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Eminem, (born Marshall Bruce Mathers III on October 17, 1972), is one of today’s most popular and controversial rappers. His first album, entitled Infinite was fairly well received after its release. Before releasing the album, Eminem had already produced many underground tracks, which spanned multiple mix-tapes. Eminem’s early work focused mostly on his experiences with drugs and being bullied. He was heavily involved in the underground freestyle circuit, competing and winning multiple competitions. In February of 1999, after earning recognition and becoming part of the mainstream rap-scene, he released The Slim Shady LP. The album sold 283,000 copies its first week. To date, the album has been certified 4x Platinum.
In May 2000 he released The Marshall Mathers LP, and the first single released from it (The Real Slim Shady) It was an enormously popular hit. During the first week after its release, it sold 1,760,049 copies, becoming the fastest-selling rap album in history, more than doubling the previous record held by Snoop Dogg’s 1993 debut, Doggystyle. Other singles from the album include ‘The Way I Am’ and ‘Stan’.
In 2002 he released The Eminem Show, in 2004 Encore and in 2005 Curtain Call: The Hits. His latest album, Relapse, was released May 19th, 2009.
Eminem also has his own record label, Shady Records (a sublabel of Aftermath Records), 50 Cent is signed to his record label on a joint venture between Dr. Dre’s Aftermath and Eminem’s Shady Records.
|Not only does he produce and write music, but he also starred in his own movie based on his own experiences growing up in Detroit. It is entitled 8 Mile. As well as this, he is a member of the rap group called D12 (Dirty Dozen) consisting of himself, Swifty McVay, Kon Artis, Kuniva, Bizarre, and the late Proof.
In 2005, speculation began that he was retiring from the music industry when his next album was rumoured to be called The Funeral. In December 2005 he released Curtain Call: The Hits, and told MTV that he was not ending his music career, merely putting it on hold for a while, not knowing when, or indeed if he would release another album.
He has released an album under his Shady Records called ‘The Re-Up’, a Shady Records compilation.
Eminem, after putting his career on hold for about three years, recently in 2009 launched The Relapse. He stated that Relapse 2 is coming later in same year.
A few tracks from his upcoming album have leaked over the web. The most popular of them being Crack A Bottle which topped charts in the US.
He has won 9 Grammys to date and an Academy Award for “Lose Yourself.”
His name, Eminem, are his initials M&M (Marshall Mathers).

|This is from the biography from www.eminembase.com :
A protégé of Dr. Dre, rapper Eminem emerged in 1999 as one of the most controversial rappers to ever grace the genre. Using his biting wit and incredible skills to vent on everything from his unhappy childhood to his contempt for the mainstream media, his success became the biggest crossover success the genre had seen since Dre’s solo debut seven years earlier. The controversy over his lyrics was the best publicity any musician could afford, and being the first Caucasian rapper to make a significant impact in years may have given him a platform not afforded to equally talented African-American rappers. A gifted producer as well, his talents always seemed overshadowed by his media presence, which was a mix between misunderstood genius and misogynistic homophobe. Both may be true, but his message spoke to legions of disaffected youth who had few role models in the rap world who could relate to the white lower-class experience.
He was born Marshall Mathers in St. Joseph, MO (near Kansas City), spending the better part of his impoverished childhood shuttling back and forth between his hometown and the city of Detroit. Initially attracted to rap as a teen, Eminem began performing at age 14, performing raps in the basement of his high school friend’s home. The two went under the names Manix and M&M (soon changed to Eminem), which Mathers took from his own initials. Due to the unavoidable racial boundaries that came with being a white rapper, he decided the easiest way to win over underground hip-hop audiences was to become a battle rapper and improv against other MCs in clubs. Although he wasn’t immediately accepted, through time he became such a popular attraction that people would challenge him just to make a name for themselves.
