Dean Browning, a former commissioner in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, who represents Republican Party, has showed his support to Lil Pump for dissing Eminem.
“Lil Pump is right. Eminem is totally overrated,” wrote Dean on his twitter:
Skylar Grey has a very heartful message to Eminem following the success of “Black Magic” song from the deluxe edition of Music To Be Murdered By: Side B.
Even though the song is not a single, it was the highest charting song from the album on iTunes, after “GNAT” single.
On her Instagram, Skylar Grey expressed her gratitude to his mentor, Eminem:
“Because of “Black Magic,” my Spotify surpassed 4 million monthly listeners today. Which is double what it was just a couple weeks ago. I want to take this moment to publicly express my gratitude for Marshall and everything he has done for me in the past ten years.”
“When Marshall cut “Love The Way You Lie,” my career was suddenly on fire. And he could have stopped there. But he did not. “Black Magic” is the 14th song we have worked on together. Over the years he has continued to include me in projects, bring me on tour, and show me tons of support. Even when other people gave up on me, he never did. Even after I parted ways with Interscope Records, he still believed in me.
“To me, Eminem is beyond a collaborator, a mentor, or a friend. He is family. From the bottom of my heart, THANK YOU Marshall… for all of the incredible opportunities, and for always having my back… I am forever indebted to you. Love you so much homie.” – says Skylar
Exactly one week ago, Eminem released the deluxe edition of Music To Be Murdered By: Side B, featuring Skylar Grey, Dr. Dre, Ty Dolla Sign, DJ Premier and more.
The album sold almost 90,000 in its first week and brought 1000% increase in sale of the original album. This is probably the biggest jump for the album in history but we have to confirm this yet.
You can check out best seller albums this week below:
3. Eminem – “Music To Be Murdered By” (Deluxe) – 90,000 units.
NOTE: This will not be a ‘debut’ of the album, this is actually the continuation of the original album, so it will be counted as an ‘increase’ of the original album.
Couple of days ago, Lil Pump posted a video of him insulting Eminem on his Instagram story. He also tweeted “f**k Eminem” but the tweet is now gone, as well as the video from his story (it was not there for 24 hours, it was deleted a bit early)
Couple of days ago, Lil Pump dissed Eminem on his Instagram story.
While Eminem has not responded, rappers from his camp are sharpening their clutches like like a chained beasts.
Boogie, Paul Rosenberg, Public Enemy, Chuck D, Nasaan, Royce Da 5’9″, Kxng Crooked, Lazarus and MAJ (who is featured on Eminem’s “These Demons”) have all responded to Little Pimp.
To Lil pump : Last time i was in the same building as @Eminem it was a 2019 stadium w 63,623 paid fanatics. This was 2 weeks after opening up a concert of 750,000 in Milan Italy.I mean people can make up whatever in their individual heads but promoting your mind as truth is crazy
Cole Bennett, who has recently shot “Godzilla,” featuring Juice WRLD and “GNAT” with Eminem, has expressed his desire to one day work with Eminem on a full-length movie.
Cole posted a picture of Eminem and himself from “GNAT” video’s behind the scenes on his Instagram story, saying: “Working with Eminem is surreal every time. I hope to one day work on a full length feature film with him once I step into the narrative world.”
Yesterday, Lil Pump called out Eminem in a bizarre rant on his Instagram Story, calling the legendary rapper “lame as hell,” and dubbing him “old,” among other things.
The ‘Gucci Gang’ rapper’s tirade ignited a social media firestorm, but not in his favor. “Lil Pump” quickly trended on Twitter in the United States, as thousands of people clowned on him for dragging Eminem’s name to stay relevant.
There were responses from Eminem’s camp too. Royce Da 5’9″ message to Little Pimp was clear as a blue sky: “I will slap them glasses so far off his face, they will land in whole another genre. Not cause I am mad but just cause I am exhausted with all the tough talk from all these harmless creatures. Enjoy yourself. You actually make money off blatant misappropriation while not being really good at anything.”
Lil Pump has just dissed Eminem on his Instagram story.
“Aye, f*%* Eminem! You lame as hell. Ain’t nobody listens to your old a*s. You lame as f***, b****.” says Little Pimp in the video.
You can watch that disgraceful video below:
We don’t know yet what was the motive of Lil Pump gong at Eminem like that. All we know Eminem has not dissed him on Music To Be Murdered By: Side B. Might be political views? Eminem hates Donald Trump, Pump supports him. Or, is Lil Pump clout-chasing? cause somebody remind him about monthly Spotify listeners:
LIL PUMP: 9.5 million monthly listeners. EMINEM: 38.7 million monthly listeners.
