Eminem performs at the Youtube Music Awards on Sunday
Photo: Jeff Kravitz/ FilmMagic
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Eminem has lived and
died by division. Some people love his verbal Molotov cocktails, which
have set fire to everyone from his friends and family to B-list
celebrities and anyone else he sees fit to lyrically destroy over the
past 14 years.
Others find him reductive, repetitive, mired in his own misery and not
immune to bouts of homophobia and sexism.
Those opposite ends of the spectrum pop up time-and-again in reviews of Em's The Marshall Mathers LP 2
,
the sequel to his landmark 2000 smash. While reviewers can't help but
give him props for the intense speed flow on "Rap God," they also can't
help but get tripped up by the use of anti-gay slurs on that song and
others on the album.
A number were happy to see him reunite with
Rihanna for "The Monster," but a bit disappointed at how little new
ground the duo's latest collabo covers. Ditto for Kendrick Lamar's verse
on "Love Game," the only rap
feature on the collection. And while Rick
Rubin's hard-rock goosing of "Berzerk" drew hails from some critics, a
few tagged it as one of several songs on the album that are propped up
on classic rock samples that feel dated.
What's clear is that
Eminem still has the power to divide, delight and destroy his enemies,
spiking his songs with clever wordplay undiminished dexterity and a
sharp ear for a pop hook. Here's a roundup of what critics are saying:
Eminem - "Berzerk (Explicit)"
Machine-Gun Verbal Spray
Calling the album the "hip-hop version of a classic-rock album," the Chicago Tribune said MMLP2 encapsulates "all that was good, bad and just plain tasteless about hip-hop's middle-age prankster 13 years ago," when the first volume came out. On the upside, the new effort rekindles Em's "ink-black humor and bruising swagger" and "reaffirms his prodigious ability with rhymes" as he "crunches together syllables, silliness and storytelling flights of ridiculousness with acrobatic skill."
Calling the album the "hip-hop version of a classic-rock album," the Chicago Tribune said MMLP2 encapsulates "all that was good, bad and just plain tasteless about hip-hop's middle-age prankster 13 years ago," when the first volume came out. On the upside, the new effort rekindles Em's "ink-black humor and bruising swagger" and "reaffirms his prodigious ability with rhymes" as he "crunches together syllables, silliness and storytelling flights of ridiculousness with acrobatic skill."
On the downside, it also,
"revives some of his worst traits as a world-be provocateur." In
particular, the paper alludes to the dated cultural references and
gay-bashing in "Rap God," which it lauds for Marshall's precise,
"machine-gun" flow, but dings for put-downs that, "suggest an Andrew
Dice Clay stand-up routine, desperately trying to get a raise out of
someone, anyone." — Greg Kot, Chicago Tribune
All Hail Pop Music's 'Antihero Poet'
"The good news and not as good: Eminem meets expectations raised by naming his new album after the landmark he released in 2000 ... he recaptures the original release's wild, clever, emotional brilliance in a flurry of caustic, brazenly honest, rapid-fire rhymes and aggressive beats." On the downside for one of rap's formerly bravest visionaries, USA Today wrote, Eminem spends most of the album gazing into the past, "reworking old tricks and wading in nostalgia rather than forging a fresh path." The other good news is that he's "sharpened his tongue and his skill set." — Edna Gundersen, USA Today
"The good news and not as good: Eminem meets expectations raised by naming his new album after the landmark he released in 2000 ... he recaptures the original release's wild, clever, emotional brilliance in a flurry of caustic, brazenly honest, rapid-fire rhymes and aggressive beats." On the downside for one of rap's formerly bravest visionaries, USA Today wrote, Eminem spends most of the album gazing into the past, "reworking old tricks and wading in nostalgia rather than forging a fresh path." The other good news is that he's "sharpened his tongue and his skill set." — Edna Gundersen, USA Today
Eminem - "Survival (Explicit)"
Marshall Versus The World
"He's also rightly considered a rap great for his technical prowess, wicked humor, and tenaciousness ... As
"He's also rightly considered a rap great for his technical prowess, wicked humor, and tenaciousness ... As
Marshall Versus The World
"He's also rightly considered a rap great for his technical prowess, wicked humor, and tenaciousness ... As
"He's also rightly considered a rap great for his technical prowess, wicked humor, and tenaciousness ... As
a rapper, he's virtually
untouchable. As a rager, he's right on many fans' levels. Which makes
his flashes of hatred for women and gay men all the more alarming. At
this point, though, his ultimate obsessions are with his disappointing
mother and absent father — and those he uses to abuse himself." Entertainment Weekly
said the 41-year-old MC works his "me-or-my-demons shell game more
furiously than ever" on the album, on "Bad Guy," where Stan's brother
kidnaps Em for revenge and he "recognizes that he's no better than the
bullies who damaged him." — Nick Catucci, Entertainment Weekly
Michael Phelps Of Rap
While Eminem shouts out 1990s names like Bill Clinton, Monica Lewinsky and Lorena Bobbitt on MMLP2, there are other rappers who share more emotion, tell better stories, have better hooks and are more relevant to today. "But if rapping were a purely athletic competition, Eminem would be Michael Phelps and Mary Lou Retton combined: pure agility and flexibility, like an unstoppable bullet with only white-hot hate in his wake. His flow only gets more baroque and knotty and Nutrageous with age: syllable-cramming, unnecessarily complicated assonance."
While Eminem shouts out 1990s names like Bill Clinton, Monica Lewinsky and Lorena Bobbitt on MMLP2, there are other rappers who share more emotion, tell better stories, have better hooks and are more relevant to today. "But if rapping were a purely athletic competition, Eminem would be Michael Phelps and Mary Lou Retton combined: pure agility and flexibility, like an unstoppable bullet with only white-hot hate in his wake. His flow only gets more baroque and knotty and Nutrageous with age: syllable-cramming, unnecessarily complicated assonance."
Though Spin found MMLP2
almost "completely devoid of actual content or actual emotion," the
site said Slim Shady still shows he has the skills to pay the bills on
the "weird, unlikely album." — Christopher R. Weingarten, SPIN
Slim Cranky Replaces Slim Shady
"Nostalgia is everywhere. Em surrounds himself in allusions to classic hip-hop, like the Beastie Boys samples producer Rick Rubin laces together on 'Berzerk.' It's telling that the only guest MC is Kendrick Lamar on 'Love Game,' probably because his slippery syllable-juggling owes a lot to Eminem ... Yet Em's former obsession — his own media image — has been replaced with a 41-year-old's cranky concerns ... He raps about how he can't figure out how to download Luda on his computer and waves the Nineties-geek flag with references to Jeffrey Dahmer and the Unabomber. He's playing his best character: the demon spawn of Trailer Hell, America, hitting middle age with his middle finger up his nose while he cleans off the Kool-Aid his kids spilled on the couch." — Jon Dolan, Rolling Stone
"Nostalgia is everywhere. Em surrounds himself in allusions to classic hip-hop, like the Beastie Boys samples producer Rick Rubin laces together on 'Berzerk.' It's telling that the only guest MC is Kendrick Lamar on 'Love Game,' probably because his slippery syllable-juggling owes a lot to Eminem ... Yet Em's former obsession — his own media image — has been replaced with a 41-year-old's cranky concerns ... He raps about how he can't figure out how to download Luda on his computer and waves the Nineties-geek flag with references to Jeffrey Dahmer and the Unabomber. He's playing his best character: the demon spawn of Trailer Hell, America, hitting middle age with his middle finger up his nose while he cleans off the Kool-Aid his kids spilled on the couch." — Jon Dolan, Rolling Stone
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