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CHAT
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Last Updated: Friday 18-May-2001 16:54
EMINEM GAMES
Eminem -- The rapper disses
and rhymes with the best of them on his sophomore release
On the cover of last year's
''The Slim Shady LP,'' Eminem stood beneath a hallucinatory full moon
with his baby daughter, and the legs of a body (Kim, his freshly murdered
girlfriend and the baby's mother, according to '''97 Bonnie and Clyde'')
protruding from his car trunk. The cover of his second set, The Marshall
Mathers LP, shows the 26-year-old blond rapper huddled beneath a loading
dock, an empty pill vial and booze bottle at his feet, looking like a
dysfunctional Little Rascal.
Easy to read, right? The
debut: a violent fantasy, the acting-out of a persona. The follow-up:
the vulnerable artist unmasked.
Nothing's so simple in the world of Marshall Mathers, a.k.a. Eminem, a.k.a.
Slim Shady, an artist who, among other things, has turned rap's preoccupation
with ''realness'' into what one critic dubbed ''Jerry Springer: The Musical.''
In the aftermath of ''Slim Shady,'' he married the girlfriend he imagined
killing, while his mother, immortalized in his hit single ''My Name Is''
(''I just found out my Mom does more dope than I do''), sued him for $10
million for defamation of character; the case is still pending. And so
the wizard of id kicks off his latest with ''Kill You,'' a little ditty
about wanting to rape his mom, confiding to her and any woman who happens
along: ''You ain't nothin' but a slut to me/ Bitch I'm'a kill you.''
''The Marshall Mathers LP'' is indefensible and critic-proof, hypocritical
and heartbreaking, unlistenable and undeniable; it's a disposable shock-rap
session, and the first great pop record of the 21st century. It plays
to a culture obsessed with celebrity gossip and talk-show voyeurism at
the same time it rails against that culture. It is, one predicts, going
to sell like penny lemonade on a hot day.
On ''Slim Shady,'' Eminem got mileage from raps about impregnating Spice
Girls and assaulting Pamela Anderson. But Mathers was nobody then. Now,
his star-studded battle rhymes pack double the frisson. Celebs dissed
on ''Mathers'' include Christina Aguilera (she considered suing Mathers
over the salacious mention in the single ''The Real Slim Shady''), Britney
Spears, 'N Sync, Billboard editor in chief Timothy White (a harsh Eminem
critic), and Detroit rappers Insane Clown Posse (who now rival Vanilla
Ice as the most ridiculed rap act ever). There's also the bit where Mathers
tells Sean ''Puffy'' Combs about wanting to have unprotected sex with
Jennifer Lopez. Puff has already issued a press release, broadcast on
MTV, saying the two rappers talked about it and it's, y'know, cool. The
disses, the dutiful media response: They are both part of the same self-reflexive,
high-yield show.
But words ARE weapons, and when he's not denying his culpability as a
role model (which he does ad nauseum here), Eminem proves himself a peerless
rap poet with a profound understanding of the power of language. ''Stan,''
an epistolary exchange between the artist and a dangerously obsessive
fan, may be the most moving song about star worship ever recorded. And
''Kim,'' a prequel to '''97 Bonnie and Clyde,'' is a shout-rapped enactment
of domestic violence so real it chills.
Indeed, ''Stan'' and ''Kim'' blaze significant new ground for rap. ''I'm
Back'' pointedly interrogates his own success (''Became a commodity/ 'Cause
I'm W-H-I-T-E''). And Dr. Dre's production on ''Mathers'' refines the
state of the art in funky, minimalist hip-hop beatmaking. But like rifling
through cable channels with your thumb on the remote, it's tough to appreciate
the pearls amidst the swine. For many, the bilious spew of ''bitches,''
''sluts,'' and ''faggots'' will render the record's achievements invisible
and irrelevent -- despite Mathers' disingenuous public disclaimers that
he doesn't have a problem with women and doesn't hate gay people.
In the end, it's impossible to separate the art from the ugliness, the
hilarity from the viciousness, or the ''realness'' from the calculation.
''The Marshall Mathers LP'' is a fun-house mirror held up to an artist's
pain, anger, and selfish ambition, as well as to the three-ring media
circus in which we live. And it's beyond one-shot grading. Media savvy:
A+ Moral responsibility: D+ Overall artistry: A-
-- Will Hermes

---- http://www.shadyfactory.cjb.net
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