| | Eminem Relapse CD Eminem Discography of CDs
(48 Customer Reviews)
Audio Mixers: Dr. Dre; Eminem. Lyrical acrobat Slim Shady returns after a five-year absence with his fifth major label release, continuing to strike the perfect balance between brooding insight and absolute silliness on 2009's RELAPSE. Opening single "Crack a Bottle" reunites Detroit's maddest rapper with his superstar mentor (Dr. Dre) and protege (50 Cent) on a fittingly funky tour de force. Eminem's RELAPSE, a double album released after five years of recorded silence, a record featuring Dr. Dre behind the boards for the first time since 2000, faced no shortage of the relentless pressure of expectations. A narrative of survival after facing down his demons in rehab unfurled with Eminem's usual twisted Swift-ian wit, RELAPSE should disappoint few fans (or critics for that matter) with its patented mix of hilariously spit venom and delirious self-loathing. Like Darren Aronofsky's adaptation of REQUIEM FOR A DREAM, 2009's RELAPSE finds the full horror element in drug addiction. Eminem's raps, for all their over-the-top humor, have always conjured up images fit for Fangoria, but as he comes out of rehab, seeking solace from his demons, Mr. Mathers amps up the gore on RELAPSE. Dre's beats lurk dark-thumping sinister while Em unleashes nightmare dreamscapes of murder, mayhem, and Britney-Spearsacide. One target who gets off surprisingly lightly this time around is his mother (a topic even Em admits in his introduction of which the world is probably sick); "My Mom" boasts softer, bouncier beats and a final line few hip-hop fans would ever expect to hear coming out of his mouth. Eminem placed himself in exile shortly after Encore wound down, a seclusion initially designed as creative down-time but which soon descended into darkness fueled by another failed marriage to his wife Kim and the death of his best friend Proof, culminating in years of drug addiction. Em none too subtly refers to that addiction with the title of Relapse, his first album in five years, but that relapse also refers to Marshall Mathers reviving Slim Shady and returning to rap. Relapse is designed to grab attention, to stand as evidence that Eminem remains a musical force and, of course, a provocateur spinning out violent fantasies and baiting celebrities, occasionally merging the two as when he needles one-time girlfriend Mariah Carey and her new husband Nick Cannon. Strive as he might to make an impact in the world at large -- and succeeding in many respects -- Relapse is the sound of severe isolation, the product of too many years of Eminem playing king in his castle in a dilapidated Detroit, subsisting on pills, nachos, torture porn, and E! Daily News. As he sifted through junk culture, he also tweaked his rhyming, crafting an elongated elastic flow that contrasts startlingly with Dr. Dre's intensified beats, ominous magnifications of his thud-and-stutter signature. Musically, this is white-hot, dense, and dramatic not just in the production but in Eminem's delivery; he stammers and slides, slipping into an accent that resembles Paul Rudd's Rastafarian leprechaun from I Love You Man and then back again. His flow is so good, his wordplay so sharp, it seems churlish to wish that he addressed something other than his long-standing obsessions and demons. True, he spends a fair amount of the album exorcising his addiction -- smartly tying it to his never-abating mother issues on "My Mom" -- but most of Relapse finds Eminem rhyming twitchily about his old standbys: homosexuals, starlets, and violent fantasies, weaving all of them together on "Same Song and Dance" where he abducts and murders Lindsay Lohan, suggesting more than a passing familiarity with I Know Who Killed Me. The many, many references to Kim Kardashian's big ass and minutely detailed sadism can get a wee bit tiring, Relapse isn't really about what Eminem says, it's about how he says it. He's emerged from his exile musically re-energized and the best way to illustrate that is to go thrRolling Stone (p.68) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "The power of RELAPSE comes from Em aiming his beatdowns at his truest target, himself....RELAPSE is reason to be glad he's still around." Billboard - "[T]he disc is packed with satisfying hooks and Eminem's ridiculously fabulous flow....He doesn't surf the beat so much as box with it, with both brutality and no small degree of grace." Relapse Music Review Average Rating: (4 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Eminem Back On Top!! Dr. Dre defitnetley gave us a little preview of what to expect from his Detox album as far as production goes, so sick!!! Eminem is on another level with this album and his flow is so sick. Every song on this album rocks, great album!! Submitted by pandartz (Lahaina, Hawaii, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 5 of 7 found this helpful.
