring a niche appeal tied to the remix's regional focus.[70] This lower traction aligns with critiques of reduced urgency, though the album's curatorial intent—co-executive produced by El-P and Nick Hook to authentically engage Latin American producers, rappers, and musicians—earned praise for broadening Run the Jewels' cultural outreach without overt commercialization.[104]
Album Details
Track Listing for RTJ4
The standard edition of RTJ4, released on June 5, 2020, comprises 11 tracks produced primarily by El-P, with songwriting credits attributed to Michael Render (Killer Mike) and Jaime Meline (El-P) across the album, alongside contributions from featured artists where applicable.[22][39] The album has a total runtime of 39 minutes.[110]
Run the Jewels' fourth studio album, RTJ4, credits the duo's core members—El-P (Jaime Meline) for production, rapping, and executive production, and Killer Mike (Michael Render) for rapping—as primary performers across all tracks.[111][22]El-P handled the bulk of the production, drawing from his established role in the duo's sound, with co-production contributions on select tracks from Wilder Zoby, Little Shalimar, and Matt Sweeney.[112][14]Guest performers include Greg Nice and DJ Premier (providing scratches), 2 Chainz, Pharrell Williams, Mavis Staples, Josh Homme, Zack de la Rocha, and A$AP Ferg, each appearing on specific recordings to add vocal or instrumental elements.[22][113] Additional instrumentation features contributions such as guitar from Matt Sweeney, saxophone from Cochemea, and bass from Danton Boller.[113][22]Recording occurred at multiple studios, with engineers including Leon Kelly, Dylan Neustadter, Carl Bespolka, Jonathan Lackey, Wil Anspach, and Kaushlesh "Garry" Purohit.[114][22] Mixing was managed by Joey Raia, while mastering was completed by Joe LaPorta at Sterling Sound.[22][115]