The Marshall Mathers LP

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Most songs cover Eminem's childhood struggles and family issues, involving his mother ("Kill You"), the relationship struggles with his wife ("Kim"), his struggles with his superstardom and expectations ("Stan", "I'm Back", and "Marshall Mathers"), his return and effect on the music industry ("Remember Me?", "Bitch Please II"), his drug use ("Drug Ballad", "The Kids"), his effect on the American youth and society ("The Way I Am", "Who Knew"), and reactionary barbs to critical response of his vulgarity and dark themes ("Criminal"). [24] Despite the large amount of controversy regarding the lyrics, the lyrics on the album were overwhelmingly well received among critics and the hip hop community, many praising Eminem's verbal energy and dense rhyme patterns. [17]

The record also contains lyrics that have been considered to be homophobic. [25] The song "Criminal" features the line "My words are like a dagger with a jagged edge/That'll stab you in the head whether you're a fag or les...Hate fags?/The answer's yes". [25] The Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) condemned his lyrics and criticized the album for "encourag[ing] violence against gay men and lesbians". [26] However, writing for the LGBT interest magazine The Advocate , editor Dave White writes, "If he has gay-bashed you or me, then it logically follows that he has also raped his own mother, killed his wife, and murdered his producer, Dr. Dre. If he's to be taken literally, then so is Britney Spears' invitation to 'hit me baby, one more time'." [25] Eminem noted that he began using the word "faggot" more frequently when "people got all up in arms about it...to piss them off worse", but added, "I think it's hard for some people to understand that for me the word 'faggot' has nothing to do with sexual preference. I meant something more like assholes or dickheads." [27] Evangelical Christian religious figure James Dobson also heavily criticized Eminem. [28]

Songs

The first track, "Kill You", discusses the controversy that surrounded the rapper's first album, nightmares of "ladies' screams", and being raised by a single mother. [29] In the song, Eminem also talks of raping his mother, and "notes the irony of magazines trumpeting his mother-raping self on their covers'." [29] The six-and-a-half minute long "Stan" samples Dido's "Thank You" and tells the story of an exchange between the rapper and an obsessive fan, where the titular character berates Eminem for not responding to his letters, which later turns to the fan committing suicide with his pregnant girlfriend. [30] On "Who Knew", the rapper addresses criticism regarding glorification of violence in his lyrics, pointing out perceived hypocrisy in American society. According to Gabriel Alvarez of Complex , Eminem's response ranges oscillates from "smart-ass ('Oh, you want me to watch my mouth, how?/Take my fuckin' eyeballs out and turn 'em around?') to smart ('Ain't they got the same moms and dads who got mad when I asked if they liked violence?/And told me that my tape taught 'em to swear/What about the makeup you allow your 12-year-old daughter to wear?')." [31] "Who Knew" is followed by the "Steve Berman" skit. "What's the Difference" plays in the background while the president of sales at Interscope Records angrily confronts the rapper about his lyrical content. He notes that Dr. Dre was successful because he rapped about "big-screen TVs, blunts, 40's, and bitches", while Eminem raps about "homosexuals and Vicodin", and believes that the album will be a commercial disaster. [32]

"The Way I Am" is a meditation on the pressure to maintain his fame, and his fear of being "pigeon-holed into some poppy sensation/to cop me rotation at rock 'n' roll stations". [33] He also laments the negative media attention received by controversial public figures such as himself and Marilyn Manson in the wake of shootings, including the Columbine High School massacre and the 1998 Westside Middle School shooting. The rapper criticizes the media for focusing on tragedies such as school shootings while ignoring inner-city violence that occurs on a daily basis. [33] "The Real Slim Shady" pokes fun at pop culture icons such as Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera and Will Smith. [34] "Remember Me?" follows with rappers RBX and Sticky Fingaz, who "kick seriously Stygian darkness on the ominous track". [24] In the song, he states "I'm tryna clean up my fuckin' image / So I promised the fuckin' critics / I wouldn't say 'fuckin' for six minutes/(Six minutes, Slim Shady, you're on)". Despite saying the word "fuck" one more time in "Remember Me", and three times at the beginning of "I'm Back", he does not say the word "fuckin" for seven minutes and 29 seconds after delivering the original promise, saying it again in the song "Marshall Mathers". [32]