Too Dated. this album has not evolved at all. most rappers go head to head with the best rappers. instead he goes after brit spears and amy winehouse?? wow, you're badazz em. you could joke on mike tyson, axl rose, and mike vick but he feels safer joking on miley cyrus?? has the same sound and nothing mind blowing about the album. it is very dated and sounds like he did 10 years ago. not his best work. whats next em?? more crying about your childhood and going head 2 head w/the jonas brothers..haha. stay tough em. you hardcore, shocking gangsta' rapper that you are..lmao. he's the only rapper brave enough to take on britney spears. it would be a great fight. aren't they the same size?? overall, weak album with the same sound. letdown. Submitted by junkie (rehab) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 3 of 5 found this helpful.
Em better than before This is classic Em putting together all his albums into one masterpiece. I like that Em went back to the darkside and tells the story of why he was gone for 4 years and he ends up dying on the cd with satan talking to him. good songs are: 3 AM, Bagpipes from Baghdad, Medicine Ball, Stay Wide Awake, Beautiful----my favorite. Submitted by Juice (Minnesota, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 3 of 5 found this helpful.
I just rated this... I said "best since Marshall Mathers LP"...I forgot to get it a star rating before, of course I meant to give it 5. Submitted by NewUploader1 (Phoenix) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 2 found this helpful.
A BREATH OF FRESH AIR This is by far the best cd of the year. Submitted by BIG MIKE (PITTSBURGH, PA.) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 2 found this helpful.
 List All Reviews | Have you heard this album? |  |
Purchase Relapse CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Eminem Encore CDs (2004) Bonus CD
Relapse
$10.39 2 CD;Bonus Disc Contains 3 Hard To Find Songs.
Personnel includes: Eminem (rap vocals); Nate Dogg, Dr. Dre, Obie Trice, Hailie Jade, D-12, Dina Rae. THE EMINEM SHOW won the 2003 Grammy Award for Best Rap Album. THE EMINEM SHOW was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Award for Album Of The Year. "Without Me" was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Awards for Record Of The Year and Best Male Rap Solo Performance. This ...
| | Eminem Presents: The Re-Up CD (2006)
Relapse
$10.45 Personnel: Eminem (rap vocals); Bobby Creekwater, 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks, Nate Dogg, Obie Trice, Proof, Bizarre, Kuniva, Stat Quo, Cashis (rap vocals). A little over two years after his hugely successful fourth solo album, ENCORE, the Warren, Michigan, native and rap icon returns with a compilation album--originally conceived as a mixtape--that serves to showcase his own label, Shady Records, and its formidable line-up of artists. While ...
| | T I Paper Trail CD (2008) Explicit Version
Relapse
$15.65 This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Personnel: Ricco Barrino (vocals); Stevie Salas (guitars); Ghislaine Fleischmann, Eliza Cho, Michelle Bishop, Igor Szwec, Emma Kummrow, Gregory Teperman (violin); Peter Nocella, Carol Briselli (viola); James J. Cooper III (cello); Canei Finch, David Siegel ...
