And, keep in mind, he never released it.Innovation wrote:im2pac wrote:put it on WEE WEE
Yes, it's a stupid song, but it's actually decent lyrically. Contrary to popular believe, the song is not that poorly written.

And, keep in mind, he never released it.Innovation wrote:im2pac wrote:put it on WEE WEE
Yes, it's a stupid song, but it's actually decent lyrically. Contrary to popular believe, the song is not that poorly written.
Nollie wrote:And, keep in mind, he never released it.Innovation wrote:im2pac wrote:put it on WEE WEE
Yes, it's a stupid song, but it's actually decent lyrically. Contrary to popular believe, the song is not that poorly written.
Nollie wrote:I really think that lyrically, Em has done nothing but improved since day 1. Even if you hate his different flows and styles, his different topics, etc. The one thing Em has kept almost 100% consistent throughout his career is lyrical progression.
Honestly, there's no other rapper who can touch Em lyrically. If he's aiming for precision/on-point syllable compound -- making every multi rhyme for every bar of an entire verse, look at half of Relapse/Refill. Punchlines (which for some reason a lot of you hate) look at Recovery, admittedly, some of it is silly but a good portion of his punchlines and wordplay on that album is absolutely superb.
People think Em goes through flows/styles, then gets rid of them. I remember an interview he did late 2009/early 2010 talking about how he's gotten bored for the english language, so he's now trying to see how far he can bend words to make them rhyme (Relapse).
I think he's undoubtedly able to pull any of his old flows/styles/rhyme schemes out of his seemingly bottomless bag, but over the last 12 years or so, he's gotten bored. Hence why he goes through what we see as "phases". Since his comeback it was the accent, it was the regular voice, the slightly tuned up voice, the vocal tearing, the yelling, and now a hybrid between them all (maybe not the accent so much).
Not trying to sound like a Stan here, but as a fan of hiphop as a whole, Em is on a whole other level lyrically. Nobody has his diversity. And don't think for one second that he's not perfectly capable of going back and pulling out those old styles.
Innovation wrote:The ONLY Eminem album to have sub-par lyricism was Encore. Even then it had its highlights with Spend Some Time.
Nollie wrote:Innovation wrote:The ONLY Eminem album to have sub-par lyricism was Encore. Even then it had its highlights with Spend Some Time.
We done swam with the sharks, wrestled with alligators
Spoke to a generation of angry teenagers
Whom if it wasn't for rap to bridge the gap, may be raised to be racist
Who may have never got to see our faces
Grace the cover of Rolling Stone pages
Broke down barriers of language and races
+ Yellow Brick Road, Spend Some Time, Mosh, Never Enough, When I'm Gone, Ricky Ticky Toc, Like Toy Soldiers, Crazy In Love and We As Americans.
Relapse?M+M wrote:Infinite even though some of it is stringing words still long ass multis.
Nollie wrote:I really think that lyrically, Em has done nothing but improved since day 1. Even if you hate his different flows and styles, his different topics, etc. The one thing Em has kept almost 100% consistent throughout his career is lyrical progression.
Honestly, there's no other rapper who can touch Em lyrically. If he's aiming for precision/on-point syllable compound -- making every multi rhyme for every bar of an entire verse, look at half of Relapse/Refill. Punchlines (which for some reason a lot of you hate) look at Recovery, admittedly, some of it is silly but a good portion of his punchlines and wordplay on that album is absolutely superb.
People think Em goes through flows/styles, then gets rid of them. I remember an interview he did late 2009/early 2010 talking about how he's gotten bored for the english language, so he's now trying to see how far he can bend words to make them rhyme (Relapse).
I think he's undoubtedly able to pull any of his old flows/styles/rhyme schemes out of his seemingly bottomless bag, but over the last 12 years or so, he's gotten bored. Hence why he goes through what we see as "phases". Since his comeback it was the accent, it was the regular voice, the slightly tuned up voice, the vocal tearing, the yelling, and now a hybrid between them all (maybe not the accent so much).
Not trying to sound like a Stan here, but as a fan of hiphop as a whole, Em is on a whole other level lyrically. Nobody has his diversity. And don't think for one second that he's not perfectly capable of going back and pulling out those old styles.
MikeNUFC wrote:Nollie wrote:I really think that lyrically, Em has done nothing but improved since day 1. Even if you hate his different flows and styles, his different topics, etc. The one thing Em has kept almost 100% consistent throughout his career is lyrical progression.