"I'm Back" features Eminem's observations regarding his rise to fame, explaining that he "became a commodity/'Cause I'm W-H-I-T-E". [29] The next song, "Marshall Mathers", mocks the chorus of LFO's "Summer Girls", while criticizing the lack of artistic merit of pop stars such as Britney Spears, the Backstreet Boys, NSYNC, and Ricky Martin. The song also takes aim at rap duo Insane Clown Posse, where Eminem raps about Violent J and Shaggy 2 Dope being flaming homosexuals. [34] [35] "Drug Ballad" has vocals from Dina Rae, [36] and describes the rapper's struggles with his drug addiction. He writes about some of his experiences under the influence of ecstasy which makes him "sentimental as fuck, spilling guts to you/we just met, but I think I'm in love with you". [37] "Amityville" is a bass-heavy ode to living in Detroit, where the rapper discusses the city's crowning as murder capital of the United States. [17] "Bitch Please II" showcases Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg and Xzibit, and contains elements of g-funk, as well as R&B crooning from Nate Dogg on the chorus. [24]

"Kim", the prequel to "97 Bonnie and Clyde" from The Slim Shady LP , features Eminem "screaming at his ex in an insane stream-of-consciousness hate spew". [17] The song begins with Eminem talking softly to his daughter, but as the beat starts, the rapper takes on portraying two characters, utilizing his own enraged, threatening voice, and the terrified shrieks of his wife Kim. [38] As the song ends, Eminem kills her while taunting, "Bleed, bitch, bleed!" [38] "Kim" is followed by "Under the Influence", which sees Eminem speaking in gibberish for the chorus, and later rap group D12 "runs rampant" on the track. [24] "Criminal" features production from F.B.T., which consists of "piano licks, swerving synth, and a deceptively simplistic bass rumble over which Em snakes and snarls and warns that 'you can't stop me from topping these charts...'". [24] He pokes fun at critics who take his lyrical content seriously, explaining that "half the shit I say, I just make it up to make you mad". [39]

Release

The Marshall Mathers LP was released on May 23, 2000, by Aftermath Entertainment, Interscope Records, in the United States, [40] and on 11 September 2000, by Polydor Records in the United Kingdom. [41] The Marshall Mathers LP was released with two different album covers. The original features Eminem sitting on the porch of the house he lived in during his teenage years. [15] He reflected on the photo shoot by saying, "I had mixed feelings because I had a lot of good and bad memories in that house. But to go back to where I grew up and finally say, 'I've made it', is the greatest feeling in the world to me." [15] The other cover features the rapper seated in a fetal position beneath a loading dock with alcohol and prescription pill bottles at his feet. [29] Will Hermes of Entertainment Weekly likened Eminem's appearance on the cover to a "dysfunctional Little Rascal", viewing the image as indicative of the rapper's musical evolution: "Easy to read, right? The debut: a violent fantasy, the acting-out of a persona. The follow-up: the vulnerable artist unmasked." [29]

Censorship

Lyrics referencing the Columbine High School massacre were censored on The Marshall Mathers LP Hope Columbine Memorial Library.jpg
Lyrics referencing the Columbine High School massacre were censored on The Marshall Mathers LP

In his book Edited Clean Version: Technology and the Culture of Control, author Raiford Guins writes that the clean version of The Marshall Mathers LP "resembles a cross between a cell phone chat with terrible reception...and a noted hip-hop lyricist suffering from an incurable case of hiccups." [42]

This version of the album often either omits words completely or obscures them with added sound effects. [42] The clean version of the album did not censor all profanity. Words like "ass", "bitch", "goddamn", and "shit" were uncensored. However, on the track "The Real Slim Shady", the words "bitch" and "shit" were censored out, as its radio edit was mainly used. References to violence and weapons were also significantly altered, and the titles to the songs "Kill You", "Drug Ballad", and "Bitch Please II" are censored on the back cover. [42] The song "Kim" is removed completely and replaced by "The Kids", a South Park -themed track about drug usage and the American youth which is also featured on the special edition of the album. [43]

Special attention was given to editing aggressive and violent lyrics that were aimed at police, prostitutes, women, homosexuals, bullies, minors, and schools. In response to the attack that had occurred at Columbine High School in April 1999, names of guns and sounds of them firing were censored. Interscope Records insisted on censoring the words "kids" and "Columbine" from the line, "I take seven [kids] from [Columbine], stand them all in line" from "I'm Back", even on the explicit version of the album. [39] Mike Rubin of Spin called the censorship a "curious decision, given that lyrics like 'Take drugs / Rape sluts' are apparently permissible". [39] Eminem commented on his lyrics regarding the shooting, calling the specific Columbine incident "so fucking touchy." He elaborated being saying, "as much sympathy as we give the Columbine shootings, nobody ever looked at it from the fuckin' point of view of the kids who were bullied — I mean, they took their own fucking life! And it was because they were pushed so far to the fucking edge that they were fucking so mad. I've been that mad." [39] The full line appears uncensored in Eminem's song "Rap God" from The Marshall Mathers LP 2, [44] although it remains censored on the clean version.

