INFINITE

| Eminem

Cabbagescale

86.7%
  • Reviews Counted:15

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INFINITE

Infinite is the debut studio album by American rapper Eminem. It was released on November 12, 1996, by Web Entertainment. Recording sessions took place at the Bass Brothers' studio, with production handled by Mr. Porter, Proof, and Eminem himself. The album features guest vocals from fellow rappers Proof, Mr. Porter, Eye-Kyu, Three and Thyme, as well as singer Angela Workman on the track "Searchin'". The copies were made on cassette and vinyl, and Eminem sold them out of the trunk of his car in Detroit. It is not officially available on any online music stores. However, on November 17, 2016, five days after the 20th anniversary of the album, Eminem posted a remaster and remix of the title track, made by the Bass Brothers, to his Vevo channel, made available digitally for the first time. -Wikipedia

Critic Reviews

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  • Genius

    This album was the building block in Eminem’s career, and a solid album overall  

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  • Consequence of Sound

    If you do somehow find a way to grab this record, please do 

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  • Hip Hop Album Reviewer

    If you’re really a hardcore Eminem fan then i’m sure you’ll enjoy a couple of songs on here. But overall, I wouldn’t put my money into this.  

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  • The Eminem Blog

    I’d advice any true Eminem fan to check the album if he hasn’t done it yet- at least for the great lyrics written by Marshall Mathers. 

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  • Amino

    I enjoyed this album much more than I thought I would. 

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  • Focus Hip Hop

    This album is extremely good. The production is solid, and Em’s rhyming is incredible. 

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  • Alex's Blog

    Not just a must have for an Eminem fan but a must have for any hip-hop fan who is a fan of raw talent as well as poetry and English literature techniques being used constantly  

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  • Fan Sided

    Infinite often finds itself lost in the shuffle, but don’t let it slip your mind. Don’t let its sales turn you away, either. You would be missing out, big time. 

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  • Consequence of sound

    At this point, there was no Slim Shady, there was no movie deal, there were no fingers thrown around by the media. There was only a kid trying to get noticed, and that kid was just Marshall Mathers. 

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  • Stereogum

    Infinite is mostly a curio of boom-bap classicism, existing in those 1996 growing pains between the commercially aspirant rhyme sprees of DITC and Boot Camp Clik and the upcoming shadow economy of indie-rap labels like Fondle ‘Em and Rawkus 

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  • Focus Hip Hop

    This album is extremely good. The production is solid, and Em’s rhyming is incredible. Not every song is that well crafted, but Em’s skill as an MC is undeniable. 

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  • Amino Apps

    The rest are the tracks are pretty unremarkable, to say the least. 

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  • Hip Hop Album Reviewer

    Em showed that he is a skilled emcee on here but unfortunately, didn’t have a ear for beats.  

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  • DJ Booth

    Eminem’s artistic rebirth is a testament not only to his resilience but to the power of his just-don't-give-a-fuck attitude.  

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  • Spectrum Culture

    Infinite is somewhat insipid, mostly gregarious, and overstuffed with rhymes. The marked improvement which occurs between Infinite and Eminem’s later work, in this sense, is entirely a question of slimming down.  

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