Just Silver wrote:Geno wrote:Just Silver wrote:his hiatus regardless the reasoning
Going to rehab was the smartest thing he's ever done.
Would you rather have him not go to rehab and continue like a drunken pill zombie, eventually dying between 07-08 or have what we have today?
i guess it was mandatory but itd be nice to see some mmlp2 type material
jinofthewind wrote:And Koolo's sources said... Nothing you idiots Koolo's sources are dead they're locked in my basement
Man1x wrote:I'd have to say......Cashis
Steve Spag wrote:Em's biggest mistake was letting D12 fall apart since Proof has passed.
ShadysDisciple wrote:That phase he went through in 06-07 where he was always hanging with G Unit and rapping about packing pistols.
LEVITIKUZ wrote:Did y'all know Eminem's initials are MM. Like his name!!!
Amaranthine wrote:Encore.
Cube23 wrote:Cosh wrote:pills.
It's impossible to say what kind of music we would have had if Eminem made his first three albums through sober penmanship. Did he take it too far? Absolutely. But his drug use, I believe, brought him to push the envelope as far as he did and most certainly improved his performances.
Mathers says you can trace the arc of his addiction by listening to his albums: He was more or less sober writing the white-trash party that was The Slim Shady LP (1999); he credits experimentation with drugs for taking his music to unexpected places on The Marshall Mathers LP (2000); with The Eminem Show (2002), he struck the perfect balance—a potent mix of punch-line raps and intensely biographical material. Then the balance tipped: His fourth album, Encore, was his weakest, and it took him two years to complete because of his addiction to pills.
I met Eminem by accident just after he’d finished throwing up a fifth of Bacardi and a slice of pizza. It was all he’d eaten that day but was only an appetizer for what was to follow: three club appearances spiced with four ecstasy caps, chased with ginger ale. Cruising from Staten Island back to Manhattan that night, Eminem was a different kind of tour guide. Riding a high that would floor most people, he was a lyrical
Tasmanian devil, spitting couplets at all of us—his manager (Paul Rosenberg), DJ Stretch Armstrong, collaborator Royce Da 59, and a few others—that caused combustive laughter, jaw-gaping awe, or, often, red-faced embarrassment for the subject of his well-aimed darts. He was a living, breathing, drinking, falling, and reeling Slim Shady that night. His energy was almost tangible, as if you could see his synapses firing. The bits of stimuli before him flooded into his dilated pupils, coursed over his brain, and were spit back out at us, redefined in rhymes, jibes, and insults impossible to rebut. He commanded the room, the limo, the afterparty, wherever we were, not because we, his entourage, were a doting audience—in fact, there were many wits in the bunch—it was because no one could touch him.
...As the E starts to hit him, Eminem becomes a word dervish, a rhyme tornado, a spaz, and a force that can’t be reckoned with. In most people, ecstasy brings on a state of bliss. In Eminem, it brings out Slim Shady. Right now Slim Shady is cranked up to eleven and bristling with energy he can’t contain. His drug-fueled rhymes are sharp, and he cannot sit still. When the radio catches his ear, he’ll rap along perfectly with OutKast’s “Rosa Parks” or DMX’s “Ruff Ryders Anthem,” until the next bit of stimuli redirects him.
"For those who are curious about my methods in the studio, it goes a little like this. If I'm writing rhymes I smoke weed or take Tylenol, or muscle relaxants, something to get the stories rolling. Or I take ecstasy. A couple of the songs on the new record [MMLP] were written on X," he confirmed to music365.
Geno wrote:I don't wanna have a kid with Zabe tbh.
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