Amadeo wrote:You act like Eminem had nothing to do with any of the beats on his first two albums. Like he just took a bunch of pre-made beats home and wrote to them.
That's only true for a few songs (mainly Dre songs).
His process was completely hands-on even back then. If he was going to rap over a beat, he wanted 100% control over that beat, from what the drum pattern was to what the bass line was, and to where the snare dropped out to emphasize a certain joke or line. It was Eminem protecting his writing by making sure the musical back-drop suited it perfectly.
The only difference between SSLP/MMLP and TES was that Eminem was occasionally playing some very simple chord progressions/notes on a keyboard in TES that he didn't need an actual pianist to play. The synth on Square Dance, for example. Other than that, it's the same process. Eminem going "yo, play this. Yeah, that sounds dope."
"I've always produced, or co-produced, my shit. I always know how I want the beat to go. Why would I let somebody else just do my beat and it's done, and I come in and rap over it?"
Then why doesn't Em have full production credits? Does he only get then when he sees fit?
Nonsense. Of course Em was involved in the mixing process in his first two albums, but the majority of the work was done for him.
Soon after MMLP he really got into the process of beat making, creating his own melodies and working more intricately with the fabric he was using. He said himself that TWIA was the first time he worked on a track off his own back. He was being more commandeering, rather than acting the pupil.
Regardless, this is all of route. My initial post was detailing how it is a fallacy that Em was not as artistically creative in his early career as he was during Relapse. His evolution as a producer obviously owes to the support he had, but it doesn't substantive a pre-existing (albeit dormant) career as a producer.