FEATURED FEATURE
(Guest Spots That Steal The Spotlight)
Eminem on Terror Squad’s “Lean Back (Remix)”
Eminem’s music is one of those things that I feel like I’m unable to engage with critically due solely to how present it’s been in my life. There are those certain songs that you’ve heard over and over again to the degree that they just become wallpaper. Rather than being actual pieces of music they’re just these...things. Sonic events that unfold over a couple of minutes in the same way that they’ve unfolded time and time again.
It is, of course, possible to break through such a mental block. In fact, doing so with the Beach Boys is essentially a universal milestone for any music fan. But when it comes to Eminem, I’ve never been able to find the wonder and appreciation I’ve eventually discovered for songs like the Chordettes’ “Mr. Sandman” or the Who’s “Baba O’Riley.” I suspect that it’s because Em’s Greatest Rapper Alive stint coincided with my preteen years, an era in which I inhaled music, but hadn’t yet developed my own taste. (Peep my P.O.D. and Alien Ant Farm CDs.) So, while I’m intimate familiar with Em’s music, it’s hard for me to engage with it or be impressed by it.
But maybe that’s changing. I’ve recently been revisiting Lil Jon & the Eastside Boyz’ early 00’s output, and rediscovered the remix to “Lean Back” that I’d not thought about in a decade or so. And I’ll be damned if I don’t love Em’s verse.
The whole thing sounds like Marshall’s drunk on assonance. Sure, he’s still spitting traditional raps (this is Eminem we’re talking about, after all) but he’s way looser in his deliver that he usually is. Rather than grabbing you by the scruff of the neck and joylessly forcing you to appreciate every syllable, he sounds like he’s actually...having fun? He smudges his way from one vowel to the next, turning the whole verse into a big slurry of schwa sounds.
It might not be the same as really hearing “Good Vibrations” for the first time, but it was still a pleasant surprise.
-TWG











