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Reply #30 posted 01/20/17 10:43pm

alphastreet

RJOrion said:

3rd Bass validated white rappers way b4 eminem did...also House Of Pain and Beastie Boys...Eminem's influence is overstated...a media creation...


In the times of Viacom/soundscan mind you lol ice also had a movie, as Eminem had 8 mile. I always felt the 00s was patterned after the 90s in how a lot of things were set up
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Reply #31 posted 01/20/17 10:45pm

alphastreet

phunkdaddy said:



alphastreet said:


phunkdaddy said:
As far as white rappers go the Beastie Boys had him beat years ago and probably before some of you were born. Run DMC also broke those doors down with their rap metal before the Beasties came along. As for Eminem I'm not a fan and while I do like Lose Yourself and maybe 2 others I feel he is overrated too. While he has had an impact on white suburbia there are other rappers like Kanye West and Jay Z that have hit that market too. I thought when he first came out with the Slim Shady persona and making raps about killing his baby's mom I thought he was cornball.

Yes, and not to mention mc hammer and vanilla ice having diamond albums that accumulated overtime. So much for mainstream not caring. Plus fresh prince/will smith was pretty much accepted by mainstream and by the Grammys for popularizing "safe" hip hop culture. One must keep in mind Eminem and bubblegum acts of the late 90s came at a time when Viacom bought networks and due to the economy, kids were spending more money than ever on popular culture and Eminem was part of that. He spoke to suburbia and low income populations and people were drawn to that. If anything it was a win win cause Dre profited too [Edited 1/20/17 20:48pm]


How the hell did I forget about MC Hammer? Because it was so easy to do. lol


MC Hammer did indeed break into mainstream pop with the Hammer Don't Hurt Em


and 2 Legit to Quit albums. I knew he was deep in it when I was taking a business law course


in 1990 and my professor was talking about how much she loved Hammer and how he was


such a smart man. He speaks so well! He speaks so well! lol




That's pretty cool, would have loved to be in your class.
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Reply #32 posted 01/21/17 2:22am

MD431Madcat

avatar

we all dont have to get everything-

i like some old-school rap.

eminem is a little too new-school for me..

but who gives a damn! lol

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Reply #33 posted 01/21/17 2:33am

EmmaMcG

phunkdaddy said:

EmmaMcG said:

He helped popularise the genre in the late 90's and early 2000's. For a lot of young (predominantly white) people at that time, he was their gateway into rap music. So, whether you like his music or not (and I don't) or whether you think he's overrated (I do), you can't deny that he helped to create a bigger market for mainstream rap music. Therefore, it stands to reason that a lot of rappers would give him "props". He helped popularise a genre of music they do, which in turn, led to a lot of rappers of all colours earning a lot of money.


As far as white rappers go the Beastie Boys had him beat years ago and probably
before some of you were born. Run DMC also broke those doors down with their rap metal before the Beasties came along. As for Eminem I'm not a fan and while I do like Lose Yourself and maybe 2 others I feel he is overrated too. While he has had an impact on white suburbia there are other rappers like Kanye West and Jay Z that have hit that market too. I thought when he first came out with the Slim Shady persona and making raps about killing his baby's mom I thought he was cornball.


I'm not saying he was the first to popularise rap amongst a new audience but he definitely contributed to it and I'd say he contributed more than the beastie boys, run dmc, etc. He was huge after his first couple of albums and having the backing of the likes of Dr. Dress obviously helped his credibility within the industry but to the average white kid he was their introduction to rap music. In turn, rap music became the dominant genre for years. Eminem wasn't alone in causing that but he was definitely a major player in it. So young rappers these days have him and his contemporaries to thank for their livelihood so that's probably why they give him "props" and choose not to mention his childish lyrics and such.
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Reply #34 posted 01/21/17 3:03am

funkaholic1972

avatar

Can we all please stop using the black and white division and start regarding each other as 'human beings'?