The line "It doesn't matter, [your attorney Fred Gibson's a] faggot" was also censored from "Marshall Mathers"; the line refers to his mother Debbie Nelson's lawyer, who assisted her in filing a lawsuit against the rapper for defamation regarding lyrics from The Slim Shady LP . [45]

Commercial performance

Eminem (left) at the ARCO Arena for the Up in Smoke Tour, in June 2000, a month after the album's release Eminem Up in Smoke Tour.jpg
Eminem (left) at the ARCO Arena for the Up in Smoke Tour, in June 2000, a month after the album's release

The Marshall Mathers LP sold 1.78 million copies in its first week, which made it one of the fastest-selling studio albums in the United States. [46] The album sold twice as much as the previous hip hop record holder for first week sales in the US, which was Snoop Dogg's 1993 album Doggystyle . [47] The Marshall Mathers LP sold over 800,000 copies in its second week, 600,000 copies in its third week, and 520,000 copies in its fourth week for a four-week total of 3.65 million. It also became one of the few albums to sell over half a million copies for four consecutive weeks. In total, the album spent eight weeks at number one on the US Billboard 200, ranking it fourth on the current all-time list of weeks spent at number one by a hip hop album. [48] By the end of 2000, The Marshall Mathers LP had become the second-best-selling album of the year with over eight million copies sold. [49] The Marshall Mathers LP was also the best-selling album of 2000 in Canada, selling 679,567 copies. [50]

According to Billboard , as of 2022, The Marshall Mathers LP is one of the 15 best-performing 21st-century albums without any of its singles being number-one hits on the Billboard Hot 100. [51] The first single, "The Real Slim Shady", became Eminem's biggest hit up to that point. It peaked at number four on the Billboard Hot 100 and topped the UK Singles Chart. [52] [53] "The Way I Am", which was released as the album's second single, peaked at number eight on the UK Singles Chart [52] and 58 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Stan", the third single released from the album, became a number-one hit in both the United Kingdom [52] and Australia. [54] The song, which details around a crazed fan of the same name, has been highlighted as a work of poetry by critics, and soon gave rise to the Oxford English Dictionary term stan. [55] [56] [57]

In 2010, Nielsen SoundScan reported that up until November 2009, The Marshall Mathers LP had sold 10,216,000 copies in the US, making it the fourth-best selling album of the decade. [58] The album has been certified Diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), and its sales stand at over 11 million copies in the United States, making it Eminem's best-selling album in his home country. [59] In worldwide sales, the album has sold 25 million copies, making it one of the best-selling albums of all time. [60] A sequel to the album, The Marshall Mathers LP 2 , was released on November 5, 2013. [61]

Critical reception

The Marshall Mathers LP
The Marshall Mathers LP.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 23, 2000 (2000-05-23)
Recorded1998–2000 [1]
Studio
Genre
Length72:04
Label
Producer
Eminem chronology
The Slim Shady LP
(1999)
The Marshall Mathers LP
(2000)
The Eminem Show
(2002)
Alternate cover art
The Marshall Mathers LP second cover.jpg
Contemporary professional reviews
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic 78/100 [62]
Review scores
SourceRating
Chicago Sun-Times Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar half.svg [63]
Entertainment Weekly A− [29]
Los Angeles Times Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar half.svg [21]
Melody Maker Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [64]
NME 9/10 [65]
Rap Reviews8.5/10 [66]
Q Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svg [67]
Rolling Stone Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [17]
The Source Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [68]
USA Today Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [69]
The Village Voice A [70]

The Marshall Mathers LP was met with widespread critical acclaim. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 78, based on 21 reviews. [62]

