Eminem, 50 Cent & Dr. Dre — Rolling Stone updates “500 Greatest Songs Of All Time”

One of the most prestigious magazine in the world, Rolling Stone has just updated their list of “500 Greatest Songs Of All Time.” They also noted that the list was created from over 250 artists, writers and industry figures who participated in a poll of over 4,000 songs. Check the list below.

#444 – 50 Cent – “In Da Club”

Rolling Stone: 50 Cent’s rhyme skills caught the notice of Dr. Dre and Eminem, who helped assemble this party track. “50 walked into the studio and picked up a pen,” Dre said. “We were done in an hour. We just made some shit we wanted to hear.”

#424 – Blackstreet – “No Diggity” ft. Dr. Dre & Queen Pen

Rolling Stone: No one wanted to record “No Diggity.” Teddy Riley introduced the idea for this R&B rump shaker to Aaron Hall during failed reunion talks for their pioneering New Jack group Guy; Hall passed. Riley’s then-current group, Blackstreet, didn’t like it either: He had to persuade them to do it, even singing the first verse as encouragement. With its old-school harmony vocals and a sample of some Bill Withers acoustic guitar, “No Diggity” became their biggest hit and a guaranteed floor filler ever since its release.

#320 – Dr. Dre & 2Pac – “California Love” 

Rolling Stone: There are a few myths surrounding the creation of 2Pac’s biggest hit. One claims that Dr. Dre made the beat during a barbecue at his Calabasas, California, home, and 2Pac jumped in the booth and dropped his verse in a few minutes. Another claims that Dre intended the track for his follow-up to The Chronic, but Death Row don Suge Knight coerced him into giving the single to Pac — whom he had just bailed out of prison and signed to the label. Regardless, “California Love” represents gangsta rap at its most flamboyant and cinematic.

#248 – N.W.A. – “Straight Outta Compton” 

Rollin Stone: N.W.A came in with a bang, kicking off their debut album with this West Coast gangsta attack, changing hip-hop forever. “Straight Outta Compton” cranked up the violence to previously unheard of levels, with DJ Yella and Dr. Dre’s explosive production and Ice Cube boasting “Here’s a murder rap to keep you dancin’/With a crime record like Charles Manson!” It takes only three lines for the first weapon to get fired. “Straight Outta Compton” was an instant sensation, claiming L.A. as rap’s new capital. As Chris Rock said, “It was kind of like the British Invasion for Black people.”

#223 – Eminem – “Stan,” ft. Dido

Rolling Stone: Eminem’s scariest song is rooted in a terrifying nightmare: What if the rapper’s violent, self-destructive lyrics could drive an obsessed fan to murder? “He’s crazy for real, and he thinks I’m crazy, but I try to help him at the end of the song,” said Eminem of his character. “It kinda shows the real side of me.” Anchored by a sample from Dido’s “Thank You” (which became a hit itself as a result) and augmented by a haunted house’s worth of sound effects, “Stan” proved that Eminem understood the dark side of his music better than his worst critics did.

#190 – N.W.A. – “F**k Tha Police”

Rolling Stone: With this song, the long-standing battle between young Black men and the LAPD was placed out in the open for white America to see and hear. The confrontational L.A. crew’s label, Priority Records, received a bulletin from the FBI denouncing the song for encouraging “violence against and disrespect for the law-enforcement officer”; the promoter who booked the group’s next tour imposed a contract that the band would be fined $25,000 if it ever played the song live. But as MC Ren told Arsenio Hall, the song was more about venting than threatening: “Once in everybody’s lifetime, they get harassed by the police for no reason, and everybody wants to say it, but they can’t say it on the spot ’cause something will happen to ’em.”

#167 – Eminem – “Lose Yourself”

Rolling Stone: Few rappers can throw themselves into a character as fully as Eminem, but for the relentlessly striving anthem to his not-exactly-autobiographical film debut, 8 Mile, the rapper said he struggled to find a voice for his alter ego, Jimmy “B-Rabbit” Smith. “I have to make parallels between my life and his,” he wrote. “That was the trick I had to figure out — how to make the rhyme sound like him, and then morph into me somehow, so you see the parallels between his struggles and mine.” Ditching his persona shifts and shock-rap gags, Eminem turned in a track as earnest as an Eighties-soundtrack fist pumper.

#29 – Dr. Dre – “Nutin’ but a ‘G’ Thang” ft. Snoop Dogg 

Rolling Stone: At the intersection of past and future West Coast hip-hop sits Dre’s debut solo single, a smooth and inimitable kickback classic that would help define his career following the demise of N.W.A. In a radio interview, the producer and rapper revealed that the song originally sampled a track by Boz Scaggs before he settled on the bass line from Leon Haywood’s 1975 hit “I Want’a Do Something Freaky to You.” Snoop was in jail while Dre was recording, so he had to originally record his parts over the phone. “I really wanted this demo done, so he called in and I taped the receiver of the phone to the mic,” Dre recalled. “You can hear jail sounds in the back.”