We have to find ways to unite people, not divide. We are all brothers and sisters and the sooner we tear down the walls of division (race, countries, wealth, etc.) the better IMO. One earth, one people, one love!!! cool

RIP Prince: thank U 4 a funky Time...
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Reply #35 posted 01/21/17 3:45am

novabrkr

I don't think the racial aspect can be left undiscussed when discussing Eminem. Most of the people on this site are adults, so there's no reason why such a discussion can't be handled in a civilized manner.

I'm "as white as it gets" as far as my genetic and cultural background are considered, but I don't have a problem stating Eminem's massive popularity wouldn't have been possible without him having been white. The thing is, when you became an A-list star in popular music, a large percentage of your record buyers are going to be young people that see themselves in the artists or need to be able to relate to them on other fairly superficial levels. I know the 10-12-year-olds in the apartment next doors to the one I was living in liked Eminem a lot, as I could hear them listening to him all the time. I can't really say the same for stuff like Jurassic 5, which is what I was playing at the time (early-00s).

This is the same reason why I've tried to convince some of the orgers living in the US / UK that Beyoncé is nowhere near the massive star or a cultural icon in countries where there are fewer black people (or people of other ethnicities that may be able to relate to blacks). Eminem, at the peak of his popularity, was everywhere on the other hand. It sucks, but it's just a numbers game in the end.

Is Eminem really one of the best rappers out there? I don't know, when people started stating that I had to conclude that I have no idea anymore what's supposed to be good or not in hiphop. Around that time I stopped listening to the genre, for the most part. It became too poppy for me and all that poppy stuff was supposed to be somehow as legit as the underground stuff from the past.

[Edited 1/21/17 3:48am]

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Reply #36 posted 01/21/17 6:53am

scorp84

RJOrion said:

novabrkr said:

Is his influence apparent on the music that we hear today?

no

Of course not, do yall listen to what's out today? It resembles nothing great about hip hop lol.

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Reply #37 posted 01/21/17 10:08am

2freaky4church
1

avatar

Meet me in Paisley Park.

All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #38 posted 01/22/17 2:30pm

214

phunkdaddy said:

214 said:

Sorry guys, but smells like racism all over this thread, and this is not against black people.

Well this racist guy here was a fan of the Beastie Boys. wink

You can be fan of any artist of any race or cultural bacxkground and still being a racist.

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Reply #39 posted 01/22/17 2:40pm

EmmaMcG

214 said:



phunkdaddy said:




214 said:


Sorry guys, but smells like racism all over this thread, and this is not against black people.




Well this racist guy here was a fan of the Beastie Boys. wink



You can be fan of any artist of any race or cultural bacxkground and still being a racist.



I didn't notice any racism of any kind on this thread whatsoever.
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Reply #40 posted 01/22/17 10:50pm

phunkdaddy

avatar

214 said:



phunkdaddy said:




214 said:


Sorry guys, but smells like racism all over this thread, and this is not against black people.




Well this racist guy here was a fan of the Beastie Boys. wink



You can be fan of any artist of any race or cultural bacxkground and still being a racist.



No shit Sherlock I was speaking for myself. I maybe a lot of things but racist is not one of them. At the same time it's not my goal in life to prove that to strangers on social media. Too busy.
Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint
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Reply #41 posted 01/24/17 1:54am

mechanicalemot
ion17

tritoncin said:

I find this title funny... As if Black rappers had the monopoly of rap.


If the guy is good, he's good...


Then people talk about racism.


lol lol lol





Uhhh. ..they did silly. Just like jazz before whites decided to steal the genre and convince people that THEY invented it
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Reply #42 posted 01/24/17 2:01am

mechanicalemot
ion17

novabrkr said:

I don't think the racial aspect can be left undiscussed when discussing Eminem. Most of the people on this site are adults, so there's no reason why such a discussion can't be handled in a civilized manner.

I'm "as white as it gets" as far as my genetic and cultural background are considered, but I don't have a problem stating Eminem's massive popularity wouldn't have been possible without him having been white. The thing is, when you became an A-list star in popular music, a large percentage of your record buyers are going to be young people that see themselves in the artists or need to be able to relate to them on other fairly superficial levels. I know the 10-12-year-olds in the apartment next doors to the one I was living in liked Eminem a lot, as I could hear them listening to him all the time. I can't really say the same for stuff like Jurassic 5, which is what I was playing at the time (early-00s).