Rolling Stone magazine's Touré applauded Dr. Dre's production and Eminem's varied lyrical style on what is a "car-crash record: loud, wild, dangerous, out of control, grotesque, unsettling", but ultimately captivating. [17] Melody Maker said that Eminem's startlingly intense vision of "rap's self-consciousness" is truly unique, [64] while Steve Sutherland of NME praised the album as a misanthropic and "gruelling assault course of lyrical genius" that critiques malevolent aspects of contemporary society. [65] Chuck Eddy from The Village Voice said that Eminem is backed by attractive music and displays an emotionally complex and witting quality unlike his previous work. [71] In the newspaper's consumer guide column, Robert Christgau called him "exceptionally witty and musical, discernibly thoughtful and good-hearted, indubitably dangerous and full of shit", while declaring the album "a work of art whose immense entertainment value in no way compromises its intimations of a pathology that's both personal and political". [70] Will Hermes of Entertainment Weekly wrote that as the first significant popular music album of the 2000s, The Marshall Mathers LP is "indefensible and critic-proof, hypocritical and heartbreaking, unlistenable and undeniable". [29]

On the other hand, music journalist Greg Kot said the reaction to The Marshall Mathers LP was "mixed", or reluctantly positive, among critics who praised Eminem's "verbal skills and transgressive humor" but decried some of the subject matter. [72] In his review for the Los Angeles Times , Robert Hilburn reserved his praise because of homophobic lyrics on what he felt is an otherwise conceptual and personal work, "docked a half star because of the recurring homophobia—something that may be de rigueur in commercial rap, but which still is unacceptable." [21] Steve Jones of USA Today opined that Eminem's "vicious and patently personal lyrical assaults" would "almost grow tedious if he weren't as inventive as he is tasteless." [69] Q magazine felt that the subject matter does not make for an enjoyable listen, even though Eminem's disaffected and nihilistic lyrics can be provocative. [67] Slant Magazine 's Sal Cinquemani was more critical in a one-and-a-half star review and found his raps extremely distasteful: "The only thing worse than Eminem's homophobia is the immaturity with which he displays it". [73] On the other hand, Spin felt that the rapping is excellent, but plagued more so by unremarkable music and lackluster tracks. [74]

Among other publications, Rolling Stone and Melody Maker named The Marshall Mathers LP the best album of 2000.[ citation needed ] In 2000, the album won in the Best Album category at the MTV Europe Music Awards. [75] It also won in the Best Rap Album category at the 43rd Grammy Awards in 2001. [76] The Marshall Mathers LP was nominated for Album of the Year, but lost to jazz-rock duo Steely Dan's Two Against Nature . [77]

Legacy and reappraisal

Retrospective professional reviews
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svg [19]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [78]
The Great Rock Discography 9/10 [79]
Pitchfork 9.4/10 [80]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svg [81]
Sputnikmusic5/5 [82]
Tom Hull – on the Web A [83]
XXL XXL (5/5) [84]

Since its initial release, The Marshall Mathers LP has been highly acclaimed in retrospective critic reviews. It has been regarded by critics as Eminem's best album and has been ranked in multiple lists of the greatest albums of all time. [85] [86] [87] In The Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004), Christian Hoard said it "delved much deeper into personal pain [than The Slim Shady LP], and the result was a minor masterpiece that merged iller-than-ill flows with a brilliant sense of the macabre." According to Sputnikmusic's Nick Butler, The Marshall Mathers LP stands as a culturally significant record in American popular music, but also "remains a truly special album, unique in rap's canon, owing its spirit to rock and its heritage to rap, in a way I've rarely heard". [82] Insanul Ahmed of Complex wrote, "At a time when the Billboard charts were dominated by squeaky-clean pop acts like NSYNC and Backstreet Boys, Eminem offered a rebuttal to the hypocritical American mainstream that criticizes rap music while celebrating—and, worse, commercializing—sex, violence, and bigotry in other arenas. This album turned Eminem into a global icon. There was a huge amount of hype and controversy around it [...] But none of that takes away from its musical achievement. This album definitively proved that the Detroit rapper was a gifted lyricist, a brilliant songwriter, and a visionary artist." [87] Mike Elizondo, a former collaborator on Eminem's albums, said, "I felt like Marshall was part of this wave with Quentin Tarantino, Pulp Fiction (1994) and Reservoir Dogs (1992) [...] This next level of art with incredible graphic imagery that Marshall had the ability to paint. Love it or hate it he was obviously very skilled at the stories he was telling." [88]