For the full list, check here.

Megan Thee Stallion drops crazy Eminem reference in a new song with Lil Nas X

Lil Nas X has released new album MONTERO, featuring Jack Harlow, Doja Cat, Elton John, Megan Thee Stallion and Miley Cyrus.

In a song titled “DOLLA SIGN SLIME,” Megan drops one of the hardest Eminem shout-out while referencing his legendary songs, ‘Stan’ and ‘The Real Slim Shady.’

Baby, all these hoes imitate me / You gon’ f**k a Stan or the real Slim Shady?” she raps.

You can bump the new track below, it really sounds banger:

Ja Rule to 50 Cent: “You are nothing without Eminem, white boy made you”

After so many years, the beef between 50 Cent and the Murder Inc. Records is still alive.

After last night’s Verzuz battle between Fat Joe and Ja Rule, 50 Cent became a trending topic on Twitter during the event. This caused Irv Gotti to respond the matter on Instagram:

“You all talking that 50 s**t, all good. He got beat up, stabbed up. Shot up. Sued us. That is all I am going to say. Your hero is not what you think he is. Period and facts.” said Gotti.

50 Cent responded back to him with several Instagram posts, saying: “I put their whole label out of business, f**k with me if you want to. I would stay out of my way if I was not me.”

Today, Ja Rule has also responded to Fifty in an exclusive interview with radio host Big Tigger: “Eminem made you, created you. You are nothing without that f**king white boy. Stop it.”

You can listen to it below:

Jack Harlow says Eminem phone call meant everything to him

Yesterday, during an interview with Billboard on 2021 MTV Video Music Awards’ red carpet, Jack Harlow revealedhe jumped on the phone with Eminem following their “Killer” collaboration, and the Detroit legend let him know he is a big fan of him.

“We did not get to meet, but we had a phone call that meant the world to me. I have not shared it with the world yet, but I can not wait until the world hears it. He gave me a lot of props that any artist would love to get. Sometimes, the best gem is just somebody you admire, letting you know who you think you are. He let me know, ‘You’re that. You’re dope.’ I have waited a decade to hear that. So it was special.” said Harlow

The Shelbyville, Kentucky-born rapper is probably going to share the phone-call via one of his songs’ intro or as a skit on the album.

For the full interview, hit Billboard here.

Eminem shares GRIP & Westside Boogie picture!

Eminem has just shared the picture of his Shady Records soldiers, GRIP and Westside Boogie with the caption: “What do these 2 Shady labelmates have cooking?”

GRIP has recently released his Shady Records debut album “I Died For This!?” and Westside Boogie is preparing his second major release under Shady.

The East Atlanta rapper and Compton emcee are probably teaming up for Boogie’s upcoming album, which is set to be released somewhere this fall.

You can check Eminem’s post below:

Lord Jamar talks about Eminem with Math Hoffa on “My Expert Opinion”

Lord Jamar and Smoke DZA has recently talked with Math Hoffa and the crew on “My Expert Opinion” about Drake and Kanye West, Lyrical rappers never going pop, Eminem and much more.

Math Hoffa literally started the interview with the straightforward question: “Why do you hate Eminem?!” On which, Lord Jamar replied:

“I had a feeling this would go to that direction at some point. First of all, according to Eminem’s fans, every time I speak – I speak about him. Which we know is not factual. I don’t even like to get in it no more. It was never about hating Eminem. It was just stating facts.”

“Hip-hop is black music. We created that s**t. As the creators, we decide who our GOATs are. Not records sales, not record companies, not white people, not any other people other than black people because we were the ones that started that s**t. So he got people coming out like ‘ohh Eminem is GOAT, he sold more records…’ Real hip-hop motherf**kers don’t care about record sales. Like MC Hammer was selling mad records, Vanilla Ice was selling mad records. That is not criteria that makes you good. And at the end of the day, you are not going to hijack this s**t from us and tell us who we f**k with.”

You can watch the interview below:

Westside Gunn talks why collaboration with Eminem never happened

Griselda’s Westside Gunn has recently set down on Bars On I-95 where he talked about Buffalo roots, how his music journey paid off, what looks like the last piece of his Hitler Wears Hermès series and what’s next for him.