His uncle’s suicide prompted a brief exodus from the world of rap, but he returned and found himself courted by several other rappers to start groups. He first joined the New Jacks, and then moved on to Soul Intent, who released Eminem’s first recorded single in 1995. A rapper named Proof performed the B-side on the single and enjoyed working with Eminem so much that he asked him to start yet another group. Drafting in a few other friends, the group became known as D-12, a six-member crew that supported one another as solo artists more than they collaborated. The birth of Eminem’s first child put his career on hold again as he started working in order to care for his family. This also instilled a bitterness that started to creep into his lyrics as he began to drag personal experiences into the open and make them the topic of his raps.
A debut record, 1996’s Infinite, broke his artistic rut but received few good reviews, as comparisons to Nas and AZ came unfavorably. Undaunted, he downplayed many of the positive messages he had been including in his raps and created Slim Shady, an alter ego who was unafraid to say whatever he felt. Tapping into his innermost feelings, he had a bounty of material to work with when his mother was accused of mentally and physically abusing his younger brother the same year. The next year his girlfriend left him and barred him from visiting their child, so he was forced to move back in with his mother, an experience that fueled his hatred toward her and made him even more sympathetic toward his brother. The material he was writing was uncharacteristically dark as he began to abuse drugs and alcohol at a more frequent rate. An unsuccessful suicide attempt was the last straw, as he realized his musical ambitions were the only way to escape his unhappy life. He released the brutal Slim Shady EP, a mean-spirited, funny, and thought-provoking record that was light years ahead of the material he had been writing beforehand. Making quite the impression in the underground not only for his exaggerated, nasal-voiced rapping style but also for his skin color, many quarters dubbed him the music’s next “great white hope.”
According to legend, Dr. Dre discovered his demo tape on the floor of Interscope label chief Jimmy Iovine’s garage, but the reality was that Eminem took second place in the freestyle category at 1997’s Rap Olympics MC Battle in Los Angeles and Iovine approached the rapper for a tape afterward. It wasn’t until a month or two later that he played the tape for an enthusiastic Dre, who eagerly contacted Eminem. Upon meeting, Dre was taken back by his skin color more than his skill, but within the first hour they had already started recording “My Name Is.” Dre agreed to produce his first album and the two released “Just Don’t Give a Fuck” as a single to preview the new album. A reconciliation with his girlfriend led to the two getting married in the fall of 1998, and Interscope signed the rapper and prepared to give him a massive push on Dre’s advice. An appearance on Kid Rock’s Devil Without a Cause only helped the buzz that was slowly surrounding him.
The best-selling Slim Shady LP followed in early 1999, scoring a massive hit with the single and video “My Name Is,” plus a popular follow-up in “Guilty Conscience”; over the next year, the album went triple platinum. With such wide exposure, controversy ensued over the album’s content, with some harshly criticizing its cartoon-ish, graphic violence; others praised its edginess and surreal humor, as well as Eminem’s own undeniable lyrical skills and Dre’s inventive production. In between albums, Eminem appeared on Dre’s 2001, with his contributions providing some of the record’s liveliest moments.
The Marshall Mathers LP appeared in the summer of 2000, moving close to two million copies in its first week of release on its way to becoming the fastest-selling rap album of all time. Unfortunately, this success also bred more controversy, and no other musician was better suited for it than Eminem. Among the incidents that occurred included a scuffle with Insane Clown Posse’s employees in a car stereo shop, a bitter battle with pop star Christina Aguilera over a lyric about her fictional sexual exploits, a lawsuit from his mother over defamation of character, and an attack on a Detroit club goer after Eminem allegedly witnessed the man kissing his wife. Fans ate it up as his album stood strong at the top of the charts. But the mainstream media was not so enamored, as accusations of homophobia and sexism sprung from the inflammatory lyrics in the songs “Kill You” and “Kim.” It was this last song that ended his marriage, as the song’s chosen topic (violently murdering his real life wife Kim Mathers) drove his spouse to a suicide attempt before they divorced. Eminem toured throughout most of this, settling several of his court cases and engaging a mini-feud with rapper Everlast.
The annual Grammy Awards nominated the album for several awards, and to silence his critics the rapper called on Elton John to duet with him at the ceremony. In 2001, he teamed with several of his old Detroit running buddies and re-formed D-12. Releasing an album with the group, Eminem hit the road with them that summer and tried to ignore the efforts of his mother, who released an album in retaliation to his comments. After getting off of the road, he stepped in front of the camera and filmed 8 Mile, a film loosely based on his life directed by an unlikely fan, Curtis Hanson (Wonder Boys). His constant media exposure died out as well, leaving him time to work on new music.
