
I've heard this at gyms and football games everywhere and I'm a little tired of it. From a lyrical, message, emotional perspective, it's quite a good song even if the production was a little bit on the weak side. And I think both songs are "right" based on the perspective of the time they were written in Em's life. A perfect example of chemistry between the two. The contrast and dynamic between the two is interesting and it just feels natural. Lavish production from Dre, well-paced with each trading bars at perfect times. Not a single bar is wasted and it's one of his most dextrous flows on the album. A serious song that isn't to dark and dull, keeps a peppy energy about it without too much levity. Perfect delivery for sure.Ī truly underrated gem. And one of my most listened songs of him. An evolved stance on middle america without the shock value. A perfect balance of noise, noise and more noise. It carries a weight and heft to it, yet is nimble and not once clumsy.

What "Kill You" wants to be when it grows up.

He uses strong emotionally charged words, but not just for the sake of being provocative like in MMLP's political commentary.

The most political (in the social sense) song on the album. I really wish he made more creative coloful psychadelic rock-oriented songs like that, but it might've made the rest of the album seem too plain in comparison.
#EMINEM THE EMINEM SHOW SONGS CRACK#
Note: Stimulate would probably crack into my top 5 because I love that song. Eminem | Events Worth checking out: Eminem - Higher (Music Video) / Eminem - GNAT (Music Video) Style Switcher Song of the Week #449: Girls - Past SotW | New: Music To Be Murdered By - Side B (Deluxe Edition) | Other: Friday Night Cypher / The Adventures Of Moon Man And Slim Shady - Kid Cudi Ft.

Curtain Call: The Hits debuted at number 1 on the UK Albums Chart, after two sales days, in a similar fashion to Eminem's previous album Encore.
