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Friday, August 31, 2012

Jay-Z Talks About Eminem

 

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Michael Jackson Talks about Eminem

 

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Slaughterhouse Says Eminem Was "Big Difference"

 

Exclusive: Joe Budden and Crooked I chart the group's growth and evolution three years later, and explain some of the key moments and ingredients in their Shady Records debut, "welcome to: Our House."
“We’re an alliance,” Royce Da 5’9 announces to a crowd of Slaughterhouse fans in Los Angeles, California’s El Rey Theatre. “We a outfit equivalent to Voltron’s,” he continues as “Sound Off’s” horns blast and audience members scream along to every word. He stands alone, momentarily, rhyming slowly until his pace picks up. Soon every member of Slaughterhouse joins him. First Joell Ortiz, then Crooked I and finally Joe Budden. This is Slaughterhouse. This is the alliance. This is Rap’s Voltron.
After overcoming obstacles as solo artists on different journeys, their paths met. Along with Nino Bless, these four emcees blessed a track and they titled it “Slaughterhouse.” It seemed like a one-off at first, a posse cut to be debated in barbershops, blocks and boards. Who had the best verse? But eventually, it was clear that the song was much more than that. It became the start of a group for these four emcees. It became this alliance, one as menacing as their name and as lyrical as their pasts might suggest. Critical acclaim followed as the group released an independent group project. Then, the video came.
There they stood. Eminem, on his song with Drake, Kanye West and Lil Wayne, chose to stand alongside a different set of emcees. He chose Slaughterhouse. His longtime friend-turned-foe-turned-friend Royce was right behind him. Crooked, Joe and Joell were right beside him. The smoke in that video became fire in a Shady Records deal for the group, forming Shady 2.0 along with Yelawolf. Then came the wait.
Slaughterhouse’s Shady debut was heavily anticipated. With Eminem’s backing, fans were curious and excited about what the outcome would be. Their first album, the independent project, was such a well received LP that expectations for their Shady record were through the roof. Then, this week, welcome to: Our House finally came.  
In this interview with HipHopDX, Crooked I and Joe Budden speak about the group’s camaraderie, Eminem’s contributions to their album, success, failure, “Truth or Truth” and “Goodbye.” They also discuss welcome to: Our House, their personalities and the importance of rhyming about their personal lives.

Slaughterhouse On Eminem’s Contributions, The Group’s Bond & Being Labeled In Rap  

DX: What elements do you feel this album has that the first album didn’t and what would you attribute that difference to?
Crooked I: Well, I can think of one element that’s different: Eminem. [Laughing] Yeah, that’s a very different element on this album. He had some influence on certain material. He arranged, he mixed and he was featured. That was a big difference between the first and the last album. Other than that, he was like, “Yo, I fell in love with the first project. Go and do what y’all do.”
DX: What about in the dynamics of the group? I know you all have become greater friends since the first. How has that camaraderie contributed to the recording process?
Joe Budden: I think the camaraderie is something that continues to get better as time passes, every day. While our chemistry was good the first go around – we did that album in six days – this time, I think the best way to say this is that the chemistry probably reflects the music a little more. That’s because we were allotted more time to let that show.
DX: When we spoke about the first Slaughterhouse album, Royce Da 5'9 said you wanted to address the boxes that people had placed you all in. With this album, what was the concern that you all had while discussing the direction of the album, if any?
Joe Budden: Nothing particularly. No, I think all of us just went in there and put our best foot forward. Then that Slaughterhouse music just started to come through naturally, organically. It was a cerebral process but we lent no thought to how we should be marketed or how we should be promoted or making a single or making a “girl” record. We didn’t play into any of that. There are a million roughs of records we started because we went there in like a machine, day in and day out, for weeks and weeks and weeks at a time in Detroit. Nah. Nobody thought about all of that. We just went in there, vibed out and zoned. Fortunately, for all parties involved, good music came out of it.

