This was a hit on IMDb, so I'll post it here.
Made it myself. Singles are denoted with asterisks. Thoughts? Want descriptions of tracks? See below.
1. Public Service Announcement 2010 (skit)
2. Insult to Injury [Dr. Dre]
3. Warpath** [Just Blaze]
4. Coming Clean [Just Blaze]
5. The Sequel (feat. Royce Da 5'9) [Just Blaze]
6. Paul (skit)
7. On the Road (feat. B.o.B) [DJ Khalil]
8. I'm Sorry [Just Blaze]
9. The Greatest [Just Blaze]
10. Back in the D [Mr. Porter]
11. All Night (feat. Lil Wayne & Drake)** [Boi-1da]
12. Same Ol' Shady** [Jim Jonsin]
13. Throw Me Out (feat. Hayley Williams)** [Boi-1da]
14. Steve Berman (skit)
15. Never Coming Down (feat. Dr. Dre & 50 Cent) [Dr. Dre]
16. No More Bullshit [Just Blaze]
17. Look Up** [Marshall Mathers]
18. Hit Me with Your Best Shot (feat. D12) [Mr. Porter]
19. Recovery (feat. Elton John) [Marshall Mathers]
20. Outro (skit)
Production:
Just Blaze - 6
M. Mathers - 2
Mr. Porter- 2
Boi-1da - 2
Dr. Dre - 2
Jim Jonsin - 1
DJ Khalil - 1
Track 1 is a humorous "This is another Public Service Announcement brought to you by Slim Shady" skit that would last about 25 seconds maximum.
We already know what 2 and 18 are.
3 and 16 are the angriest tracks. In "Warpath", he goes on a rant about everything that pisses him off in the world, music, and his life. It's the "White America" of this album. Track 16 is where he addresses those who say he fell off and lost the fire, and attacks those who lost faith in him. It's similar to "Till I Collapse".
In "Coming Clean", he sets the record straight about his drug addiction and how it effected his life. It's thematically similar to "Déjà Vu" and it's a slow track.
"The Sequel" is self-explanatory to anyone who hear the SSLP (which better be everyone reading this). Em does some accent-free soft horrorcore like he did on most of that album.
The Paul skit is Paul talking about the negative response to Relapse.
"On the Road" is about how Em's family life was negatively affected by his rap career because he was always touring. Similar to "When I'm Gone", but slower. B.o.B sings the hook and has no verse.
"I'm Sorry" is an acid-tongued, satirical "apology" to everyone he's offended. I accidentally tagged this as sad earlier. Didn't mean to.
"The Greatest" is an angry track about how he feels he is the best rapper alive and the game would never be the same if he left.
"Back in the D", obviously a reference to Detroit, is about his childhood and the Soul Intent days. This is a somewhat sad track, a bit like "Like Toy Soldiers", "Airplanes Part 2", and "Yellow Brick Road" in thematic material.
"All Night" is a club banger similar to "Shake That" and "Smack That" with better lyrics on Em's end. Would likely hit #1 and be a big dance hit this summer. The three rotate doing the hook.
"Same Ol' Shady" is a blast of Slim Shady circa 2000. Sarcastic instead of silly, and with no accent. Lead single.
"Throw Me Out" is about how he refuses to leave until he's ready, in the rap game, in a strip club, and in in a fictional woman's apartment. Hayley does what Dina did on "Superman". Hook, bridge, background vocals.
The Steve skit is about how pissed Steve is about album delays, Relapse 2 not existing, and Em using new producers. The conflict escalates and Em pulls out a machine gun and permanently kills the Berman character, getting Dre and 50 to help move the corpse, which leads into "Never Coming Down" a track that works on two levels -- Shady/Aftermath boasting and getting high. Em does the hook.
"Look Up" is sort of a cross between "Lose Yourself" and Tupac's "Keep Ya Head Up". It's Eminem deliviring a message to young Marshall Mathers.
"Recovery" is about how Eminem has fully recovered from his relapse (the real one, not the album), and is back forever. Elton does the hook and bridge.
Writing this all made me REALLY wish this was the tracklist.