| | Black Eyed Peas E.N.D. (The Energy Never Dies) CD (2009)
Relapse
$10.59
| | Green Day 21st Century Breakdown CD (2009)
Relapse
$15.45
| | Jay-Z The Blueprint 3 CD (2009)
Relapse
$15.65
| | Miguel Aceves Mejia Las Numero 1 CD (2007) (Import)
Relapse
$22.35
| | Only The Best Of The Dorsey Brothers CDs (2009) Box Set
Relapse
$31.15
| | U-Nam Unamity CD (2009) Digipak
Relapse
$12.59
| | Iron & Wine Around The Well CDs (2009) Digipak
Relapse
$12.25 Personnel: Sarah Simpson, Randy Henry, Patrick McKinney, Jeff McGriff, Joey Burns, Paul Niehaus, Rob Burger, Sam Beam, Jim Becker, EJ Holowicki, Brian Deck. Audio Mixer: Brian Deck. Audio Remasterer: Neil Strauch. Recording information: KUOW, Seattle, WA. Delving deep into the Iron & Wine discography, the 23-track AROUND THE WELL compilation unearths rarities from indie-folk singer-songwriter Sam Beam's considerable catalogue. The first half of the Sub Pop collection focuses on spare, hushed bedroom recordings, many from Beam's formative CREEK DRANK THE CRADLE era--most notably the melancholy, God-fearing "Dearest Forsaken" and the achingly intimate "Sacred Vision." In relative contrast, WELL's latter half showcases Iron & Wine in full-band form, particularly on tracks written for the IN GOOD COMPANY soundtrack--"The Trapeze Swinger," a quietly expansive epic, and previously unissued ...
| | Paul Wall Fast Life CD (2009) Edited
Relapse
$14.65 On his third major label LP, Paul Wall largely sticks to the winning formula which brought him success on his break-out effort, THE PEOPLE'S CHAMP (2005), and the follow-up, GET MONEY STAY TRUE (2007). Moving back and forth between feel-good street bangers (as on the defiant album-opener "I Need Mo," the syrupy-slow "One Hundred," and the ode to automobiles "Pressin' Them Buttons") and bouncy synth-fueled strip club anthems (like the lusty neck-snapper "Lemon Drop" and the designer-drug homage alongside Bay Area legend Too $hort "Pop One of These"), Wall also takes time for a few heartfelt, lyrically-driven excursions. FAST LIFE'S unlikely highlights see ...
| | Prins Thomas Live At Robert Johnson Vol. 2 CD (2009) Remixes
Relapse
$13.89
| | Black N Blue Bluegrass Etc. CDs (2001) (Import) United Kingdom
Relapse
$11.29 Bluegrass Etc.: John Moore (vocals, guitar, mandolin); Dennis Caplinger (vocals, banjo, fiddle); Jim Green (vocals, bass). Recorded at Golden Track Studios, San Diego, California. Includes liner notes by David McCarty. Black N' Blue: Jamie St. James (vocals); Tommy Thayer, Jeff "Woop" Warner (guitar, background vocals); Patrick Young (bass, background vocals); Pete Holmes (drums). Producers: Gene Simmons, Bruce Fairbairn, Dieter Dierks, Jonathan Cain. Compilation producer: Mike Ragogna. Includes liner notes by Gerri Miller. Digitally remastered by Erick Labson (Universal Mastering Studios West, North Hollywood, California). Personnel: Dennis Caplinger (banjo, fiddle). Audio Mixer: Bluegrass Etc. In the summer of 2001, Discover Card ran a Behind the Music parody of an '80s hair metal band called Danger Kitty who crashed and burned, spending all their money within the span of two years (they were a little wrong on the timing, claiming that the band hit it big in 1984, two and a half to three years earlier than the big hair metal boom, but only a donkers like me would point that out). If it wasn't for their sub-biker jeans and sheer boneheadedness, Black 'N' Blue would be that band since they for all the world sound like a parody. This is a band that in all seriousness wrote a song called "Rockin' on Heaven's Door," sang "Heat It Up! Burn It Out!" and "Get Wise to the Rise," and belted out "Nasty, Nasty" and "Bombastic Plastic" -- all songs that are every bit as ridiculous as their titles, even sillier, actually. They also did a song called "I'll Be There for You" a few years before Bon Jovi did, but they weren't exactly prescient -- they just stumbled through their career, seeing a couple thousand of faces and rocking a handful of 'em. Listening to Hip-O's 2001 20-track overview is entertaining, but only because you're gawking at this historical oddity ...
|
|
|