Chronilogical Order of Eminem Mgk G Eazy Beef
Everybody must start somewhere, right? Eminem would not be the Rap God he is now if it wasn't for his robot-like work ethic, hard work, and dedication. Over 20 years of his career, there is no denying that Eminem has both hit-and-miss projects and classic albums, but it does not damage his legacy in the rap game as one of the best, most prolific rappers of all-time.
Before all the fame and the glitz, Marshall Mathers was just a small-time cook at Gilbert's Lodge, making rap music during the breaks and attending rap battles on the weekends. These are his first-ever ten songs, ranked in descending, chronological order.
10 1997: Just Don't Give a F*ck
Following the poor reception of his debut album Infinite, Eminem summoned Slim Shady to life on his 1997's EP, Slim Shady EP.The EP's most well-known single, Just Don't Give a F*ck, is the incarnation of that. According to his autobiography Angry Blonde, Em wrote the song during the hardest time of his life.
"Just Don't Give a F*ck was a song that I wrote when I was staying at my mother's house. It was around the time that Hailie was born," he wrote."Just a whole bunch of other horrible sh*t was going on."
9 1996: Infinite
Contrary to popular belief, the 1999's Slim Shady LP wasn't Eminem's debut album. It was Infinite, produced by Mr. Porter of D12 and the Bass Brothers, who later served as Eminem's primary producer for the next five albums until the 2009's Relapse.
Many noted how significant Nas and AZ's influence on this record. Detroit's very own hip-hop radio stations didn't even want to play it and also asked Em, "Why don't you go into rock & roll?"
8 1995: Biterphobia
Rap God wasn't the first time Eminem went ham on a song. Before a solo artist, Eminem was a part of Detroit's local group called Soul Intent, consisted of Em (known as M&M at that time), Proof, DJ Buttafingaz, Chaos Kid, and Mike 'Manix' Ruby.
On their 1995 single, Biterphobia, Eminem swallowed the whole thesaurus while competing against the beats and the oxygen. Though he's still developing his skill in this song, Biterphobia was the start of something special.
7 1994: Crackers & Cheese
Next is Crackers and Cheese from the old tapes of Soul Intent in 1994. Eminem's flow has somewhat imitated the likes of NWA's Eazy-E or MC Ren vibes to it on this song, which is understandable because he was still finding his own sound as an artist.
It was produced by the Bass Brothers as a part of Soul Intent's 1995 eponymous debut EP.
6 1993: So Many Styles (Snippet, The Source Leak)
During his highly publicized beef against The Source magazine, Eminem was thrown under the bus for the two leaked, racially-charged tapes purportedly from 1993. One of them is titled So Many Styles, where Eminem reportedly said the n-word.
Fourteen years later, during a freestyle titled Step Right Up on Shade45, Eminem admitted that he had a hard time getting forgiveness after the leak.
5 1992: Unrealistically Graphic (Soul Intent)
Unrealistically Graphic is one of Soul Intent's early works from Still in the Bassmint tape in 1992. His lyrics are far more improved now, but for a young underground artist, Unrealistically Graphic was rapped in a high technical speed, and its one-liners are what makes it better.
The other songs from this tape are The Day It Dawned, One-Handed Juggler, and Conceptual Corrections.
4 1991: Pooh Butt Day (Soul Intent)
Pooh Butt Day is another dusty song from Soul Intent's early works. On this track, M&M went toe-to-toe on storytelling with his Soul Intent bandmate, Chaos Kid, on Bass Brother-produced beats.
Some said it's a 1991 song; others believed that it went further from that to 1988. Either way, Chaos Kid and Eminem were good friends at some point. Unfortunately, things went south between them after Eminem rose to fame, and Chaos Kid eventually took his own life in 2011.
3 1990: Fattest Skinny Kid Alive (Soul Intent)
Back in the days, Eminem still tried to figure things out with his rap, like on Fattest Skinny Kid Alive from Soul Intent's Steppin' On to the Scene tape when he clearly sounded like his childhood rap idol, LL Cool J.
"It's pourin', plus the old man ain't snoring," he raps. "Cause he gotta get up pretty damn early in the morning."
2 1989: As The Doom Surrounds With Gloom (Soul Intent)
Still from M&M and Chaos Kid, As The Doom Surrounds With Gloom is a storytelling-like freestyle of the duo that details bizarre things that happened to them in a cold, mysterious day.
His rapping style on this song is similar to what we heard from his conversational storyline songs like Guilty Conscience, Bad Guys Always Die, and Stan. Young Em really did hone his skill on this one.
1 1988: Foolish Pride (The Source Leak)
More from The Source's controversial leak in an effort to present Em as the 'Rap's Hitler,' Foolish Pride is Eminem's oldest song known to this day. Dated way back to 1988 when he was only 16, young Marshall had just broken up with a black girlfriend and took on his songs to make racist remarks.
"I reacted like the angry, stupid kid I was," Em responded about the leak. "I hope people will take it for the foolishness that it was, not for what somebody is trying to make it into today."
Source: https://www.thethings.com/eminem-first-ever-songs/
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