Eminem – The Marshall Mathers LP 2 Discussion Thread (Nov 5th)

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So far reviews from the album positive...but its mainstream publications... few other websites and newspapers are giving high praise and ratings just a small sample

Rolling Stone 4 outta 5,

Spin 8 outta 10,

Usa Today 3.5 outta 4

La Times 3 outta 4

 
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Yeah for now on everytime a song gets posted and people like it, I'm asking yall to list the quotables. I've never seen this quotable shit start until this album come out
 
all i'm saying is that yall aintt gon get same schizophrenic walking blonde q-tip nigga that licked dre's balls way back when. i guarantee you niggas and coons will cry yall eyes out when hearing his washed up ass.
 
ChampagnePapi;6440395 said:
all i'm saying is that yall aintt gon get same schizophrenic walking blonde q-tip nigga that licked dre's balls way back when. i guarantee you niggas and coons will cry yall eyes out when hearing his washed up ass.

U gon name names or what cause right now u aint really sayin nothin bruh.
 
obviously this whole thread is hyping it up, what else do you want nigga. you aint saying nothing but praises to that faggot ass nigga named after candy.
 
ChampagnePapi;6440395 said:
all i'm saying is that yall aintt gon get same schizophrenic walking blonde q-tip nigga that licked dre's balls way back when. i guarantee you niggas and coons will cry yall eyes out when hearing his washed up ass.

Drake
 
ChampagnePapi;6440413 said:
obviously this whole thread is hyping it up, what else do you want nigga. you aint saying nothing but praises to that faggot ass nigga named after candy.

So u trollin. Got it
 
if the mmlp was a bitch, it would look like this:

Jaime-Pressly-jaime-pressly-212274_1280_800.jpg


bad guy: track is actually good, sets the mood for what could be a dope album, the last part of the song is actually great to me

parking lot: oh shit eminem used to say his last verse on criminal was one of his best verses ever, maybe the next song is gonna be that ill

rhyme or reason: not what i expected, but after a few listens not a bad song either

so much better: oh fuck off

survival: call of duty players can suck my balls, skip

legacy: wait what?

asshole: if this shit didnt had skylar fucking grey it would be 10 times better

berzerk: i wish i had weed right now

rap god: dope flow, i remember eminem used to think that rapping really fast was the key to been a great rapper

brainless: this shit's just ok

stronger than i was: wtf is this bullshit

the monster: aaaand skip

so far: is that you taylor swift? why are you rapping? why do i feel like im in a trailer park drinkin billy rock beer? not a bad song either

love game: thank u king kendrick.

headlights: shit song overall, 00/10 probably recorded back when he was making encore

evil twin: oh shit is that royce?

5/10, if this album was a bitch it would look like this:

DSCN0689.JPG


good side:

he aint using the same flow on every song like on recovery

he aint using a retarded accent like in relapse

when its done destroyin any expectation you had it does become easier to listen to it over and over, after you delete stronger than i was, maybe if i get high i'll like it more.

bad side:

didnt live up the album name

made me feel like white trash

eminem sings again

production isnt as dope as it could be when its executive produced by rick rubin and dr. dre the beat on so far isnt what i expected.

fucking skylar grey, nate ruess, rihanna, where the fuck are rbx, sticky fingaz, xzibit, dr. dre
 
icecoldstew;6440419 said:
ChampagnePapi;6440413 said:
obviously this whole thread is hyping it up, what else do you want nigga. you aint saying nothing but praises to that faggot ass nigga named after candy.

So u trollin. Got it

so i'm trollin cause i'm stating facts? pull that skirt down feminem don't love you
 
EMINEM PREDICTS WHEN HE'LL SAY GOODBYE, RETIRE FROM THE RAP GAME

hough Slim Shady could not pencil in an exact date, he did admit music-making would likely end when he no longer has a hunger for the craft.

As for whether there will be a Marshall Mathers LP 3 in 2026, don't bank on it. "I hope not," Eminem says. "I don't know what I'll be doing as far as whether I'll still be making music-I'd like to keep doing it as long as I still have the passion for it. But I hope to always be involved in hip-hop in one form or another. Because when it comes down to it, this is really all I know." (Billboard)

Back in 2010, Em contemplated how many more years he would keep releasing music.

"...Honestly, I don't know how much longer I have in this game. I'm always going to love hip-hop. But how much longer am I going to still do it? I couldn't give you an answer. But the day that this is not better than the last will probably be the day I stop...I do love it so much. But even if I was rapping at 50 [years old], I don't now if I would put it out. I know it always makes me feel better to lay things to tape, and--'Lay the tape.' See, I'm old school. The fans might say the sh*t is garbage. You don't know how long people are going to want you around...Realistically, if I don't rap, what the f*ck am I going to do? It's too late to be unfamous at this point." (VIBE)

A year prior, Em said he could see himself putting down the microphone for good after at least another solid decade.

