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"Rap God" is a song by American rapper Eminem. The song premiered via YouTube on October 14, 2013, and was released in the United States on October 15, 2013, as the third single from Eminem's eighth studio album, The Marshall Mathers LP 2 (2013). It contains references to previous conflicts in Eminem's career, as well as to other rappers' conduct.
The song's title refers to Eminem's "Rap God" and Eminem went into the studio days later to record his own response, [458] as did former D12 associate Bizarre. [459] [460] Eminem responded with "Killshot" on September 14 [461] and Bizarre's "Love Tap" was released on September 20. [462] "Killshot" garnered 38.1 million streams on YouTube in its ...
According to a set of calculations done by a Genius contributor and confirmed by the website, Eminem's verse on the song out-performs his 2013 song "Rap God" in rapping speed by about 9.7 syllables per second. On "Majesty", Eminem raps 123 syllables in about 12 seconds—about 10.3 syllables per second—, while he spits 157 syllables in 16.3 ...
“R.I.P., rest in peace, Biggie / And Pac, both of y’all should be living,” Eminem rapped. “But I ain’t tryna beef with him / ‘Cause he might put a hit on me like Keefe D did / And that ...
DVLP produced Eminem's "Rap God", released October 15, 2013, as the third single off The Marshall Mathers LP 2. [16] DVLP first created the track in 2011, without any particular artist in mind. His manager, Stephen Hacker of Hebrew Hustle, sent the track to Eminem in 2012 after Eminem's management team reached out to Hacker for tracks for his ...
In the song Eminem, 51, rapped: “Kells, the day you put out a hit’s the day Diddy admits that he put the hit out that got Pac killed, ah!” in reference to the infamous 1996 drive-by shooting ...
Eminem began rapping in underground mic battles when he was 14, and while he worked on his rap skills, his school work suffered: He was left back three times in ninth grade and dropped out of high ...
Eminem's third verse on the track holds the record for his fastest rap verse, rapping 11 syllables per second, or 400 words in 30 seconds, and a peak burst of 12.73 syllables per second. [2] Eminem surpassed his own records held by his feature on Nicki Minaj and Labrinth 's 2018 song " Majesty ", where he rapped 12.26 syllables per second, and ...