Member Since:
6/7/2004
Total Mixes:
9747
Total Feedback:
8
Other Mixes By
itunes
Playlist
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Other Mix
Playlist
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Celebrity Playlist
Playlist
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Celebrity Playlist
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Dr. Dre
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What's the Difference (feat. Eminem & Alvin Joiner)
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from The Chronic 2001
(2008)
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Eminem
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Never Enough
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from Encore (Deluxe Version)
(2004)
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Eminem
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'97 Bonnie and Clyde
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from The Slim Shady LP
(1999)
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Eminem
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Drug Ballad
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from The Marshall Mathers LP
(2000)
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Bad Meets Evil
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Living Proof
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from Hell: The Sequel (Deluxe Edition)
(2011)
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Eminem
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Elevator
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from Relapse: Refill
(2009)
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Eminem
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Criminal
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from The Marshall Mathers LP
(2000)
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D12
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Girls
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from Devil's Night
(2001)
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Eminem
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Square Dance
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from The Eminem Show
(2002)
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50 Cent
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Patiently Waiting
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from Get Rich or Die Tryin'
(2003)
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Xzibit
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My Name
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from Man vs. Machine
(2002)
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D12
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How Come
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from D12 World
(2004)
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Bobby Creekwater, Cashis, Eminem, Obie Trice & Stat Quo
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We're Back
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from Eminem Presents the Re-Up (Bonus Track Version)
(2006)
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Obie Trice
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We All Die One Day
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from Cheers
(2003)
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Bad Meets Evil
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Welcome 2 Hell
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from Hell: The Sequel (Deluxe Edition)
(2011)
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Eminem
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Talkin' 2 Myself
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from Recovery (Deluxe Edition)
(2010)
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Funkmaster Flex & Supreme Bigga Nigga Big Kap
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If I Get Locked Up
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from The Tunnel
(1999)
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D12
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It Ain't Nothin' But Music
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from Devil's Night
(2001)
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Eminem
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Rock Bottom
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from The Slim Shady LP
(1999)
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Eminem & 50 Cent
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The Re-Up
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from Eminem Presents the Re-Up (Bonus Track Version)
(2006)
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Eminem
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My Darling
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from Relapse: Refill
(2009)
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Eminem
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I'm Back
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from The Marshall Mathers LP
(2000)
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Eminem
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Insane
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from Relapse
(2009)
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Eminem & D12
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Shit On You
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from Curtain Call - The Hits (Deluxe Version)
(2005)
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Eminem
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My 1st Single
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from Encore (Deluxe Version)
(2004)
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Comment:
To understand where Eminem [i]really[/i] comes from, you might want to start with "Nuttin' to Do" and "Scary Movies," two standout tracks from his [i]Bad Meets Evil[/i] sessions with Royce da 5'9". Tracked in the late '90s — right before Marshall Mathers became Dr. Dre's right-hand man — they push Em's battle-ready rhymes to the foreground alongside spring-loaded basslines and spare, trunk-thumpin' beats. These days, Eminem's a respected producer in his own right, whether we're talking about half of the [i]Eminem Presents the Re-Up[/i] compilation (the stark and sinister title track, the wild, speaker-poking strings of "We're Back") or bits of boom-bap breaks ("6 in the Morning"), laser-like keys ("We All Die One Day"), and clock radio clicks ("My 1st Single").
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