Here’s an interesting story about Eminem’s first album — but it’s not The Slim Shady LP .
Broke, humiliated, and getting booed at open mics, Marshall snapped. That rejection directly birthed The Slim Shady LP . He stopped being nice. He created Slim — the psychotic, hilarious, venomous alter ego who didn’t care if you hated him. As he later rapped in “Rock Bottom” (written during this period): “I feel like I’m walkin’ a tight rope without a circus net / I’m popping Percocet… ‘cause my pride’s in the gutter.” eminem first album
He sold maybe 70 copies. Most were given away. Detroit’s underground radio stations ignored it. One local hip-hop magazine gave it a brutal review, calling him a “Nas clone.” The final nail: at a small record store, Marshall watched a customer pick up Infinite , listen to it, and put it back with a disgusted face. The owner later told him, “Nobody bought it. We threw most of them in the trash.” Here’s an interesting story about Eminem’s first album
One original Infinite cassette — with the hand-drawn label — sold on eBay for over $1,000 years later. Eminem himself once said, “If you find a copy, burn it. I hate that album.” He stopped being nice
Before the world knew him as Eminem, before Dr. Dre, before “My Name Is,” a hungry, angry 24-year-old Marshall Mathers released an album called in 1996. And it pretty much failed — spectacularly.
Marshall had just lost his job as a cook at Gilbert’s Lodge, his girlfriend was pregnant with Hailie, and he was living in a tiny, cockroach-infested apartment on Detroit’s east side. He and his friend/producer, the Bass Brothers, scraped together about $1,500 to press maybe 500–1,000 cassettes and records.