As promised on my last post, I’m experiencing everything firSSt again. The biggest draw for me so far is Eminem – I’m having a monster revival. What’s ironic is that firSSt has soured on Eminem recently so this revival is truly old school. I’d like to go on record as saying that The Eminem Show is one of the top 10 best albums of all time (though keep in mind I’ve probably given 100 albums top 10 status in my lifetime). I think even firSSt in his state of Eminen denial would agree on The Eminem Show. firSSt said it firSSt and best, Eminem is the Shakespeare of our generation.
My Eminem resurgence got me thinking about his career/album progression so I did some research (i.e., I looked it up on Wikipedia). I’ve included a summarized list below. I actually didn’t realize there was a difference between albums and “compilations”. This is important because earlier this year I e-mailed firSSt all excited about the fact that Eminem released a new album: Eminem Presents the Re-Up. He was indifferent. Perhaps if I had correctly identified it as a compilation his reaction may have been different. I must admit after listening to Eminem Presents the Re-Up, I was indifferent as well. The compilation wasn’t really an Eminem album -- it was more a “friends of Eminem” album with some Em sprinkled in here and there. I tried as hard as I could to force myself to listen, giving Eminem the benefit of the doubt, but just like cycling in Italy on day 13, it was like chewing nails. I put the compilation to the side for a while, but one day a song (Pistol Pistol) popped on my ipod during an iPod shuffle session and I actually enjoyed it. I started getting into the song, listening to it a lot – but I never listened to the other songs on the compilation. Soon, I started to branch out on the album and the music grabbed me – I started to see the genius of it too. Eminem got his start through a break from Dr. Dre, so this was his way of paying it forward. There are 23 songs on the album and I truly heart about 15 of them. It was a hard, long road to enjoying this album, but just like the 9 mile climbs into the Italian mountains, the rewards are that much sweeter.
I’m sure you are wondering how I came up with my post title. It refers to the last song on the album called “Billion Bucks”, sung by Stat Quo. The diamond reference has double meaning – not only is the song awesome – but I think it’s indestructible. Let me explain. You know how you love a song so much and never imagine you could ever not love it – you listen to it nonstop – and in the process, you kill it. Once you cross the line, you wonder if you’ll ever listen to it again. I think Billion Bucks is the first indestructible song I’ve run across. I’m trying to massacre it. I listen to it nonstop. It just keeps laughing at me. The lyrics are awesome. The beat is awesome. The layers are infinite. (FYI, I’ve listened to the song 12 times while I was writing this post.)
ALBUMS:
1) The Slim Shady LP, Released: February 23, 1999, Worldwide Sales: 9.3 million
2) The Marshall Mathers LP, Released: May 23, 2000, Worldwide Sales: 21 million
3) The Eminem Show, Released: May 28, 2002, Worldwide Sales: 20 million
4) Encore, Released: November 12, 2004, Worldwide Sales: 12 million
5) King Mathers, unconfirmed name of the fifth full-length studio album.
COMPILATIONS:
1) 8 Mile Soundtrack, Released: October 29, 2002
2) Curtain Call: The Hits, Released: December 6, 2005 (U.S.)
3) Eminem Presents the Re-Up, Released: December 5, 2006
MIXTAPES:
1) Shade 45: Sirius Bizness
2) The Freestyle Manual
3) Anger Management 3
4) Mick Boogie Presents the Pre-Up
5) Invasion Part 1
6) Conspiracy Theory: Invasion Part II
7) Invasion Part 3: Countdown to Armageddon
8) Shady 08:Shoot To Kill
UNDERGROUND:
1) Steppin' onto the Scene, Released: 1992
2) Fuckin’ Backstabber/Soul Intent, Released: 1995
3) Infinite, Released: 1996
4) The Slim Shady EP (demo), Released: 1997
5) The Underground EP, Released: 1997
1 comment:
the theory of the "indestructible song". genius.
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