When he re-emerged in 2002, he splashed onto the scene with “Without Me,” a single that attacked Moby and Limp Bizkit and celebrated his return to music. Surprisingly, the following album, The Eminem Show, inspired little controversy. Instead, the popular second single, “Cleanin’ Out My Closet,” told of his dysfunctional childhood and explained his hatred toward his mother in a mannered, poignant fashion. And being Eminem, he followed this up with an appearance at MTV’s Video Music Awards that inspired boos when he verbally assaulted Moby. Targets on his third straight chart-topper, 2004’s Encore, ranged from Michael Jackson (“Just Lose It”) to war-hungry politicians (“Mosh”). The album was another smash hit for Eminem, but the resulting touring was fraught with setbacks and controversy. First there was a bus crash in Missouri that injured protégé Stat Quo. Then there were reports of the tour being under-attended. There were also rumors of Eminem retiring, which he quickly quelled. However, the tour’s European leg was eventually canceled due to “exhaustion,” and Em entered rehab for a dependency on sleeping pills. However, by the end of 2005 he was back with a new video. In typical Eminem fashion, the clip for “When I’m Gone” riffed on his recent rehab stay. He also issued a chart-topping greatest-hits set, Curtain Call: The Hits, that December.
The year 2006 was a turbulent one. Mathers remarried Kim on January 14, 2006, but the couple filed for divorce in April. Also in April, D-12 member Proof, Mathers’ best friend, was killed in a shooting at a Detroit nightclub. In August, Eminem resurfaced as producer on Obie Trice’s Second Round’s on Me and in October he was rapping on Akon’s hit single “Smack That.” He capped the year off with Eminem Presents: The Re-Up, a mixtape featuring artists from his Shady label. ~ Jason Ankeny & Bradley Torreano, All Music Guide
In September 2007, Eminem called into New York radio station Hot 97 during a 50 Cent interview and said he was “in limbo” and “debating” about when and if he would release another album. He said, “I’m always working — I’m always in the studio. It feels good right now, the energy of the label. For a while, I didn’t want to go back to the studio … I went through some personal things. I’m coming out of those personal things it feels good.
Eminem made an appearance on his Sirius channel Shade 45 in September 2008 in which he said, “Right now I’m kinda just concentrating on my own stuff, for right now and just banging out tracks and producing a lot of stuff. You know, the more I keep producing the better it seems like I get ‘cause I just start knowing stuff.”It was around this time that Interscope finally confirmed the existence of a new Eminem album, with Spring 2009 later being stated as the period span in which the album is due.In December 2008, he gave more details on the album, which he recently reported was being titled Relapse. He said, “Me and Dre are back in the lab like the old days, man. 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.”
On March 5, 2009, Eminem reported in a press release that he would be releasing two new albums this year. Relapse, the first album, was released on May 19, while “We Made You”, the first official single and its music video, were released on April 7. On October 3, 2009, Eminem appeared once again on Shade 45 with DJ Whoo Kid and announced that Denaun Porter and Just Blaze were very busy working on Relapse 2. On October 30, Eminem performed at the Voodoo Music Experience in New Orleans as a headliner in his first full performance in 2009. The performance included several songs from Relapse, as well as many of Eminem’s older hits and an appearance by D12.
On November 19, 2009, Eminem announced on his website that Relapse: Refill will be released on December 21st. The album will be a re-release of the Relapse album with 7 bonus tracks, including “Forever” and “Taking My Ball”. In a statement he described the forthcoming CD:
“I want to deliver more material for the fans this year like I originally planned…Hopefully these tracks on The Refill will tide the fans over until we put out Relapse 2 next year…I got back in with Dre and then a few more producers, including Just Blaze, and went in a completely different direction which made me start from scratch. The new tracks started to sound very different than the tracks I originally intended to be on Relapse 2, but I still want the other stuff to be heard.”
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