This is the same reason why I've tried to convince some of the orgers living in the US / UK that Beyoncé is nowhere near the massive star or a cultural icon in countries where there are fewer black people (or people of other ethnicities that may be able to relate to blacks). Eminem, at the peak of his popularity, was everywhere on the other hand. It sucks, but it's just a numbers game in the end.

Is Eminem really one of the best rappers out there? I don't know, when people started stating that I had to conclude that I have no idea anymore what's supposed to be good or not in hiphop. Around that time I stopped listening to the genre, for the most part. It became too poppy for me and all that poppy stuff was supposed to be somehow as legit as the underground stuff from the past.

[Edited 1/21/17 3:48am]



Kinda like how the Black Eyed Peas knew they had to become complete sell-outs and even put a white singer in the group for good measure to get any mainstream shine.
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Reply #43 posted 01/24/17 2:03am

mechanicalemot
ion17

EmmaMcG said:

phunkdaddy said:



As far as white rappers go the Beastie Boys had him beat years ago and probably
before some of you were born. Run DMC also broke those doors down with their rap metal before the Beasties came along. As for Eminem I'm not a fan and while I do like Lose Yourself and maybe 2 others I feel he is overrated too. While he has had an impact on white suburbia there are other rappers like Kanye West and Jay Z that have hit that market too. I thought when he first came out with the Slim Shady persona and making raps about killing his baby's mom I thought he was cornball.


I'm not saying he was the first to popularise rap amongst a new audience but he definitely contributed to it and I'd say he contributed more than the beastie boys, run dmc, etc. He was huge after his first couple of albums and having the backing of the likes of Dr. Dress obviously helped his credibility within the industry but to the average white kid he was their introduction to rap music. In turn, rap music became the dominant genre for years. Eminem wasn't alone in causing that but he was definitely a major player in it. So young rappers these days have him and his contemporaries to thank for their livelihood so that's probably why they give him "props" and choose not to mention his childish lyrics and such.



The popularity of Eminem TRULY signaled the death of hip hop. Lil Wayne was its death knell
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Reply #44 posted 01/24/17 5:13am

peedub

avatar

i think mtv oughtta be a larger part of ya'lls conversation regarding who was responsible for popularizing hip hop amongst the white youth...you've got to consider that mtv had a national audience. kids were no longer limited to whatever the local radio market decided to pump out or to their parent's generational record collections.

beastie boys, run dmc, epmd, grandmaster flash, 3rd bass, blondie, fat boys, nwa, 2 live crew...too many to mention. then later dre, snoop and all the death row imitators. it was never a single artist of any race. mtv brought all of it to an audience that would never be exposed to it unless they made a wrong turn off the highway and ended in the wrong part of town while they were on vacation far from home.

it was a different time and things happened differently. you all seem to be looking through the lens of the way things are now is the way it's always been.

as far as eminem is concerned...by the time he came along, i think most folks were already hip hop fans if they were going to be. i'm not a huge fan, really, but i had enough hip hop exposure to hear about him when he was still just releasing mix tapes. dude's got skills and he's funny as fuck. i don't think him being white is a factor in anything. people just gotta have something to bitch about.

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Reply #45 posted 01/24/17 6:13am

EmmaMcG

mechanicalemotion17 said:

EmmaMcG said:



I'm not saying he was the first to popularise rap amongst a new audience but he definitely contributed to it and I'd say he contributed more than the beastie boys, run dmc, etc. He was huge after his first couple of albums and having the backing of the likes of Dr. Dress obviously helped his credibility within the industry but to the average white kid he was their introduction to rap music. In turn, rap music became the dominant genre for years. Eminem wasn't alone in causing that but he was definitely a major player in it. So young rappers these days have him and his contemporaries to thank for their livelihood so that's probably why they give him "props" and choose not to mention his childish lyrics and such.



The popularity of Eminem TRULY signaled the death of hip hop. Lil Wayne was its death knell


I wouldn't disagree with that.
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Reply #46 posted 01/24/17 8:00am

paisleypark4

avatar

mechanicalemotion17 said:

Like Elvis and Vanilla Ice before him...Eminem is highly overrated. Another great white hope nothing more nothing less. Dre cosigned and Blacks fell for it lock, stock, and barrel.

