Eminem
Stan
| "Stan" |
 |
|
Single by
Eminem |
| from the album
The Marshall Mathers LP |
| Released |
2000 |
| Format |
CD |
|
Genre |
Rap |
| Length |
6
min 43 s |
|
Label |
Aftermath/Interscope |
|
Producer(s) |
The 45 King |
|
Chart
positions |
- #1 (UK, Australia,
Switzerland, Austria, Germany, Finland, Italy)
- #3 (Norway, Sweden)
- #4 (France)
- #51 (US)
|
|
Eminem
singles chronology |
"The
Way I Am"
(2000) |
"Stan"
(2000) |
"Without
Me"
(2002) |
Stan is the third track on the
Eminem album
The Marshall Mathers LP (2000).
"Stan" was the third
single (after "The
Real Slim Shady" and "The
Way I Am") released from
The Marshall Mathers LP, the second LP from
rapper
Eminem. The
song is perhaps Eminem's most critically-acclaimed song and a "cultural
milestone."[1]
The song samples "Thank You" by
Dido.
It is a haunting story of a fan who writes to Eminem but doesn't receive a swift
reply. Unhinged already, the fan (Stan) drives his car off a bridge with his
pregnant girlfriend in the trunk. The first three verses are delivered by Stan,
with the third actually being spoken in the car itself as he is about to drive
off a bridge. The fourth verse is Eminem responding too late to Stan, only
realizing at the last second that he has heard about Stan's death as he was
writing to him. The video features Devon Sawa as Stan, the obsessive fan and
Dido as his pregnant girlfriend.
Song
The chorus of "Stan" is sung by
British singer Dido, a sample of
her song "Thank You"; unusually, Dido's part was a verse, not the chorus, in the
original song. It is a haunting melody, ominous and threatening when placed
alongside the booming, deep bass beats and the sound of rain and thunder and
lightning.
Lyrics
In the first verse, Stan writes to Eminem for the third time. He is still
optimistic that his hero will write back. He explains the level of his devotion
("I got a room full of your posters and your pictures man"). He optimistically
believes that Eminem "must not have got 'em", meaning his previous two letters.
Stan also reveals that his girlfriend is pregnant, and that he is going to name
his daughter Bonnie, a reference to his song "97 Bonnie and Clyde", and
sympathizes with the suicide of a family member ("I read about your Uncle Ronnie
too I'm sorry/I had a friend kill himself over some bitch who didn't want him").
In spite of the optimism of Stan, the menacing beats, intermittent thunder and
rainfall, background music keeps the mood dark and ominous.
In the second verse, Stan is angry, though not extremely so. He begins
somewhat optimistically but begins to lose his temper by the second line ("I
ain't mad - I just think it's fucked up you don't answer fans"). The
thunder in the background has grown steadily more constant and louder,
particularly at some of the more chilling lines in the song, lines that
illustrate the depths of Stan's fanaticism, such as: "I even got a tattoo with
your name across my chest" and "PS: We should be together too" as well as his
general lack of mental health: "Sometimes I even cut myself to see how much it
bleeds/It's like adrenaline, the pain is such a sudden rush for me" (see
self-harm). Stan mentions his little brother, Matthew, who is an even bigger fan
than Stan himself. This could be interpreted as an example of psychological
projection on Stan's part, placing his own feelings and
emotions on someone else. Stan is bitter because Eminem had refused to give
Matthew an autograph at a concert, after waiting in the "blistering cold" for
four hours. Stan explains why he identifies with Eminem ("I never knew my father
neither/He used to always cheat on my mom and beat her").
The third verse is Stan rapping into a tape recorder in the car he is about
to drive off a bridge. His pregnant girlfriend can be heard screaming in the
trunk, and the rain and thunder are loud and insistent. Stan is irate,
addressing Eminem as "Dear Mister-I'm-Too-Good-To-Call-Or-Write-My-Fans". He
explains his predicament: "I'm in the car right now, I'm doing 90 on the
freeway/Hey Slim, I drank a fifth of vodka, you dare me to drive?" (quoting "My
Name Is..." on the previous Eminem album,
The Slim Shady LP). This is followed by a reference to a
Phil Collins song, "In the Air Tonight". Specifically, Stan refers to an urban
legend that the song is about a true experience of Collins, that he was
aware of a man who killed another person by drowning and saw that man in the
front row at a concert. (Collins claims that this is not true and nothing of the
sort ever happened.) Stan vents, revealing the depths of his anger: "I hope you
can't sleep and you dream about it/And when you dream I hope you can't sleep and
you SCREAM about it/I hope your conscience EATS AT YOU and you can't BREATHE
without me". At the end, Stan realizes too late he will be unable to send the
tape to Eminem.
The fourth verse is Eminem's belated reply to Stan. He begins casually "Dear
Stan, I meant to write you sooner but I just been busy." He also sends a
"Starter cap" with his autograph for Matthew. He also reveals something of his
serious and sober side with his advice for Stan: "You got some issues Stan, I
think you need some counseling" and "I really think you and your girlfriend need
each other/or maybe you just need to treat her better". He apologizes for
missing Stan at the concert mentioned in the second verse, and also chastises
Stan for suggesting an apparently homosexual relationship ("That type of shit'll
make me not want us to meet each other"; later related to in the Pet Shop
Boys song "The Night I Fell in Love"). The song ends with Eminem's realization of what has
happened ("... in the car they found a tape, but they didn't say who it was
to/Come to think about it, his name... it was you. Damn."), and then a sudden
clash of thunder and lightning. In the music video, the lightning strike
illuminates a split-second image of Stan's face staring in through a window.
Legacy of the song
The song was released in the
United Kingdom in December 2000 and entered the charts at No.1, but was knocked
off the top of the chart before Christmas by children's cartoon character Bob
the Builder. British DJ Chris Moyles performed a parody of the song entitled "Stanta",
featuring Moyles taking the part of Stan writing a similar series of letters to
Santa Claus with similar results. The parody was never commercially released.
Alistair McGowan also parodied it on his TV show, portraying Eminem as an
obsessive fan of Jimmy Savile who was driven to producing terrible rap music after Jim failed to
fix it for him.
Australian comedian
John Safran made a parody music video of Stan about Eminem (referred to as
Marshall) doing community service at a children's hospital. Marshall is told to
read the book "Green Eggs and Ham" to the children. He reads the book in the same fashion that
"Stan" is composed, but ad-libbing lines from the book into the rap lyrics.
Rapper Canibus
released a response track to this song entitled U Didn't Care, in which
Canibus, as Stan, accused Eminem of not caring about him at all.
Canadian actor
Scott Thompson also made a parody version of this song where the main chorus
ended "Are you straight or gay?".
At the 2001 Grammy Awards, Eminem was facing a lot of criticism from the Gay
and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation over his lyrics, and as a result
Eminem
responded by performing "Stan" with homosexual singer Elton John singing Dido's
lines. Recordings of this performance were available for download on Eminem's
official website, Eminem.com, and, later, on his 2005 greatest hits release,
Curtain
Call.
Home | Up | Business | Cleanin' Out My Closet | Encore | Guilty Conscience | Just Lose It | Like Toy Soldiers | Lose Yourself | Mockingbird | My Name Is | Shake That | Sing for the Moment | Stan | Superman | The Real Slim Shady | The Way I Am | Without Me | Crazy in Love
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