Honestly, there's no other rapper who can touch Em lyrically. If he's aiming for precision/on-point syllable compound -- making every multi rhyme for every bar of an entire verse, look at half of Relapse/Refill. Punchlines (which for some reason a lot of you hate) look at Recovery, admittedly, some of it is silly but a good portion of his punchlines and wordplay on that album is absolutely superb.
People think Em goes through flows/styles, then gets rid of them. I remember an interview he did late 2009/early 2010 talking about how he's gotten bored for the english language, so he's now trying to see how far he can bend words to make them rhyme (Relapse).
I think he's undoubtedly able to pull any of his old flows/styles/rhyme schemes out of his seemingly bottomless bag, but over the last 12 years or so, he's gotten bored. Hence why he goes through what we see as "phases". Since his comeback it was the accent, it was the regular voice, the slightly tuned up voice, the vocal tearing, the yelling, and now a hybrid between them all (maybe not the accent so much).
Not trying to sound like a Stan here, but as a fan of hiphop as a whole, Em is on a whole other level lyrically. Nobody has his diversity. And don't think for one second that he's not perfectly capable of going back and pulling out those old styles.
Quoted for stupidity.
Nollie wrote:I really think that lyrically, Em has done nothing but improved since day 1. Even if you hate his different flows and styles, his different topics, etc. The one thing Em has kept almost 100% consistent throughout his career is lyrical progression.
Honestly, there's no other rapper who can touch Em lyrically. If he's aiming for precision/on-point syllable compound -- making every multi rhyme for every bar of an entire verse, look at half of Relapse/Refill. Punchlines (which for some reason a lot of you hate) look at Recovery, admittedly, some of it is silly but a good portion of his punchlines and wordplay on that album is absolutely superb.
People think Em goes through flows/styles, then gets rid of them. I remember an interview he did late 2009/early 2010 talking about how he's gotten bored for the english language, so he's now trying to see how far he can bend words to make them rhyme (Relapse).
I think he's undoubtedly able to pull any of his old flows/styles/rhyme schemes out of his seemingly bottomless bag, but over the last 12 years or so, he's gotten bored. Hence why he goes through what we see as "phases". Since his comeback it was the accent, it was the regular voice, the slightly tuned up voice, the vocal tearing, the yelling, and now a hybrid between them all (maybe not the accent so much).
Not trying to sound like a Stan here, but as a fan of hiphop as a whole, Em is on a whole other level lyrically. Nobody has his diversity. And don't think for one second that he's not perfectly capable of going back and pulling out those old styles.
RKOunion wrote:Nollie wrote:I really think that lyrically, Em has done nothing but improved since day 1. Even if you hate his different flows and styles, his different topics, etc. The one thing Em has kept almost 100% consistent throughout his career is lyrical progression.
Honestly, there's no other rapper who can touch Em lyrically. If he's aiming for precision/on-point syllable compound -- making every multi rhyme for every bar of an entire verse, look at half of Relapse/Refill. Punchlines (which for some reason a lot of you hate) look at Recovery, admittedly, some of it is silly but a good portion of his punchlines and wordplay on that album is absolutely superb.
People think Em goes through flows/styles, then gets rid of them. I remember an interview he did late 2009/early 2010 talking about how he's gotten bored for the english language, so he's now trying to see how far he can bend words to make them rhyme (Relapse).
I think he's undoubtedly able to pull any of his old flows/styles/rhyme schemes out of his seemingly bottomless bag, but over the last 12 years or so, he's gotten bored. Hence why he goes through what we see as "phases". Since his comeback it was the accent, it was the regular voice, the slightly tuned up voice, the vocal tearing, the yelling, and now a hybrid between them all (maybe not the accent so much).
Not trying to sound like a Stan here, but as a fan of hiphop as a whole, Em is on a whole other level lyrically. Nobody has his diversity. And don't think for one second that he's not perfectly capable of going back and pulling out those old styles.
Nollie wrote:Innovation wrote:The ONLY Eminem album to have sub-par lyricism was Encore. Even then it had its highlights with Spend Some Time.
We done swam with the sharks, wrestled with alligators
Spoke to a generation of angry teenagers
Whom if it wasn't for rap to bridge the gap, may be raised to be racist
Who may have never got to see our faces
Grace the cover of Rolling Stone pages
Broke down barriers of language and races
+ Yellow Brick Road, Spend Some Time, Mosh, Never Enough, When I'm Gone, Ricky Ticky Toc, Like Toy Soldiers, Crazy In Love and We As Americans.
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