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The most promising new rapper of the year is a cartoonishly
angry welfare kid from the Detroit ghetto. Oh, and by the
way, he's white.
by CHARLES AARON
Give this kid a magazine rack, because he's
got a lot of issues. For starters, there's race (he's the
"corny-lookin' white boy" who got his lunch money stolen at
his inner-city school and never forgot), drugs (he's well
acquainted with mushrooms, weed, etc.), and women (he
envisions his mom as a drug addict with no breasts,
fantasizes about murdering his baby's mother, and advises a
husband to cut off the head of his adulterous wife). For
23-year-old Marshall Mathers, a.k.a. Eminem, a.k.a. Slim
Shady, whose major-label debut, The Slim Shady LP, is the
shocker pop-hit of 1999 (entering the Billboard 200 at No. 2
with more than 280,000 first-week sales), life is a
*censored* who needs to die, now! He's so angry his "dance"
song features a line about Kurt Cobain committing suicide.
But by outrageously spoofing every fear every parent ever
had about his/her child, the album also defies any pat
answer as to why this runty dude is so pissed off. And it
implicitly ridicules anybody who tries to label his music as
either "positive" or "negative."
Less than a year ago, Eminem was a
little-known, if nastily skilled, MC from Detroit, with only
an independently released album and EP to his name. Now,
after hooking up with Dr. Dre (he'll soon appear on Dre's
Chronic 2000 album), he's been known to give shout-outs to
Interscope boss Jimmy Iovine onstage. Since early '99, MTV
has been endlessly rotating the uproarious video for his
single "My Name Is," in which Eminem impersonates Marilyn
Manson and Bill Clinton, as well as a publicity bit
featuring Missy Elliott and Dre giving the rapper props (Interscope
also bought commercial time to play the video during Howard
Stern's Saturday night CBS TV show). He's getting spins on
hip-hop radio stations, extremely rare for a white artist,
and is even recording a song for Limp Bizkit's new album.
All those years he spent fighting for his right to be white
finally paid off.
Spin: From listening to your album,
you get the impression that your childhood was pretty much a
living hell. What was it really like?
Eminem: I was born in Kansas City,
and my dad left when I was five or six months old. Then when
I was five we moved to a real bad part of Detroit. I was
getting beat up a lot, so we moved back to K.C., then back
to Detroit again when I was 11. My mother couldn't afford to
raise me, but then she had my little brother, so when we
moved back to Michigan, we were just staying wherever we
could, with my grandmother or whatever family would put us
up. I know my mother tried to do the best she could, but I
was bounced around so much-it seemed like we moved every two
or three months. I'd go to, like, six different schools in
one year. We were on welfare, and my mom never ever worked.
I'm not trying to give some sob story, like, "Oh, I've been
broke all my life," but people who know me know it's true.
There were times when friends had to buy me *censored*in'
shoes! I was poor white trash, no glitter, no glamour, but
I'm not ashamed of anything.
Spin: These were mostly
African-American neighborhoods where you grew up?
Eminem: Yeah, near 8 Mile Road in
Detroit, which separates the suburbs from the city. Almost
all the blacks are on one side, and almost all the whites
are on the other, but all the families nearby are
low-income. We lived on the black side. Most of the time it
was relatively cool, but I would get beat up sometimes when
I'd walk around the neighborhood and kids didn't know me.
One day I got jumped by, like, six dudes for no reason. I
also got shot at, and ended up running out of my shoes,
crying. I was 15 years old and I didn't know how to handle
that shit.
Spin: Were most of your friends
black?
Eminem: When you're a little kid, you
don't see color, and the fact that my friends were black
never crossed my mind. It never became an issue until I was
a teenager and started trying to rap. Then I'd notice that a
lot of mother*censored*ers always had my back, but somebody
always had to say to them, "Why you have to stick up for the
white boy?"
Spin: When did you first get into
hip-hop?
Eminem: The first hip-hop shit I ever
heard was that song "Reckless" from the Breakin' soundtrack;
my cousin played me the tape when I was, like, nine. There
was this mixed school I went to in fifth grade, one with
lots of Asian and black kids and everybody was into break
dancing. They always had the latest rap tapes-the Fat Boys,
L.L. Cool J's Radio-and I thought it was the most incredible
shit I'd ever heard.
Spin: What'd you think when you first
heard the Beastie Boys?
Eminem: That's what really did it for
me. I was like, "This shit is so dope!" That's when I
decided I wanted to rap. I'd hang out on the corner where
kids would be rhyming, and when I tried to get in there, I'd
get dissed. A little color issue developed, and as I got old
enough to hit the clubs, it got really bad. I wasn't that
dope yet, but I knew I could rhyme, so I'd get on the open
mics and shit, and a couple of times I was booed off the
stage.
Spin: Your single ("My Name Is") is
getting played on both Modern Rock and Urban radio. Are you
surprised at how quickly you're being accepted?