Jeff Weiss of The Ringer wrote, "TheMarshall Mathers LP certified Eminem as an alienated voice of a generation, a caustic wedge issue distilling the spirits of Elvis, Holden Caulfield, Johnny Rotten, Kurt Cobain, Cartman from South Park , and Tupac if he shopped at Kroger. In a postmodern abyss where everything's performative, it might have been the last album that possessed the capacity to genuinely shock." [89] Dan Ozzi of Vice highlighted that "Eminem was the one artist high school kids seemed to unanimously connect with. [...] he represented everything high school years are about: blind rage, misguided rebellion, adolescent frustration. He was like a human middle finger. An X-rated Dennis the Menace for a dial-up modem generation." [90] Max Bell of Spin wrote that the album remains "one of the most critically-acclaimed, commercially-successful, and influential albums in rap history", citing rappers influenced by the album, such as Tyler, the Creator, Earl Sweatshirt, Kendrick Lamar, and Juice WRLD. [91] Bonsu Thompson of Medium described the album as "a masterful confluence of punk, bluegrass, and subterranean hip-hop that gave life to a singular brand of Americana rap." [28] Thompson further praised the album's impact on white rappers, saying, "For a snapshot of the album's seismic influence, compare the pre–Marshall Mathers LP decade of White rappers like Everlast and MC Serch with the post-2000 landscape of Action Bronson, G-Eazy, and the late Mac Miller [...] Eminem homogenized the White rapper." [28]

Eminem's upending of the mainstream, particularly through the release of The Marshall Mathers LP, earned him countless enemies. From religious groups to government officials, he faced no shortage of protesters, but while Middle America – as well as occupants of other suburban areas around the world – hated him, their kids loved him, his music and his rebellious nature. You can love him or loathe him, but the fact we're still talking about The Marshall Mathers LP 20 years later speaks to its undeniable impact.

– Will Lavin of NME , speaking on The Marshall Mathers LP [92]

In 2003, The Marshall Mathers LP was ranked number 302 on Rolling Stone 's list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time; [93] it was moved up to number 244 in the magazine's revised 2012 edition of the list, [94] and moved to 145 on the 2020 edition. [95] IGN named it the twenty-fourth greatest rap album of all time in a 2004 list. [96] In 2006, The Marshall Mathers LP was included by Time in its list of the 100 Greatest Albums of All Time. [97] That same year, Q ranked it number 85 on a list of The Greatest Albums of All Time, the highest position held by any hip hop album on the list. [98] The Marshall Mathers LP was also the highest ranked hip hop album on the National Association of Recording Merchandisers & the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's list of the 200 Definitive Albums of All Time, where it was placed at number 28. [99] It has been named one of the Top 100 Albums of the Decade (2000s) by Rolling Stone, who ranked it seventh, [100] Complex Magazine, who ranked it fourth, [101] and Pitchfork , who ranked it 119th. [102] The Guardian ranked the album at 29 on its Top 50 Albums of the decade. [103] The A.V. Club ranked the album at 36 on its Best Albums of the Decade list. [104] Popdose listed The Marshall Mathers LP as the 10th best album of the decade. [105] Spinner ranked the album at 22 on its Best Albums of the 2000s list. [106] In 2010, Rhapsody ranked it at number 1 on their list of "The 10 Best Albums by White Rappers". [107] In 2015, the album was ranked number 81 by About.com on their list of 100 Best Hip-Hop Albums of All Time. [108] In 2020, The Marshall Mathers LP was included at the 100 Best Albums of the 21st Century list of Stacker, being ranked at 69. [109] The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die . [110] In 2022, it was ranked 25 by Rolling Stone on their list "The 200 Greatest Rap Albums of All Time". [111]

Controversies

Nobody is excluded from my poking at. Nobody. I don't discriminate, I don't exclude nobody. If you do something fucked up, you're bound to be made fun of. If I do something fucked up, I'll make fun of myself—I'm not excluded from this.