Image result for receipts whitney houston

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #47 posted 01/24/17 9:35am

mechanicalemot
ion17

peedub said:

i think mtv oughtta be a larger part of ya'lls conversation regarding who was responsible for popularizing hip hop amongst the white youth...you've got to consider that mtv had a national audience. kids were no longer limited to whatever the local radio market decided to pump out or to their parent's generational record collections.

beastie boys, run dmc, epmd, grandmaster flash, 3rd bass, blondie, fat boys, nwa, 2 live crew...too many to mention. then later dre, snoop and all the death row imitators. it was never a single artist of any race. mtv brought all of it to an audience that would never be exposed to it unless they made a wrong turn off the highway and ended in the wrong part of town while they were on vacation far from home.

it was a different time and things happened differently. you all seem to be looking through the lens of the way things are now is the way it's always been.

as far as eminem is concerned...by the time he came along, i think most folks were already hip hop fans if they were going to be. i'm not a huge fan, really, but i had enough hip hop exposure to hear about him when he was still just releasing mix tapes. dude's got skills and he's funny as fuck. i don't think him being white is a factor in anything. people just gotta have something to bitch about.



Y'all forgetting how big LL was. He had some major MTV hits too.
What bugs me is how when Eminem came along white music writers acted as if he invented hip hop....or like he changed the game and brought intelligence to it that it was lacking before. Suddenly Rolling Stone writers who had completely ignored hip hop unless it was to write something snide are talking about cadence, meter,dactyl,anapest, elegy, while comparing his lyrics to Shakespearean sonnets. Like he somehow made it a legitimate art form
[Edited 1/24/17 9:37am]
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Reply #48 posted 01/24/17 9:41am

mechanicalemot
ion17

RJOrion said:

3rd Bass validated white rappers way b4 eminem did...also House Of Pain and Beastie Boys...Eminem's influence is overstated...a media creation...

yeahthat
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Reply #49 posted 01/24/17 9:46am

mechanicalemot
ion17

There was definitely a push by the media on legitimizing Eminem. ...just like they had done Vanilla Ice before him but he was just complete crap. They tried it with Kid Rock too to some degree
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Reply #50 posted 01/24/17 10:07am

peedub

avatar

mechanicalemotion17 said:

peedub said:

i think mtv oughtta be a larger part of ya'lls conversation regarding who was responsible for popularizing hip hop amongst the white youth...you've got to consider that mtv had a national audience. kids were no longer limited to whatever the local radio market decided to pump out or to their parent's generational record collections.

beastie boys, run dmc, epmd, grandmaster flash, 3rd bass, blondie, fat boys, nwa, 2 live crew...too many to mention. then later dre, snoop and all the death row imitators. it was never a single artist of any race. mtv brought all of it to an audience that would never be exposed to it unless they made a wrong turn off the highway and ended in the wrong part of town while they were on vacation far from home.

it was a different time and things happened differently. you all seem to be looking through the lens of the way things are now is the way it's always been.

as far as eminem is concerned...by the time he came along, i think most folks were already hip hop fans if they were going to be. i'm not a huge fan, really, but i had enough hip hop exposure to hear about him when he was still just releasing mix tapes. dude's got skills and he's funny as fuck. i don't think him being white is a factor in anything. people just gotta have something to bitch about.

Y'all forgetting how big LL was. He had some major MTV hits too. What bugs me is how when Eminem came along white music writers acted as if he invented hip hop....or like he changed the game and brought intelligence to it that it was lacking before. Suddenly Rolling Stone writers who had completely ignored hip hop unless it was to write something snide are talking about cadence, meter,dactyl,anapest, elegy, while comparing his lyrics to Shakespearean sonnets. Like he somehow made it a legitimate art form [Edited 1/24/17 9:37am]



yeah, but you're kind of putting the cart before the horse. the only reason they were talking about him was because he had skills enough to get their attention. maybe they had previously neglected hip hop, but that ain't on eminem. the press is the press, but eminem was good before dre got ahold of him and before rolling stone said so. he may not be your taste and you can dislike him for whatever reason you choose, but the only reason you know his name is because he's got talent.