In an interview, Gunn revealed he has a radio show coming on Shade 45 and explained why a collaboration with Eminem never happened. (Besides Griselda’s “Bang (Remix), which actually was a track with Conway The Machine)

“When I was signed to Shady, I never even wanted to do an Eminem song cause our styles don’t even mix. I don’t do s**t just because ‘Oh I’m with Shady, I gotta do hundred Eminem songs.’ It was not like that but it was an opportunity of being over there with them guys. That’s all I really wanted. I still wanted to have my sound. I’m looking at, trying to do movies. I’m a creator. I wanted to do that Get Rich Or Die Tryin’ and 8 Mile s**t. I wanted to do all that s**t. That’s why I jumped and went that rout. I’m still thankful. Shout out to Paul. We talking right now because I’m trying to get this weekly show on Shade 45 finished. So I’m about to crush him with my own show on Shade 45 cause I’m all for the culture.” – said Westside Gunn

You can watch the interview below:

Conway performs new song “Piano Love” in Atlanta

Conway The Machine is on “Love Will Get You Killed” tour right now and the Griselda heavyweight premiered new song “Piano Love” at The Masquerade, Atlanta, Georgia.

The song is probably from his Shady Records debut album, “God Don’t Make Mistakes,” which is set to be released later this year.

The Buffalo legend also brought out 2 Chainz, JID and Bangladesh to perform “200 Pies,” “Scatter Brain” and “6:30 Tip Off” respectively, from his latest album, La Maquina.

Conway’s next stop is Norfolk, Virginia. Meanwhile, check the previous performances below:

Eminem mural in Detroit gets defaced after 1 day of completion, Chris Devins promises to fix it

Chicago street artist Chris Devins spent his weekend to paint an Eminem mural in Detroit but it was defaced the next day.

Devins began at around 1P.M. and finished 6 hours later, with locals taking photos and paying respect throughout the day. But by the next day, the six-foot tall portrait had been vandalized with 18 bird head sketches drawn with a Sharpie.

“Only one day after its completion, some idiot in Detroit already defaced the new Eminem mural. You can not give some people anything good. Dumb. I can probably fix it but damn…” Devins wrote on his Instagram.

Speaking to The Detroit News, Chris Devins said: “I was devastated. Who would do that? That’s against the rules of street art. I want to restore it to its original value. I would like to re-present it to the community in its unblemished form.”

“It was a great wall. It looked like it was going to sit there for a second, so I thought it could use some beautification. It really enhances that wall. To me, it’s totally appropriate. I wanted to do him looking young and fresh. I didn’t put up anything ugly.”

“There was time and effort spent to make sure it was something people would want, and to make it relatable to the community. It’s not just usual tagging.” Check out the video of completing the mural:

In “Where We’re From” documentary Otherwize remembers beating Eminem at Rap Olympics 1997

Back in 1997, Eminem participated in the Rap Olympics during the Rap Sheet convention at the Red Lion Hotel in Los Angeles where he went all the way to the final, up against Otherwize who eventually took the  crown.

The infamous face-off is now part of the new documentary titled Where We’re From: Rise of LA Underground Hip Hop that was produced by Element co-founders DJ Breeze and DJ Bonds who were both instrumental in establishing the underground Hip Hop scene.

In a new interview with HHDX, DJ Breeze said: “Eminem held his own as well. The battle with Wize had to go extra rounds because these dudes were going at it. The battle had also a slight racial overtone to it. Obviously ’cause there were few white rappers at the time. So it definitely started to take on the feel of Black versus white. I will say this, the battle between those two guys was phenomenal. It had to go extra rounds because at one point it just seem like they were so evenly matched.”

“Even though you could feel the crowd wanting Otherwize to win, you couldn’t deny Eminem skill set. But I do feel confidently 100 percent that Otherwize did win the battle. Did he blow them out of the water? No, he did not. But he did win. It also adds a kind of lore to Otherwize’s name considering Eminem bought all the footage so nobody could see the battle.”

You can watch the Otherwize VS Eminem part from Where We’re From documentary below:

Battle rappers discuss why “8 Mile” was huge success but “Bodied” flopped

In a recent episode of their show “My Expert Opinion“, Math Hoffa and Ms Fit talk about the rap battle movies, including Eminem‘s 2002 classic “8 Mile” movie and 2017  battle rap movie “Bodied” which was produced by Eminem.

The crew had some huge praise for Eminem’s “8 Mile” while calling “Bodied” a failure. They said that “8 Mile” felt more real, gritty, and somehow inspired by Eminem’s real-life story.

While Bodied, the 2017 battle rap comedy-drama film directed by Joseph Kahn, somehow didn’t connect to the streets. The movie flopped at the box office as it only made $100k, after being made from a budget of $15 million.

Math Hoffa gives his opinion on “Bodied” and said that it was an exaggerated version of “8 Mile”.

You can check out the whole discussion below:

[Via HipHop24x7]

DJ Whoo Kid turns Eminem’s Shade 45 into brothel

DJ Whoo Kid regularly turns Shade 45 into strip club and this time it was one of the mad nights at Eminem’s radio station.

Shade 45 shared a video of DJ Whoo Kid in the office with some Instagram models with caption: “What girls do for Eminem.”

In the video, one of the girls named Sara Russi says: “I’m big fan of Eminem and I can’t wait to put my pussy on someone’s neck.”

You can watch the weirdest video below:

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