Eminem did diss Lil Pump on “The Ringer” off Kamikaze back in 2018 but Pump said he deserved that. You can check all the info in the video above.
“Book Of Rhymes” is No. 5 song on Eminem’s latest release, the deluxe edition of Music To Be Murdered By: Side B, which is accompanied by scratches from legendary beat-maker DJ Premier, produced by Luis Resto, Illa Da Producer and Eminem.
The song also plays off the title of the Alchemist produced ‘Book of Rhymes’ song by Nas from God’s Son. There is also a likely sample of the Nas song in the end in the DJ Premier mixing part, towards the ending of the song.
Preemo doesn’t look to get enough off of the track as he added more scratches during an Instagram session. “You killed it.” Eminem’s manager Paul Rosenberg commented on the post.
During an interview with HipHopDX’s Senior Writer Kyle Eustice, legendary hip-hop group’s Cypress Hill’s B-Real was talking about the Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E. collaboration, titled “911” featuring himself and Eminem when he listed top three greatest rappers of all time.
“Well, my top three rapper list would be, you know, it always KRS-1 at the top, Eminem and then JAY Z as rappers go. Public Enemy’s Chuck D is in there for sure, but my Top three is those guys right there.” said B-Real
Xzibit was asked the same question but took a more comedic approach with his answer, “Dylan, Dylan, Dylan, Dylan, Dylan,” – replied X to the Z, referencing the famous Chappelle’s Show skit.
For more details about the interview, visit HipHopDX here.
As the early reports say from HitsDailyDouble, the deluxe edition of Eminem’s “Music To Be Murdered By: Side B” album is heading to debut at No. 3 on US Billboard 200 chart with 70,000 – 80,000 sales, just Taylor Swift “Evermore” with 100,000 and Paul McCartney’s “McCartney III” with 85,000 – 95,000.
If Eminem’s new album will debut at No. 3 this will end his 10-albums No.1 streak record.
Eminem fans decided to make MTBMB SIDE B streaming party to make sure the Rap God will receive the number one spot on the charts next week, joined by Drake, Rihanna, Demi Lovato fans, as well as other musician’s fanbases.
The streaming party starts on 24th of December, Thursday, at 5PM EST. We encourage all the fans around the world to unite and join the party but also make sure to make a digital purchase.
On 9th day of HotNewHipHop Presents: 12 Days Of Christmas, Royce Da 5’9″ talks on his discography, producing for Eminem, learning production from Dr Premier and Denaun Porter, his first Grammy nomination, Lil Wayne’s legacy and much more.
Interviewer: I am loving your production. I remember you showcased a few beats on your Instagram hinting at a little bit of a Bad Meets Evil vibe, I was pretty into that.
Royce 5’9″ : I sent Marshall some stuff here. I always send him stuff. I mean, so my first placement I got was on his album. So that was a dope accomplishment. And I love when I can send him something and he gets excited, man, it makes me excited. It makes me want to work. Sometimes I need that, you know?
Interviewer: Oh, definitely. And it showcases some versatility too. Like the sounds that you were kind of working with on Music To Be Murdered By were pretty different than the ones on Allegory. So it showed that you’re able to adapt to other artists. I mean, obviously, you’re familiar with working with Eminem but did it open a new dynamic? Was it new territory?
Royce 5’9″ : So it is always a new dynamic, because you never know what he is gonna be on. It all depends on what headspace he is in, you know? You can do so many things and like, whatever he chooses to do, he is going to be great at it. He is going to strive to put his best foot forward. The competition level of just what you have to put into it in order to be able to coexist from a competitive perspective is distressing. I mean, that is pretty much what my experience is like whenever I am working with him. I am a new producer, so having to– producing his first single is stressful, because, like, it is on the same album as a Dr. Dre beat.
So it is just a level of stress that is fun. And I am up for that challenge. But it is definitely on a different mind frame. And then like, with those beasts that I gave him for that album, that was my first time working with somebody where when I come around, I have to find out where I fit, and occupy that space, and not go past that. You know? Because that’s his ship. I am just here to help. So I am just here to do my part. Actually, I did not even get summoned here to help. I am just here as a friend. And I am playing him stuff, and he is liking it. So like, now I got to just adapt to that.
For the full interview, visit HotNewHipHop here and also make sure to support Royce’s latest album, “The Allegory.”