Slaughterhouse On “welcome to: Our House,” “Goodbye,” & Personal Lyrics Behind “Truth Or Truth”

DX: Joe Budden says, “Failure is not an option,” on “We did it.” Recently, we spoke with Crooked Iabout how success is different for everyone. How would you define success and failure with this album? 
Joe Budden: I’m the first one to say that success is self-determined. If the album comes out and it sells one copy, that’s really not my concern because we went in there and we made the best possible music that we were able to make. Whoever enjoys it, that’s great. I appreciate it. Whoever doesn’t, in my opinion, you’d be depriving yourself but you could feel totally different. The music is great.
Crooked I: I second that emotion. It’s like being in a barbershop and a dude walking up to you to say, “That ‘Flip a Bird’ joint is tough.” That’s a success to me. I feel like somebody appreciates what we’re putting in. That’s that. For me, personally, in my personal career, it’s been hard for me to get to that shelf. I’ve had several record deals. There was always something that went wrong in the process between me making music and actually putting it out. So, with the product being on the shelf, hey, that’s a success.
DX: On “Goodbye,” all of the emcees discuss very personal and yet very relatable topics. How did that song come together and how did you all respond to each other’s verses when you heard them? 
Joe Budden: I was blown away. I’m always blown away by things that these guys do.
Crooked I: Man! With “Goodbye,” which is probably my favorite song on the album, Joe [Budden] just went in there and laid it down. He set the tone. We was out here in L.A. at my studio. Boi1da came through with a crazy ass beat. Joe walked in the booth and the rest is history. We had to vibe off of what he was doing. His shit was so authentic and real, there was nothing we could do but follow it up in our own ways. You know?
DX: Is there ever a topic that is too personal to touch on a record?
Crooked I: For me, it used to be that several topics I used to be embarrassed to discuss. I grew up below the poverty line at times. Certain things I would be ashamed to talk about when I was a young emcee. You know? But when Tupac made “Dear Mama,” and exposed that his moms was hooked on crack at some point, me looking up to him and being inspired by him, I thought, “If we could be open enough to say that, I should never be afraid to say anything about anything that goes on in my personal life. Good or bad.”
DX: Joe, how about you?
Joe Budden: Hell no! Nah. The more personal, the better for me. Listen, if my dick is itching, I’ll rap about it. That’s just me though.
DX: Where do you feel that candid honesty comes from?
Joe Budden: I mean, I’m comfortable with me. That’s really the bottom line. I’m not really about what anybody else has to say or think about my life or the way I live it. When you operate like that, shit just comes easy. I don’t know if that’s a testament to honesty or security or comfort. I don’t know what to attribute it to but I’ll take it.
DX: Is that why you talk about being so proud of your son when he came up to you and said, “I’m weird” on “Truth or Truth?”
Joe Budden: Hell yeah! Hell yeah. Fuckin’ right! That wasn’t something like…I wasn’t privileged enough to be there every step of the way of my little guy growing up. But even if I was, that’s probably not something that I would have tried to give him so early on. He freestyled that shit to me. He caught me by total-total-total surprise. It was just like…It was an ill moment for me.
DX: It sounds like it was a proud moment too.
Joe Budden: Yeah, easily. It was easily one of my most proud moments.

Slaughterhouse On Learning From One Another, “Throw It Away,” “Our Way” & Emotions In Music

