"Infinite was me trying to figure out how I wanted my rap
style to be, how I wanted to sound on the mic and present
myself," he recalls. "It was a growing stage. I felt like
Infinite was like a demo that just got pressed up."
After being thoroughly disappointed and hurt by the response
Infinite received, Eminem began working on what would later
become the Slim Shady EP -- a project he made for himself.
Featuring several scathing lines about local music industry
personalities as well as devious rants about life in general,
the set quickly caught the ear of hip-hop's difficult-to-please
underground.
"I had nothing to lose, but something to gain," Eminem says
of that point in his life. "If I made an album for me and
it was to my satisfaction, then I succeeded. If I didn't,
then my producers were going to give up on the whole rap
thing we were doing. I made some sh*t that I wanted to hear.
The Slim Shady EP, I lashed out on everybody who talked
sh*t about me."
By presenting himself as himself, Eminem and
his career took off. Soon after giving the Rap Coalition's
Wendy Day a copy of the Infinite album at a chance meeting,
she helped the aspiring lyrical gymnast secure a spot at
the Coalition’s 1997 Rap Olympics in Los Angeles, where
he won second place in the freestyle competition. During
the trip, Eminem and his manager, Paul Rosenberg, gave a
few people from Interscope Records his demo and he made
his major radio debut on the world famous Wake Up Show with
Sway and Tech. Realizing that this was the opportunity of
his lifetime, Eminem delivered a furious medley of lyrics
that wowed his hosts and radio audience alike.
"I felt like it's my time to shine," Eminem says of that
performance. "I have to rip this. At that time, I felt that
it was a life or death situation."
Eminem would soon record the underground classic "5 Star
Generals." This record helped establish him in Japan, New
York and Los Angeles. It also helped him earn a spot on
the inaugural Lyricist Lounge tour, which took him to stages
from Philadelphia to Los Angeles.
Set to take the hip-hop world by storm with his unique lyrical
approach and punishing production, Eminem and his Slim Shady
LP are sure to have listeners captivated.
"I do say things that I think will shock people," he says.
"But I don't do things to shock people. I'm not trying to
be the next Tupac, but I don't know how long I'm going to
be on this planet. So while I'm here, I might as well make
the most of it."