"It was, 'I don't want to be a rapper when I'm 40,' and the next time we talk it will be, "I don't want to be a rapper when I'm 50." Sixty is the cut-off. I can't be no 60-year-old rapper, son!" (Complex)

http://www.sohh.com/2013/11/eminem_predicts_when_hell_say_goodbye_re.html
 
ChampagnePapi;6440429 said:
icecoldstew;6440419 said:
ChampagnePapi;6440413 said:
obviously this whole thread is hyping it up, what else do you want nigga. you aint saying nothing but praises to that faggot ass nigga named after candy.

So u trollin. Got it

so i'm trollin cause i'm stating facts? pull that skirt down feminem don't love you

What facts other than you wont cop? That shit was a great post btw
 
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Eminem Details The Making Of "The Marshall Mathers LP 2"

Eminem's The Marshall Mathers LP 2 is set to be released November 5. The album was also made available for streaming through iTunes Radio yesterday (November 1).

Eminem discusses the making of this album during an interview with Rolling Stone.

"I feel like right now I'm probably working harder than I've ever worked in my life," Eminem says in the interview. "And I've probably worked harder on this record than any other record aside from maybe the time period during The Eminem Show, which is a little hazy 'cause just so much shit was going on at that time. Just being so busy with The Eminem Show and doing the 8 Mile movie, and the soundtrack and the score to the movie. This is probably the equivalent of that but all focused on the record mostly."

Eminem also says that focus was particularly heightened by the title of this project.

"Once I had the direction that I wanted to go, and you know calling it The Marshall Mathers LP 2, obviously I knew that there might be certain expectations," Eminem says. "Like, I wouldn't want to just call it that just for the sake of calling it that. So I wanted to make sure that I had the right songs to be able to call it that. So, a lot of recording. A lot of songs that people probably will never hear. We hit a couple of road blocks. There were songs where the beat leaked or a producer sold the beat to someone else or whatever. And just when you think you got it or you got the right amount of songs you go back and you listen and you're like, 'Fuck man! I feel like it needs this or this' to paint the whole picture."

During the interview, Eminem is asked if he's proud of the album.

"That's a tough question," he says. "For the most part, yeah. But I don't know if I ever feel totally great about a record when I put it out. With every record that I put out, someone has literally got to come pry it from me because when I listen to my own music, I just hear flaws in it. Like I hear 'Oh fuck! I could have done this better or that better!' And I'll work it to death. Obviously if I wasn't comfortable with it, I wouldn't put it out. But from the beginning, ever since my career started, I don't know if I've ever been totally like, this is completely it."

Eminem Discusses The Marshall Mathers LP, Relapse & Recovery

Beyond his discussion about his upcoming release, Eminem also speaks about The Marshall Mathers LP, his diamond-certified album released in 2000.

"It's probably my favorite," Eminem says. "I think some of them are my favorites for different reasons. Hate to even say that about my own record, but I mean the first three records, I think they may have captured a time period. And then I think I pretty much probably have publicly said, you know, Encore and Relapse wasn't – it was just a different time."

Eminem notes that Tyler, The Creator continues to say he is a big fan of Relapse.

"Yeah, he tells me that every time I see him," Eminem says. "I don't hate the record. I want to rap and be able to always try to do my best lyrically, but at the same time find the right balance between that and making the right songs. And you know, I don't know if I necessarily found that balance yet, because I was just getting sober and just kind of finding my feet again and so there was a lot of songs that were just like, 'Ha ha, this is funny.' You know, walking around and joking around with your friends and shit and it ends up on the record and you're laughing about it. Because when I got sober it was like – I've said this before – but it just was like, 'Oh shit! I can think straight again.' So I don't know if that record was particularly my best work as far as songs, writing songs that felt like something, that brought some kind of emotion. I ran accents into the ground. I got stuck on that kind of serial killer, crazy vibe and just kind of went with it."

During the Rolling Stone interview, Eminem also explains how he feels about his most recent release, Recovery.

"I feel like that record I finally got back to where I was at maybe during The Eminem Show," he says. "Like, creatively and songwriting, I guess. I mean obviously Recovery was the first time I had ever worked with that many producers outside of our camp. Aside from working with Dre, it was like I always wanted to produce my own records, because producing is fun to me too. One of the things that was cool for me about that record was getting beats that already had choruses on them. It's kind of like a challenge to myself to be able to hear somebody else's hook and kind of interpret the words. Because my own hooks, I already know what I mean when I write them. The way that I do music is, like, regardless of what the beat is and whatever kind of appeal it may or may not have, I always want to try to go as hard lyrically as I can. So regardless if the beat feels like, 'Wow maybe this could be played on the radio,' I'm not like, 'Maybe radio would play this so I'll just wing it.' Like, I always have looked at it like I want to approach every record from an emcee's aspect."

http://www.hiphopdx.com/m/index.php?s=news&id=26081
 

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