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Reply #51 posted 01/24/17 10:59am

mechanicalemot
ion17

peedub said:



mechanicalemotion17 said:


peedub said:

i think mtv oughtta be a larger part of ya'lls conversation regarding who was responsible for popularizing hip hop amongst the white youth...you've got to consider that mtv had a national audience. kids were no longer limited to whatever the local radio market decided to pump out or to their parent's generational record collections.

beastie boys, run dmc, epmd, grandmaster flash, 3rd bass, blondie, fat boys, nwa, 2 live crew...too many to mention. then later dre, snoop and all the death row imitators. it was never a single artist of any race. mtv brought all of it to an audience that would never be exposed to it unless they made a wrong turn off the highway and ended in the wrong part of town while they were on vacation far from home.

it was a different time and things happened differently. you all seem to be looking through the lens of the way things are now is the way it's always been.

as far as eminem is concerned...by the time he came along, i think most folks were already hip hop fans if they were going to be. i'm not a huge fan, really, but i had enough hip hop exposure to hear about him when he was still just releasing mix tapes. dude's got skills and he's funny as fuck. i don't think him being white is a factor in anything. people just gotta have something to bitch about.



Y'all forgetting how big LL was. He had some major MTV hits too. What bugs me is how when Eminem came along white music writers acted as if he invented hip hop....or like he changed the game and brought intelligence to it that it was lacking before. Suddenly Rolling Stone writers who had completely ignored hip hop unless it was to write something snide are talking about cadence, meter,dactyl,anapest, elegy, while comparing his lyrics to Shakespearean sonnets. Like he somehow made it a legitimate art form [Edited 1/24/17 9:37am]



yeah, but you're kind of putting the cart before the horse. the only reason they were talking about him was because he had skills enough to get their attention. maybe they had previously neglected hip hop, but that ain't on eminem. the press is the press, but eminem was good before dre got ahold of him and before rolling stone said so. he may not be your taste and you can dislike him for whatever reason you choose, but the only reason you know his name is because he's got talent.



Actually his "talent" and "skill" was knowing whose styles he could bite and get away with it. Eminem wasn't original by any means. Everything about his perceived' signature style' was stolen from lesser known MCs. Even he knew he was a fraud
[Edited 1/24/17 11:03am]
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Reply #52 posted 01/24/17 11:35am

peedub

avatar

mechanicalemotion17 said:

peedub said:



yeah, but you're kind of putting the cart before the horse. the only reason they were talking about him was because he had skills enough to get their attention. maybe they had previously neglected hip hop, but that ain't on eminem. the press is the press, but eminem was good before dre got ahold of him and before rolling stone said so. he may not be your taste and you can dislike him for whatever reason you choose, but the only reason you know his name is because he's got talent.

Actually his "talent" and "skill" was knowing whose styles he could bite and get away with it. Eminem wasn't original by any means. Everything about his perceived' signature style' was stolen from lesser known MCs. Even he knew he was a fraud [Edited 1/24/17 11:03am]



well, stay tuned long enough and you'll see a thread started making the same claims against 90% of all artists in every genre of every medium. standing on the shoulders of giants, all.

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Reply #53 posted 01/24/17 1:24pm

paisleypark4

avatar

mechanicalemotion17 said:

peedub said:



yeah, but you're kind of putting the cart before the horse. the only reason they were talking about him was because he had skills enough to get their attention. maybe they had previously neglected hip hop, but that ain't on eminem. the press is the press, but eminem was good before dre got ahold of him and before rolling stone said so. he may not be your taste and you can dislike him for whatever reason you choose, but the only reason you know his name is because he's got talent.

Actually his "talent" and "skill" was knowing whose styles he could bite and get away with it. Eminem wasn't original by any means. Everything about his perceived' signature style' was stolen from lesser known MCs. Even he knew he was a fraud [Edited 1/24/17 11:03am]

Right right... thats like saying Prince was fraud because James Brown, Sly and Jimi were better. You really have no much to run with.

