D12 Doesn't
Mind Being Seen As Eminem's Group
(6/21/01, 3 p.m. ET) -- Just out is Devil's
Night, the highly anticipated album from D12,
the Detroit rap collective that features solo superstar Eminem (news
- web
sites), who executive produced the album. The group's
critics--at least those who aren't attacking its songs about
violence, sex, and drugs--are using Eminem's involvement to
discount the contributions of the group's other five members.
But MC Proof (Deshaun
Holton), who co-founded the band a decade ago, tells LAUNCH that
D12 sees nothing but advantages to Eminem's stature. Some people
look at us, like, 'This is gonna be Eminem's group. You're gonna
be in his shadow.' They don't realize how positive and great
that is to hear," he said. "If we're in the shadow of
a guy that can almost sell 10 million records in just the States
alone, great! That's not a dis to us. But when they hear the
album, they'll hear the individuality of each person, how
everybody hold their own."
D12 will
perform on the Vans Warped tour this summer before heading out
on its own tour in the fall. You can catch the group's video,
"Purple Hills," on-demand on LAUNCH.com.
-- Gary Graff,
Detroit
Eminem's
Crew Has Familiar Message: Don't Take Us Literally
By Teri Van Horn
Like Eminem (news
- web
sites)'s last two solo albums, the debut LP from his
hometown crew, D12, opens with a public service announcement.
But this time,
the announcer suggests that anyone offended by words like
"bitch" and "faggot" should turn off their
stereos immediately.
"We want
people to know what the f--- they gonna hear for the next
hour," D12's Bizarre said, speaking from the group's home
base of Detroit last week. "It's our own ghetto public
service announcement."
The sextet asks
those who keep listening to Devils Night, due Tuesday, not to
draw conclusions from what they hear — a request that will
sound awfully familiar to Eminem fans.
"I say
that I'm picking up transvestites on my Harley-Davidson in one
of my raps," Bizarre said. "There's no barriers. You
can't say that we're faggot bashers, you can't say that we like
gays, you can't say nothing about us, 'cause we're not scared to
trip on any subject. How can we hate fags with Bizarre saying sh--
like that? It's all in fun, and that's how it should be."
But Bizarre
said the album is not without realistic portraits, pointing, of
all songs, to "American Psycho," on which he and
Eminem trade rhymes that bring listeners "into the mind of
a psychopath killer," complete with lyrics about eating a
human fetus.
"It's not
really to shock. Shock-rap, to me, is just saying anything to
get people's attention," Bizarre said. "Our minds are
just warped like that. We just tell how we feel, and basically
the sh-- that we talk about is going on in real life. It's just
the type of sh-- you don't talk about. It might be sick, like
some Stephen King horror sh--, but it's reality. I'm just trying
to be a narrator and tell a story."
Devils Night
— which includes the single "Purple Pills," a.k.a.
"Purple Hills" — features production work by Eminem,
Dr. Dre, DJ Head and D12 member Kon Artis. The group recorded
the album in fits and starts during breaks in Eminem's touring
schedule.
"Basically,
Eminem is a workaholic, so he's going to be at the studio a
couple hours before we get there and 10 hours after we
leave," Bizarre said. "We all come up with ideas, but
mostly he comes up with ideas."
On the
Dre-produced "Ain't Nuttin But Music" — whose beat
deviates only a hair from that of "The Real Slim
Shady" — Eminem takes aim at his usual targets
(Christina, Britney, Everlast, etc.) while his crew extends the
bash list to include Whitney
Houston, Destiny's Child, Jesse Jackson, Baha Men and George
Michael.
The
album-closing track "Girls" finds Eminem dishing out
wicked words for former friend Fred Durst — who just happens
to be a vice president at Em's label, Interscope — and Limp
Bizkit's DJ Lethal (see).
Though D12 —
whose lineup also includes Proof, Kuniva and Swift — formed
back in 1994, it's taken this long for them to put out an album.
The MCs made a pact, agreeing that whoever got signed first
would come back for the rest of the group.
"Basically,
Eminem was just so busy," Bizarre said, adding that he
never doubted the album would happen eventually. "Em is
kind of a loner — he doesn't have many friends, so he
basically just kept us around him during his whole career. We
just had to wait our turn and be patient — that's what he told
us to do."
Bizarre said
the group plans to put out one album per year from now on. D12
will get started on Devils Night's follow-up in Eminem's home
studio this week, and the group will continue plugging away on
it in between tour breaks and work on Em's next solo album, he
said.
"Everybody's
serious and committed. I think this album really made us mature.
Rapping's a job. In order to eat, you can't just quit your
job."
With Eminem
popping in on select dates, D12 will make a run on the Warped
Tour beginning late next month. The group will head overseas in
late August.
D12
& Eminem Celebrate Album Release In New York
(6/20/01, 3 p.m. ET) -- DJ
Premier, Rah
Digga, Xzibit, Angie Martinez, Nikka
Costa, Masta Ace, and the Outsidaz were among the
celebrities in attendance at Eminem (news
- web
sites)'s group D12's Devil's Night New York album release
party Tuesday (June 19), the day the record hit the stores.
At 12:30 a.m.,
the group performed a 20-minute set, including several Devil's
Night songs such as "Sh-t Can Happen," "Pistol
Pistol," "Pimp Like Me," and the album's first
single "Purple Hills."
Before
performing "Purple Hills," Eminem asked, "New
York, we want to know how many mother f--kers pop pills?...And
don't even give a f--k what kind of pills they are. They just
take them?"
The
Detroit-based group is expected to debut at Number One on the
Billboard 200 albums chart next week. "Purple Hills"
entered Billboard's Hot Rap Singles chart last week at Number
45.
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