
A
protege of Dr. Dre, rapper Eminem 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, later
earning notoriety as a member of the Motor City duo Soul Intent.
He made his solo debut in 1996 with the independent release
Infinite, soon followed by the Slim Shady EP; both records
made a huge splash in the hip-hop underground, earning notice
not only for Eminem's exaggerated, nasal-voiced rapping style
but also for his skin color, with many quarters dubbing 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, although it was not until
Eminem took second place in the freestyle category at 1997's
Rap Olympics MC battle in Los Angeles that Dre agreed to sign
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 cartoonish, 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 Dr.
Dre 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. — Jason Ankeny