The Death of Slim Shady (Coup De Grâce)

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AlbumJul 11 / 202420 songs, 1h 9m 34s92%
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Whether as Marshall Mathers or Slim Shady, Eminem never fails to make a strong impression. His discography regularly documents a struggle between the Detroit-bred rap superstar’s two outspoken personas, an artistic battle followed closely by his most ardent and attentive fans, while pitchfork-wielding outsiders and his more casual listeners never bothered to discern the difference. The willfully profane Slim and the comparatively less sacrilegious Marshall compose a dramaturgical dyad that makes each of his album releases feel like blockbusters. That said, the stakes feel dramatically high on *The Death of Slim Shady (Coup De Grâce)*, its title the most thematically loaded of his two-and-a-half-decade career. If this does end up the genuine final curtain call for Eminem’s most notorious alter ego, he makes it a point to execute it on his own controversy-baiting terms, whether people like it or not. Addressing his detractors head-on, “Habits” defensively dismantles criticisms both internal and external, taking personal inventory while decrying political correctness. Cancel culture and wokeness as existential threats stay front of mind throughout, looming particularly large over the combative “Antichrist” and the Dr. Dre co-produced “Lucifer.” Repeated references to Caitlyn Jenner won’t quell the perpetual transphobia accusations Eminem has long faced, but on songs like “Evil” and “Road Rage” he at least aims to clarify his positions amid his characteristically clever wordplay. Naturally, Slim isn’t about to go out quietly. Ever the eager pugilist, he exploits his upper hand with Fight Club panache on “Brand New Dance” and “Trouble.” The character’s antagonism vacillates between self-destructive outbursts and strategic gaslighting, gleefully poking at touchy topics on “Houdini” and assigning we’re-in-this-together complicity to Marshall on the surprise sequel “Guilty Conscience 2.” Yet even as the tragicomically intertwined foes grapple with one another, the album still makes room for something as personal as “Temporary,” a heartfelt message to his daughter for after he’s gone. With the added benefit of a few unexpected cameos, including Michigan-repping cut “Tobey” with Big Sean and BabyTron, the over-the-top theatricality driving *The Death of…* feels like fan service, giving his longtime patrons the Eminem show they’ve come to expect from him.

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4.8 / 10

A concept album about killing his alter ego can’t save the impishly clever Eminem from the same tired, dated, developmentally arrested material.

5 / 10

Eminem returns with ‘The Death of Slim Shady (Coup De Grâce)’, his most commercial-sounding record in years – read the NME album review

Eminem's 'The Death of Slim Shady (Coup de Grace)' Review.

Rapper maintains his signature sharpness of diction throughout – it’s the content that’s at fault

5 / 10

Eminem’s Jekyll and Hyde tendencies were evident from the start. Splitting his negative emotions from a more secure place of introspection, the divide

With ‘The Death of Slim Shady,’ Eminem has narrowed his vision to the point that he can’t see, much less engage with, the world around him.

The return of the rapper’s nihilistic alter ego makes his 12th album feel like a confused, conflicted attempt to recreate his 00s success – his flow is perfect as ever, but he can no longer provoke true outrage

Album Reviews: Eminem - The Death Of Slim Shady (Coup De Grace)

3.7 / 5

Eminem - The Death of Slim Shady (Coup De Grâce) review: A great concept album that's held back by a couple pesky old habits.

With astonishing lyricism, the controversial rapper battles against his vile alter-ego’s views on Gen Z, transgenderism, and the disabled

The trademark furious slander and insult are balanced by a strange vulnerability