—Eminem, on the album's controversy. [112]

While the album was hugely controversial and criticized, Eminem propelled to the forefront of American pop culture. [113] At a United States Senate hearing, Lynne Cheney criticized Eminem and sponsor Seagram for "promot[ing] violence of the most degrading kind against women", labeling him as "a rap singer who advocates murder and rape". [114] She specifically cited lyrics from "Kill You", explaining, "He talks about murdering and raping his mother. He talks about choking women slowly so he can hear their screams for a long time. He talks about using O.J.'s machete on women, and this is a man who is honored by the recording industry". [114] Cheney drew a link between the Columbine massacre and violent music, mentioning artists Eminem and Marilyn Manson as musicians who contribute to the United States' culture of violence. Although she stated that she has "long been a vocal supporter of free speech", Cheney called for the music industry to impose age-restrictions on those who can purchase music with violent content. [114]

On October 26, 2000, Eminem was on the co-headlining Anger Management Tour with Limp Bizkit and scheduled to perform at a concert in Toronto's SkyDome. [115] However, Ontario Attorney General Jim Flaherty argued that Canada should stop Eminem at the border. "I personally don't want anyone coming to Canada who will come here and advocate violence against women", he said. [115] Flaherty claims to have been "disgusted" when reading transcriptions of Eminem's song "Kill You", which includes lines like "Slut, you think I won't choke no whore/till the vocal cords don't work in her throat no more?" [115] Eminem's fans argued that this was a matter of free speech and that he was unfairly singled out. [115] Michael Bryant suggested that the government let Eminem perform and then prosecute him for violating Canada's hate crime laws, despite the fact that Canada's hate-crime legislation does not include violence against women. [116] In an editorial in The Globe and Mail , author Robert Everett-Green wrote, "Being offensive is Eminem's job description." [117] Eminem was granted entry into Canada. [118]

A 2001 and 2004 study by Edward Armstrong found that of the 14 songs on The Marshall Mathers LP, eleven contain violent and misogynistic lyrics and nine depict killing women through choking, stabbing, drowning, shooting, head and throat splitting. According to the study, Eminem scores 78% for violent misogyny while gangsta rap music in general reaches 22%. [119] [120] Armstrong argues that violent misogyny characterizes most of Eminem's music and that the rapper "authenticates his self-presentations by outdoing other gangsta rappers in terms of his violent misogyny." [120] A fifteen-year-old boy in Fresno, California was arrested in September 2015 for making terrorist threats, after sharing the Columbine-related lyrics to "I'm Back" on Instagram. [121]

Reactions from other artists

Elton John performed "Stan" with Eminem at the Grammys despite negative reactions from the LGBT community. Elton John 2011 Shankbone 2.JPG
Elton John performed "Stan" with Eminem at the Grammys despite negative reactions from the LGBT community.

Protests against the album's content reached a climax when it was nominated for four Grammy Awards in 2001 including Album of the Year. [122] At the ceremony, Eminem performed "Stan" in a duet with openly gay artist Elton John playing piano and singing the chorus. This performance was a direct response to claims by GLAAD and others who claimed his lyrics were homophobic, with Eminem stating, "Of course I'd heard of Elton John, but I didn't know he was gay. I didn't know anything about his personal life. I didn't really care, but being that he was gay and he had my back, I think it made a statement in itself saying that he understood where I was coming from." [123] GLAAD did not change its position, however, and spoke out against Elton John's decision. [124] Despite significant protests and debate, The Marshall Mathers LP went on to win Best Rap Album.

In a 2001 interview with Spin magazine, Johnny Cash defended Eminem against accusations that the album encouraged violence, pointing out that the most popular song of the 19th century was the violent folk song "Jesse James". Cash added that nobody had re-enacted the murder portrayed in his own "Folsom Prison Blues". [125] [126]

Singer Christina Aguilera was upset about the lyric, "Christina Aguilera better switch me chairs so I can sit next to Carson Daly and Fred Durst / and hear 'em argue over who she gave head to first" from "The Real Slim Shady", calling the rapper's claim "disgusting, offensive and, above all, not true". [127] Eminem included this line after becoming angry with the singer for informing the public during an MTV special without his consent about the rapper's secret marriage to Kim Mathers. [127] However, the two later settled their differences after hugging backstage at the 2002 MTV Video Music Awards, with the singer appearing at the premiere of 8 Mile months later. [127]

In 2002, French jazz pianist Jacques Loussier filed a $10 million lawsuit against Eminem that was later settled out of court. The lawsuit claimed the beat for "Kill You" was stolen from his song "Pulsion". [128]

Track listing

Credits adapted from the album's liner notes [129] and Tidal [130]