Eminem: Thing is, I'm not really a
commercial rapper. My whole market, my whole steez, is
through the underground; if those hip-hop heads love it,
I'll rise above. It's like, you hardly ever hear a Wu-Tang
song on the radio, but they rose from the underground on
word of mouth.
Spin: Has being white really affected
the way you see yourself as a rapper?
Eminem: In the beginning, the
majority of my shows were for all-black crowds, and people
would always say, "You're dope for a white boy," and I'd
take it as a compliment. Then, as I got older, I started to
think, "What the *censored* does that mean?" Nobody asks to
be born, nobody has a choice of what color they'll be, or
whether they'll be fat, skinny, anything. I had to work up
to a certain level before people would even look past my
color; a lot of mother*censored*ers would just sit with
their arms folded and be like, "All right, what is this?"
But as time went on, I started to get respect. The best
thing a mother*censored*er ever said about me was after an
open mic in Detroit about five years ago. He was like, "I
don't give a *censored* if he's green, I don't give a
*censored* if he's orange, this mother*censored*er is dope!"
Nobody has the right to tell me what kind of music to listen
to or how to dress or how to act or how to talk; if people
want to make jokes, well *censored* 'em. I lived this shit,
you know what I'm sayin'? And if you hear an Eminem record,
you're gonna know the minute that it comes on that this
ain't no fluke.
Spin: Did you ever come close to
quitting?
Eminem: About three or so years ago,
not that long after my daughter [Hailie Jade Scott] was
born. I was staying in this house on 7 Mile Road, and little
kids used to walk down the street going, "Look at the white
baby!" Everything was "white this, white that." We'd be
sitting on our porch, and if you were real quiet, you'd
hear, "Mumble, mumble, white, mumble, mumble, white." Then I
caught some dude breaking into my house for, like, the fifth
time, and I was like, "Yo, *censored* this! It's not worth
it. I'm outta here." That day, I wanted to quit rap and get
a house in the *censored*ing suburbs. I was arguing with my
girl, like, "Can't you see they don't want us here?" I went
through so many changes; I actually stopped writing for
about five or six months and I was about to give everything
up. I just couldn't, though. I'd keep going to the clubs and
taking the abuse. But I'd come home and put a fist through
the wall. If you listen to a Slim Shady record, you're going
to hear all that frustration coming out.
Spin: Could you see why some black
people might be not be so enthusiastic about a white kid
trying to be a rapper?
Eminem: Yeah, I did see where the
people dissing me were coming from. But, it's like, anything
that happened in the past between black and white, I can't
really speak on it, because I wasn't there. I don't feel
like me being born the color I am makes me any less of a
person.
Spin: Did you ever wish you were
black?
Eminem: There was a while when I was
feeling like, "Damn, if I'd just been born black, I would
not have to go through all this shit." But I'm not
ignorant-I know how it must be when a black person goes to
get a regular job in society. Music, in general, is supposed
to be universal; people can listen to whatever they want and
get something out of it. Personally, I just think rap music
is the best thing out there, period. If you look at my deck
in my car radio, you're always going to find a hip-hop tape;
that's all I buy, that's all I live, that's all I listen to,
that's all I love.
Spin: How do you feel about other
white rap fans?
Eminem: Say there's a white kid who
lives in a nice home, goes to an all-white school, and is
pretty much having everything handed to him on a platter-for
him to pick up a rap tape is incredible to me, because what
that's saying is that he's living a fantasy life of
rebellion. He wants to be hard; he wants to smack
mother*censored*ers for no reason except that the world is
*censored*ed-up; he doesn't know what to rebel against. Kids
like that are just fascinated by the culture. They hear
songs about people going through hard times and want to know
what that feels like. But the same thing goes for a black
person who lived in the suburbs and was catered to all his
life: Tupac is a fantasy for him, too.
Spin: Should suburban white kids, who
don't have any firsthand experience of the way black people
live, really be identifying so closely with hip-hop?
Eminem: Well, whether a white kid
goes through as much shit as I did, or didn't go through any
trouble at all, if they love the music, who's to tell them
what they should be listening to? Let's say I'm a white
16-year-old and I stand in front of the mirror and lip-synch
every day like I'm Krayzie Bone-who's to say that because
I'm a certain color I shouldn't be doing that? And if I've
got a right to buy his music and make him rich, who's to say
that I then don't have the right to rap myself?
Spin: Do you think that hip-hop
culture can open up their minds at all?
Eminem: I don't know, man. Sometimes
I feel like rap music is almost the key to stopping racism.
If anything is at least going to lessen it, it's gonna be
rap. I would love it if, even for one day, you could walk
through a neighborhood and see an Asian guy sitting on his
stoop, then you look across the street and see a black guy
and a white guy sitting on their porches, and a Mexican dude
walking by. If we could truly be multicultural, racism could
be so past the point of anybody giving a *censored*; but I
don't think you or me are going to see it in our lifetimes.
Spin: What do you think will happen
if your album blows up and becomes a huge hit?
Eminem: I imagine I'll go through a
lot of this same racial shit, but that'll just make my
second album better-because I'll have even more to rap
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