DX: What would you all say you’ve learned from watching each other now that you guys are friends?
Crooked I: I learn from them guys all the time, man.
Joe Budden: Word.
Crooked I: I just think a good artist, or human being period, has to learn something every day. The day you stop learning, I feel sorry for you. To be put into an environment around three genius artists, in my opinion, there’s so much you soak up and I soak it all up. It’s too much to even name and some of the stuff I’m learning without even knowing I’m learning.
Joe Budden: I learn entirely too much from those guys. I’m constantly learning.
DX: I recently asked Crooked I when he realized that [Slaughterhouse] was more than a Rap group and more like a family. But I was interested in the other members and when the moment came where you realized this was deeper than just a Rap crew, that it was more of a friendship.
Joe Budden: This was a long time ago. This was in 2008-2009. I figured that out early in the game for me. No one thing [made that happen]. It was a combination of things. But it was quite a few things and those things are still on display today.
DX: Songs like “Frat House,” “My Life,” “Throw it Away” and even “Our Way” sound like celebratory cuts. What do you attribute that to?  
Joe Budden: I attribute all the music on the album to whatever the overall mood of ours was at the time. If we were in the studio and we had one big party because we felt like we had finally got one step closer to whatever our ultimate goal is so we felt like celebrating, then we celebrated, we reminisced. We told war stories. We talked about four different brothers’ unique paths to get where we are today, all against the odds. But yeah, if it sounds like we were celebrating, it’s probably because we were celebrating some shit.
Crooked I: Yeah, if I went to the strip club that night in Detroit, then I might have a verse for “Throw it Away” ready. You know? But a good project in Hip Hop, as a fan of Hip Hop, not even as an artist, a good project should always respect the daily moods: happiness, anger, sadness. As long as you can feel every emotion on that album, the job has been done. If you could celebrate to “Throw it Away” and“My Life,” you could reflect on “Goodbye” and “Other Side,” you could understand what we go through on “Our House,” it’s a roller coaster of emotions. That’s what I want out of an album and I feel like that’s what we delivered.
DX: What would you say has been the most surprising aspect of your fellow group members?
Crooked I: Joell [Ortiz] could do stand-up. He’s hilarious. [Laughing] He can control a crowd like a mothafucka too, without even rapping. Royce [Da 5'9] is very technical. He’s very, very technical in the studio. He can take a song from one level to a whole ‘nother level without even rapping, just with his ideas. With Joey, one thing I’ve admired about him since we started this group, has been his openness and honesty, like we just talked about. If he’s on stage and feels a certain way, he’ll let the crowd know or even conducting an interview. So, these guys are definitely people to learn from, artists to learn from. It’s been a dope ride, man. If Slaughterhouse broke up tomorrow, it’s still Slaughterhouse forever on mine. I got the ink in my skin and it ain’t going nowhere, man. I’m Slaughter for lif
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Thursday, August 30, 2012

Eminem Talks New Album 2012, Confirms Dr. Dre Collaboration

 
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NEW (REMIX )2012 - Eminem - "Can't Hold Me Back" Feat. Lupe Fiasco & Lil Wayne *HOT*

 
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NEW 2012 - Eminem - "Black Star" Feat. T.I. *HOT*

 



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P!Nk Confirms Duet With Eminem

 




It's no secret that they've have had their squabbles in the past, but P!nk andEminem have made peace - and have even recorded a tune together.
The 32-year-old "So What" singer revealed that she and the "Love the Way You Lie" hitmaker teamed up on "a club banger" titled "Here Comes the Weekend," which may eventually be released as a single from The Truth About Love.
Talking with Australia's Herald Sun, P!nk dished, "He said, 'Do you want to do a song with me?' '[Bleep] yeah!' I said, 'Do you want to do a song with me?' and he said, '[Bleep] yeah!' Handshake. Nothing signed. Done."
Meanwhile, P!nk is among those set to perform at the iHeartRadio Music Festival in Vegas this September. Hear what she had to say about performing in Vegas and her new music in teh player below via 610 WIOD!
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Eminem - Love the Way you lie ft.Rihanna

 
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Eminem - 8 Mile

 
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Eminem Not Dead – Rapper Battles Fake Death Story, Again

 

Eminem Not Dead Rapper Battles Fake Death Story, Again

LOS ANGELES (LALATE) – Eminem is not dead. Eminem is battling a fake death report today featuring a fictitious hospital. The story, moreover, erroneously claims to have been authored by a reporter from a cable news network. This is, however, not the first time that the rapper has battled fake death reports in the last three years.
Currently, there are roughly a handful of erroneous death reports online striking the rapper. At least one of them originated from Global Associated aka Mediafetcher. In that report, the site erroneously claims that the rapper died “from a waverunner crash in Turks and Caicos.” Fake jet-ski crash stories are not new for Global which has previously used the same to kill off other rappers like Lil Wayne and 50 Cent.
This fake Global report, however, claims a peculiar crash. “Preliminary reports from Turks and Caicos Police officials indicate that the musician struck a concrete boat slip in a marina on Parrot Cay in the Turks and Caicos Islands” claims the fake Global report.
Beside Global, however, another fake report is prompting confusion today. Global Daily erroneously claimed two days ago on July 24 that Eminem died in Los Angeles (and apparently Palo Alto simultaneously). While the article’s title claims the rapper died in “Los Angeles”, the article’s body claims he died inside “Palo Alto Memorial Hospital”. While the geography makes no sense, the hospital’s name is also problematic. There is no such “Palo Alto Memorial Hospital”, located in Palo Alto or Los Angeles.
Today is not the first time that the rapper has battled fake death reports. In August 2009, the rapper battled a fake death story. Months later, on December 25, 2009, a fake car crash report published online featured the musician with a dubious “Route 80″ tale from Global.
Eminem is not dead, nor is Wiz Khalifa, Mac Miller, or Waka Flocka.
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EXCLUSIVE: Mom Says Eminem Was Shy Boy