The Marshall Mathers LP– Standard edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Public Service Announcement 2000"  0:25
2."Kill You"4:24
3."Stan" (featuring Dido)
6:44
4."Paul (skit)"  0:10
5."Who Knew"
  • Mathers
  • Young
  • Bradford
  • Dr. Dre
  • Mel-Man
3:47
6."Steve Berman (skit)"  0:53
7."The Way I Am"
  • Mathers
  • Eminem
4:50
8."The Real Slim Shady"
  • Dr. Dre
  • Mel-Man
4:44
9."Remember Me?" (featuring RBX and Sticky Fingaz)
  • Dr. Dre
  • Mel-Man
3:38
10."I'm Back"
  • Mathers
  • Young
  • Bradford
  • Dr. Dre
  • Mel-Man
5:10
11."Marshall Mathers"
5:20
12."Ken Kaniff (skit)"  1:01
13."Drug Ballad" (featuring Dina Rae [b] )
  • Mathers
  • J. Bass
  • M. Bass
  • Eminem
  • F.B.T.
5:00
14."Amityville" (featuring Bizarre)
  • Eminem
  • F.B.T.
4:14
15."Bitch Please II" (featuring Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Xzibit and Nate Dogg)
  • Dr. Dre
4:48
16."Kim"
  • Mathers
  • J. Bass
  • M. Bass
  • F.B.T.
6:17
17."Under the Influence" (featuring D12)
  • Eminem
  • F.B.T.
5:21
18."Criminal"
  • Mathers
  • J. Bass
  • M. Bass
  • Eminem
  • F.B.T.
5:18
Total length:72:04
The Marshall Mathers LP– Special edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
19."The Kids"
  • Eminem
  • F.B.T.
5:06
Total length:77:10
The Marshall Mathers LP– Limited edition (bonus disc)
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."The Real Slim Shady (Instrumental)" 
  • Dr. Dre
  • Mel-Man
4:46
2."The Way I Am (Instrumental)" 
  • Eminem
4:52
3."Stan (Instrumental)" 
  • The 45 King
  • Eminem [a]
6:45
4."The Kids (Explicit version)"
  • Mathers
  • J. Bass
  • M. Bass
  • King
  • Eminem
  • F.B.T.
5:06
5."The Way I Am (Danny Lohner Remix)" (with Marilyn Manson)
4:58
Total length:98:31
The Marshall Mathers LP– Limited edition – enhanced portion
No.TitleDirector(s)Length
6."The Real Slim Shady (music video) (director's cut)"
4:27
7."The Way I Am (music video) (LP version)"5:01
8."Stan (music video) (director's cut)"
  • Dr. Dre
  • Atwell
8:09
Total length:116:08

Notes

Personnel

Credits adapted from the album's liner notes [129] and Tidal [130]

Credits

Charts

Certifications and sales

RegionCertification Certified units/sales
Argentina (CAPIF) [224] Gold30,000^
Australia (ARIA) [225] 7× Platinum490,000
Austria (IFPI Austria) [226] Platinum50,000*
Belgium (BEA) [227] 2× Platinum100,000*
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil) [228] Gold100,000*
Canada (Music Canada) [229] 8× Platinum800,000^
Central America (CFC) [230] Platinum 
Denmark (IFPI Danmark) [231] 6× Platinum120,000
Finland (Musiikkituottajat) [232] Platinum40,055 [232]
France (SNEP) [233] 2× Platinum600,000*
Germany (BVMI) [234] 3× Platinum900,000
Greece (IFPI Greece) [144] Gold15,000^
Hungary (MAHASZ) [235] Gold 
Italy
2000-2001 sales
200,000 [236]
Italy (FIMI) [237]
sales since 2009
Platinum50,000
Japan (RIAJ) [238] Platinum200,000^
Mexico (AMPROFON) [239] Platinum150,000^
Netherlands (NVPI) [240] Platinum80,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ) [241] 5× Platinum75,000^
Norway (IFPI Norway) [242] 2× Platinum100,000*
Poland (ZPAV) [243] Platinum100,000*
South Africa (RISA) [153] 2× Platinum100,000*
South Korea106,486 [244]
Spain (PROMUSICAE) [245] Platinum100,000^
Sweden (GLF) [246] 2× Platinum160,000^
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland) [247] 4× Platinum200,000^
United Kingdom (BPI) [248] 9× Platinum2,700,000
United States (RIAA) [249] 11× Platinum12,540,000 [250] [251]
Summaries
Europe (IFPI) [252] 6× Platinum6,000,000*

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

See also

Related Research Articles

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