There were plenty of white rappers from Ice, to Cypress, to Snow to Chaos, to Marky Mark that just didnt have the IT factor Eminem possessed. Eminem is the kind of person who can come on a verterans or legends track and make it their own (Dead Wrong - Biggie, Renegade - Jay-Z)

You can say what you want about originality without any receipts; however you cannot deny his craftsmanship and skill for conjuring the songs and albums under his belt without these "hidden icons" you proclaim were 'better'...that have not wrote any of his material.

As well, Eminem speaks very candidly about his own life. Nobody else is writing his material for him. Songs like Kim, My Fault, Brain Damage, The Way I Am, Just Don't Give A Fuck, Cleaning Out My Closet, Yellow Brick Road, up to Insane and so many others speak from a reflective and personal experience. Doesnt sound like you know what you are talking about.

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Reply #54 posted 01/24/17 2:13pm

RJOrion

Cypress Hill was NOT white...B-Real is half mexican half cuban, and Sen-Dog is afro-cuban...DjMuggs was white but he was neither the face nor voice of the group
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Reply #55 posted 01/24/17 3:27pm

mechanicalemot
ion17

RJOrion said:

Cypress Hill was NOT white...B-Real is half mexican half cuban, and Sen-Dog is afro-cuban...DjMuggs was white but he was neither the face nor voice of the group

Exactly....yet wants to claim others don't know what they're talking about.
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Reply #56 posted 01/24/17 3:31pm

mechanicalemot
ion17

paisleypark4 said:



mechanicalemotion17 said:


peedub said:




yeah, but you're kind of putting the cart before the horse. the only reason they were talking about him was because he had skills enough to get their attention. maybe they had previously neglected hip hop, but that ain't on eminem. the press is the press, but eminem was good before dre got ahold of him and before rolling stone said so. he may not be your taste and you can dislike him for whatever reason you choose, but the only reason you know his name is because he's got talent.



Actually his "talent" and "skill" was knowing whose styles he could bite and get away with it. Eminem wasn't original by any means. Everything about his perceived' signature style' was stolen from lesser known MCs. Even he knew he was a fraud [Edited 1/24/17 11:03am]

Right right... thats like saying Prince was fraud because James Brown, Sly and Jimi were better. You really have no much to run with.



There were plenty of white rappers from Ice, to Cypress, to Snow to Chaos, to Marky Mark that just didnt have the IT factor Eminem possessed. Eminem is the kind of person who can come on a verterans or legends track and make it their own (Dead Wrong - Biggie, Renegade - Jay-Z)



You can say what you want about originality without any receipts; however you cannot deny his craftsmanship and skill for conjuring the songs and albums under his belt without these "hidden icons" you proclaim were 'better'...that have not wrote any of his material.



As well, Eminem speaks very candidly about his own life. Nobody else is writing his material for him. Songs like Kim, My Fault, Brain Damage, The Way I Am, Just Don't Give A Fuck, Cleaning Out My Closet, Yellow Brick Road, up to Insane and so many others speak from a reflective and personal experience. Doesnt sound like you know what you are talking about.





Ha ha....you're clearly arguing with your own unconscious because I didn't even say half of the things you're trying to dispute here.
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Reply #57 posted 01/24/17 3:35pm

mechanicalemot
ion17

Did he REALLY just bring up Marky Mark???
Next he'll be trying to legitimize Freedom Williams
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Reply #58 posted 01/24/17 3:39pm

RJOrion

Eminem has even gone on record saying that his rap style was inspired by Masta Ace and Treach...Eminem didnt break any new ground creatively...he fell off after the Marshall Mathers lp (his second), and became a caricature of himself...strangely enough, thats about when the fame and overstated accolades started...his first 2 lps were cool...but thats about it...he BEEN runnin on fumes...
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Reply #59 posted 01/24/17 4:00pm

paisleypark4

avatar

mechanicalemotion17 said:

Did he REALLY just bring up Marky Mark??? Next he'll be trying to legitimize Freedom Williams

Yet you still bring no receipts

Image result for whitney houston receipts

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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Group of black rappers give props to Eminem.