Death of Slim Shady: The controversial legacy of Eminem's peroxide-blond alter ego.

 



Twenty-five years after bursting on to the scene, it appears rapper Eminem's provocative alter ego Slim Shady may finally be silenced.

The antagonistic Slim Shady, with his peroxide-blond hair and everyman blue jeans, stemmed from Eminem's self-described "white trash" upbringing.

In a surprise April announcement teased as a mock murder news report, Eminem revealed that his new album, The Death of Slim Shady (Coup de Grâce), will be released this summer.

And on Friday, Shady once again said "guess who's back" - reappearing to cause havoc on the album's lead single, Houdini.

Featuring cameos from rap icons Dr Dre, Snoop Dogg and 50 Cent as well as comics Pete Davidson and Shane Gillis, Eminem comes face-to-face with the rap anti-hero he created.

The new album title suggests a fittingly violent end to Slim Shady, with the rapper himself concluding: "I knew it was only a matter of time."

So, as his alter ego rises to his feet for the last time - how should we understand his legacy?




Born Marshall Mathers III, Eminem was raised in Michigan's low-income, majority-black Detroit neighbourhoods.

Rap became an escape when he was a teenager, from a childhood of strained parental relationships and bullying.

He tried to break into the music scene, and felt “crushed” when Vanilla Ice became the face of white solo rap in 1990, his pop-party track Ice Ice Baby selling millions.

“Ice’s name became synonymous with selling out and manufactured success,” surmised The Ringer’s Justin Sayles.

But Mathers was different, "a true product of ghetto streets," wrote Nick Hasted in his Eminem biography.


This left him uniquely placed to manage what Jeff Weiss called the “cultural debt” faced by white rap artists.

It helped that his flow, honed through years of rap battles, was spectacular.

Prof Anthony Kwame Harrison, a sociologist specialising in hip-hop, praised Eminem's skills, saying "his outstanding rhyming and songcraft made him the last white rap pioneer".

Despite this, his 1996 album, Infinite, failed to attract major labels.

His early mentors, the Bass Brothers, suggested the idea of "shock-rap", which led to the birth of Slim Shady.

"The market didn't take to it until he got a little foul-mouthed," added Mark Bass

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