Eminem
Early career
Soul Intent
Early career
Interested in rap from a young age, Mathers began performing as early as
thirteen, later gaining some popularity with a group, Soul Intent. In 1996, he released
his first independent album, named
Infinite (of which he sold about 500 copies out of the back of his car.)
The album received no airplay and a mixed critical response, with people
claiming Eminem's rapping style sounded too similar to Nas and AZ. Drawing on the negative experiences of his life, in 1997 Eminem followed
Infinite up with
The Slim Shady EP demo, which saw his lyrics take a decidedly darker
turn, in songs like "No One's Iller" and "Murder Murder," the latter in which he
talks about having to commit crimes to feed his daughter. He became famous in
the hip-hop underground because of his distinctive, cartoonish style and the
fact that he was white in a predominantly black genre. Fellow rapper Snoop Dogg
referred to him as rap's "great white American hope" in the song "Bitch Please II".
It is said that rap artist and producer Dr. Dre found Eminem's demo on the
garage floor of Jimmy Iovine, the Interscope label chief. Though this did not
directly lead to a recording contract, Dr. Dre agreed to sign him when Eminem
won second place versus Otherwize at the 1997 Rap Olympics freestyle battle. Other sources state that an executive at the offices of Interscope handed the demo to Iovine who passed it to Dre, which resulted in a
contract.
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