 

Although her son has called her a horrible mother who drank and took drugs and deserves to burn in hell, rapper Eminem's mother doesn't take it to heart.
"He's got a persona to live up to, an image," his mother, Debbie Nelson, told Primetime's Jay Schadler.
Nelson says that she doesn't take her son's rage-filled lyrics literally. Even when he sings, "You selfish bitch, I hope you f---ing burn in hell for this s--t," she says it doesn't bother her. "That's just artistic expression," she said. "He's very sad on the inside. He is hurting a lot. And I can see it. I can see through my son. I know him like the back of my hand."
Her son's violent, resentful lyrics have also been good for his record sales, Nelson says. "The minute you start becoming destuctive and being different — you know, kill your mother, rape this one and kill that one — I mean, people love it. The more he went in that direction, I mean, he was selling just like crazy. I mean, everybody wanted more."
Nelson, who brought a $10 million defamation lawsuit against her son in 1999 but ended up settling out of court for a few thousand dollars, said she is sure he still loves her. Part of the reason he continues to say horrible things about her in his music, she said, is commercial: "He's got everybody else pulling him in different direction: managers, different people, telling him what to say. And money is power, you know."
Tough Times, But No Drugs or Alcohol, Mom Says
Nelson was just 17 when Eminem, whose real name is Marshall Mathers, was born. She admits the family went through some tough times. By the time Marshall was 2, she fled an abusive marriage and started a tough life as a single mother. "We'd get into homes, fix it up and they'd sell it out from under us, so it was kind of tough," she said. "I went from paycheck to paycheck."
But Nelson denies that she was the kind of mother depicted in her son's music. He has accused her in his lyrics of being an alcoholic, smoking marijuana and abusing prescription drugs — all of which she denies. "None of that is true," she said.
Eminem's reputation as a rapper is built around his raw depiction of grim realities in his life, including what he says was a difficult childhood with a bad mother. Nelson stops short of calling her son a liar, but insists that what she says is true. "That is what I'm saying, but I don't want to call him a fake," she said.
The rapper declined Primetime's request for an interview and chose not to respond to his mother's comments.
Nelson has said in the past that she is an excellent mother, but she conceded to Primetime that she would give herself only nine points out of ten as a mother, "because no one is perfect." In 1996, the Michigan Department of Social Services alleged that Nelson "exhibits ... almost paranoid personality" and accused her of abusing Marshall's younger brother, Nathan. He was temporarily removed from her custody but eventually returned under state supervision.
Says Eminem Was a 'Momma's Boy'
Nelson says her son was a shy, imaginitive boy when he was little, who loved play-acting at home and dressing up as Batman and Robin. "He was a Momma's boy. He always wanted to be with Mommy," she said.
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Exclusive: Eminem Talks New Album, Book

 


Eminem has revealed details of his long-awaited new album, "Relapse," in an exclusive interview with Billboard, conducted via email. The set is due next spring from Shady/Interscope.

Eminem is working on "Relapse" with longtime collaborator Dr. Dre, who put his own album, "Detox," on the backburner to help bring the project to completion.


"Me and Dre are back in the lab like the old days, man," Eminem says. "Just him banging away on tracks and me getting that little spark that makes me write to it. I don't have chemistry like that with anyone else as far as producers go -- not even close. Dre will end up producing the majority of the tracks on Relapse.' We are up to our old mischievous ways ... let's just leave it at that."


A handful of songs intended for "Relapse" have leaked online, most recently "Crack a Bottle," leaving Eminem "really heated. It wasn't close to finished, and it even has me doing guide vocals for Dre as a suggestion of how he could lay his verses down. It's like someone catches you peeping in your window before you got the Spider Man costume all zipped up! Nobody is supposed to see that. We are gonna finish it up though and get it out there how it's supposed to be."


