Just because Em was on the lead single you can't attribute some of his success to that? Him working with the hottest producer coming off a multi platinum album didn't help grow his fan base? Okay. Im not trying to argue anything. It's a fact that 2001 helped boost Eminem. That Up In Smoke Tour was huge for his career and fan base.
If you think that Eminem blows up to unheard of levels with out 2001 and the tour it spawned you are sadly mistaken.
He almost went double platinum with Restless and Man Vs Machine went gold. That's more than 2 million sold. He also was in all those Aftermath affiliated movies like The Wash and 8 mile. Acting like he didn't 'blow up' after 2001 is a joke.
Sadly theres still people on this board who never heard his early work and how good it really is.
Right. And that one track he produced? He said he bit from Xxplosive. Influencing the biggest producer in the last 10 years is quite an impact, wouldn't you agree?
"'Xxplosive', off 2001, that's [where] I got my entire sound fromif you listen to the track, it's got a soul beat, but it's done with those heavy Dre drums. Listen to "This Can't Be Life," a track I did for Jay-Z's Dynasty album, and then listen to "Xxplosive". It's a direct bite."
But back to the original point....you are trying to split hairs with me on THREE examples of it being a record with a big impact. You conceded on two other ones. Your idea that it wasn't that big of an album and on par with Reasonable Doubt is just flat out wrong.
Of course you can attribute some of his success to being on Forgot About Dre - a very small, negligible portion. The original person I was responding to was trying to argue that Eminem's success could be attributed to this album. As if 2001 was the direct cause of the additional 7 million in sales from SSLP to MMLP.
Em had already sold 1.76 Million the first week with MMLP before the Up In a smoke Tour. I'm sure that tour helped him sell more records - but he was already the biggest pop star and had outsold 2001 by a factor of 3 (in terms of first week sales). I'm telling you - the more you think about this - Eminem probably had a bigger role in 2001 selling than vice versa. Dre always got suburb love but with Em the white people were flocking to him like never before.
I said a few posts back that Xzibit blew up - but it had more to do with the change in his sound, Dre single and Dre/Snoop affiliation then simply the fact that he had appeared on 2001.
I already a knowledged that the Kanye lift was a good example of 2001's impact. But I think he was kissing ass a bit in that quote - he didn't copy Dre's style on 2001 hook line and sinker. What else did he copy other than those drums?
You and some of the other posters have done a good job of making the case for 2001's impact. And while I don't believe it was a genre changing album like its predecessor - I do think I was downplaying its impact with my initial statement on the album. But I'm not splitting hairs with you, nor did I ever say it wasn't a big record or that RD was just as big in 96. I said RD was a better album - then I said 2001 didn't have a huge impact. 2 separate points. Go back and read my first post in this thread.



@ whoever said that xzibit was previously only known by the west coast and backpackers.
because dude was a post player.




