Eminemβs new album, βThe Marshall Mathers LP2β is basically the hip-hop version of a classic-rock album, taking us back to his old Slim Shady days.Β
Eminem emerged out of 90s Detroit spewing angry, comical, outrageous lyrics and building prodigious rap-rhyme skills that left his competition in a vapor trail. But, later albums revealed an apologetic MC battling addiction and creative inertia. βThe Marshall Mathers LP2β revives his raunchy humor and crass swagger while also worshiping wordplay.Β
Crunching scatterbrained stories, syllables and punchlines, Eminem takes absurdity to new heights. The best example of this is seen with the Rick-Rubin-produced track βBerzerk.β He plays off of Beastie Boy beats and an adolescent whine reminiscent of the MCβs early years. Rock, rap and chaos, with a touch of 80s nostalgia, makes βBerzerk,β well, worthy of its title.Β
βRap Godβ sums up the new-old Eminem. The melody is static and subdued to give way to angry, agitated lyrics. βLook, Iβve been a βrap godβ since Monica Lewinsky and Columbine made headlines…ββthe track piles on the pop culture references. That is if you can catch the lyrics with his machine-gun delivery.Β
He sparingly resorts to mysogynistic blows and gay-bashing, the type of borderline punchlines that made him a hip-hop villain you love and hate. He may spew a lot of hate, but I think itβs safe to say he reserves the greatest amount of malice and criticism for himself.Β
βEvil Twinβ is another testament to how time cannot heal all wounds. A six-minute rant, essentially, the track names Sarah Palin, Jessica Simpson, Jessica Alba, and plenty of other celebrities.Β
βSo whoβs left? Lady Gaga? Messed with the Bieber/ Nah, F with Christina, I ainβt [explective] with either Jessica neither/ Simpson or Alba, my albums just sicker than struck with the feverβ
There are countless allusions to the βold daysβ when Eminem was a screwed up kid from a broken home. Eminem tries to convince us that his βevil twinβ is responsible for all his anger and angstββEvil twin/ Here it comes again/ It controls my penββbefore acknowledging that there will always be a little Slim Shady in him.
The up-and-coming Eminem in 2000 had plenty of enemiesβwife, parents, pop stars, boy bands, anyone really. This time around, however, he admits that heβs running out of targets. So, he turns the blade inward. Questioning his relevance, calling his lines βboringβ and even mocking the crowβs feet around his eyes, despite his inability to grow up, he transforms into his own biggest target.
One of my favorite tracks, and one of the most surprising in terms of arrangements, βRhyme Or Reasonβ plays off of the Zombiesβ βTime of Season.β A seamless amalgam of a rock classic alongside Eminemβs singing and rapping makes for a combination that somehow works.Β
He rants about his daddy-issues, references Rick Rubin via a comical Yoda impression and declares that βThereβs no rhyme of no reason for nothing.β The hook asks βWhoβs your daddy,β Em answers, βI donβt have one/ My mother reproduced like a Komodo dragon.β
βLove Gameβ featuring Kendrick Lamar is another solid track, bringing back Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenderβs 60s hit, βGame of Love.β The melody is irresistably retro and catchy. Lamar and Eminem sing about the intricacies of love for a girl who is equally awful and irresistable. He dumped the girl because she was with Kanye, Lil Wayne and a whole roster of rappers, but Eminem and Lamar canβt seem to let her go.
Yes, most of the album hew to the stark beats and crass lyrics reminiscent of his early years. But, the tracks that lean on classic rock anthems and flip unexpected retro hooks are the most entertaining by far.Β
Eminem has always been a mess, and heβll probably always give us his fair share of rantsβwrinkles, retirement, denturesβfor as long as heβs still rapping. The MC already hit 40, but from what I can tell, heβs far from retirement.