Eminem also responded to producer Swizz Beats' recent comment that he'd submitted a track for the project described as a sequel to the hit single "Stan," telling Billboard, "I haven't worked with Swizz on this album.


"There isn't a 'Stan 2,' and there won't be," he says. "Stan drove his car off a bridge and I'm not writing a song as Stan's ghost. That would just be really corny."


While working on "Relapse," Eminem was also writing his autobiography, "The Way I Am," with Sacha Jenkins. The book has received favorable reviews and has spent time in the top 20 of the New York Times hardcover nonfiction best-sellers list.


"For me, writing an album is an entirely different process from making this book," he says. "The album requires a certain focus of mine that I can't really explain -- let's just say it's all I can really do while I'm doing it. With the book, the process was much more spread out, like, 'Let's get you together with Sacha for a few hours next week. Let's go thru these photos and artwork, etc.' The book was a lot more of a focus here-and-there thing as opposed to music, which totally consumes me every second."


Eminem goes into great detail in "The Way I Am" about how much he was impacted by the 2006 shooting death of fellow Detroit rapper Proof, who was one of his best friends.


"Opening the book with Proof's chapter was real important for me," Eminem says. "Everything from my past moving into my future is marked by his passing. It's sort of like life when Proof was with us, and life after -- a real dividing factor. He means more to me than a book chapter could describe, but I'm glad I was able to put him first, like he did for me so many times."


As for Shady Records' 2009 roster, Eminem says 50 Cent's delayed "Before I Self Destruct" will be out in February. "He's still working on it and getting back together with me and Dre next week to finish up," he says. "I have a couple of tracks on there with him. It's sick."


Afterward, Ca$his will release the follow-up to his 2007 "County Hound EP." Says Eminem, "People are going to be surprised what he is capable of. I produced a bunch of records on there as well."


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LeBron James raps along to Eminem's "The Way I Am"

 





MIAMI -- NBA MVP LeBron James got into the mood for Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals against the BostonCeltics by rapping along to Eminem's 2000 hit "The Way I Am" in the Miami Heat's locker room.

If you're into the psychoanalysis thing, the verse in question happens to have a decidedly anti-media vibe. James has received criticism during the series for his lackluster play in the fourth quarter of a Game 5 loss but then stormed back to put together a 45-point performance in a Game 6 win at TD Garden to avoid elimination. Following Game 6, James promised that he "[wouldn't] regret" his Game 7 performance "win, lose or draw."

Here are the lyrics that James was rapping.

"Sometimes I just feel like my father, I hate to be bothered
With all of this nonsense it's constant
And, "Oh, it's his lyrical content -
- the song 'Guilty Conscience' has gotten such rotten responses"
And all of this controversy circles me
And it seems like the media immediately
Points a finger at me (finger at me)...
So I point one back at 'em, but not the index or pinkie
Or the ring or the thumb, it's the one you put up
When you don't give a [expletive], when you won't just put up
With the [expletive] they pull, 'cause they full of [expletive] too
When a dude's gettin bullied and shoots up his school
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Eminem more popular than Obama

 


Believe it or not, according to a latest survey, rapper Eminem is more popular than American president Barack Obama

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In what way? Well, a known social network aggregator recently conducted a survey about the world’s most popular celebrity ‘dad’. Eminem (who has a 16-year-old daughter and has adopted two girls) came out on top of the list, beating the likes of Barack Obama and Homer Simpson.
He is very popular with the younger lot and does things which make him endearing to them. A couple of weeks back, he actively promoted a Nintendo game.
There you go, he likes kids. Only if his songs are tad more intelligible to children !
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Eminem calls into BET's 106 & Park! ::

 
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Eminem Tributes Nate Dogg, Performs “Stan” And “Space Bound” At Osheaga

 

A last-minute cancellation by Kid Cudi didn’t stop the Osheaga Music Festival in Montreal from making quite a splash this weekend — a record-breaking 38,000 fans turned out to see Eminem yesterday at Montreal’s Parc Jean-Drapeau, where they were treated to an hour-and-a-half set of MTV Video Music Award nominee’s greatest hits. The“Lighters” rapper also took a moment to pay homage to Nate Dogg, the Grammy-nominated G-funk crooner who died of a strokein March. Catch this tribute and Em’s performances of “Stan,” “Airplanes,” and the live-on-stage debut of “Space Bound” below









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