Product Details
Encore (Deluxe Edition)

Encore (Deluxe Edition)
Eminem

List Price: $19.99
Price: $14.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

114 new or used available from $1.99

Average customer review:

Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Curtains Up
  2. Evil Deeds
  3. Never Enough Feat. 50 Cent & Nate Dogg
  4. Yellow Brick Road
  5. Like Toy Soldiers
  6. Mosh
  7. Puke
  8. My 1st Single
  9. Paul (Skit)
  10. Rain Man
  11. Big Weenie
  12. Em Calls Paul (Skit)
  13. Just Lose It
  14. A** Like That
  15. Spend Some Time Feat. Obie Trice, Stat Quo, & 50 Cent
  16. Mockingbird
  17. Crazy In Love
  18. One Shot 2 Shot Feat. D-12
  19. Final Thought (Skit)
  20. Encore Feat. Dr. Dre & 50 Cent

Disc 2:

  1. We As Americans
  2. Love You More
  3. Ricky Ticky Toc

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5142 in Music
  • Brand: Eminem
  • Released on: 2004-11-19
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Format: Explicit Lyrics
  • Dimensions: .28 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
"ENCORE" is multi-platinum recording artist EMINEM's first full album of new material since 2002's "THE EMINEM SHOW," which spawned the hit singles "Without Me" and "Cleanin' Out My Closet." That album went on the sell over 19 million albums worldwide. He followed up in November 2002 with Music From And Inspired By The Motion Picture ‘8 Mile’, which featured the Academy Award winning song "Lose Yourself" and sold almost 9 million copies worldwide. Earlier this year, Eminem’s group D-12 released D-12 World (global sales over 3 million) and scored hits with "My Band" and "How Come".

ENCORE, Executive Produced by DR. DRE, features guest performances by 50 CENT, D-12, NATE DOGG, OBIE TRICE, and STAT QUO.

BONUS DISC: This two disc set includes a bonus CD with three previously unreleased EMINEM songs.

Amazon.com
Eminem's fourth album offers few surprises, but still enough pleasures to carry the day. As evinced by Em's pre-election, pro-voting "Mosh," this is not exactly the same Eminem who seemingly crapped on anything and everything. Encore finds a surprisingly mature Eminem waxing reflective about his battle with Benzino ("Like Toy Soldiers") rather than unloading both barrels. However, it's not all elder statesmanship: "Puke" goes after his ex-wife Kim with incredible scorn, and "Big Weenie" showcases the familiar juvenile humor that made him famous. If Encore has a clear weakness, it's the bland production--the same plodding sound that he and Dr. Dre cooked up on the previous three albums. The exotic flavor of "Ass Like That" catches the ear, but many others run off the same monotonous minor-key melodies and tempos. Of course, people buy Eminem albums to hear him spit first and foremost, and in that regard few fans will be disappointed by Encore; it'd just be nice to see him switch up his sound at some point. --Oliver Wang


Customer Reviews

How much time did he put into this record2
This album was an upset; a real disappointment. When I think of the track "Just Lose It" the only thing I lost was my money! A few songs made the radar like, "Yellow Brick Road", "Toy Soldiers", "Mockingbird", "We As Americans" (bonus CD) and "Ricky Ticky Tock" (bonus CD). Unlike some of his other Albums, I had no idea what message he was trying to deliver. Maybe it was more of a mix tape approach? He definitely sounds like a Toys "R" Us kid with some of his tracks, but I must admit "Ass Like That" was hilarious. Anyway, this won't be the album of the year.

ONE

ALLRIGHT - ENOUGH.1
Pus***s. That's the only word for it. If you are a fan and giving this album more than 3 stars, your review should be null and void. Who are you trying to fool - how does this compare to the last three cd that Slim Shady wrote? That's the problem - it doesn't and it shouldn't. The last 3 titles were excellent - they contained what most rapper's 50 point i.q.'s could have bearly picked up upon - political, social, and controversial issues mixed in with complex and difficult vocals, yet fun lyrics and good beats. Slim Shady will always be remembered as the guy who stood against the masses and said f*** the world despite the critics and he will be remembered as the only rapper, besides Tupac, that actually had some deep and intellectual meanings (if not at times overly sarcastic to the point of being questioned) behind the words he spoke. As a fan of Eminem, I feel it is my responsibility and duty to incorporate the ironies I've learned within the last Eminem cds and deliver you a shockingly controversial, yet politically correct message: This cd SUCKS BALLS. It lacks everything that Eminem stood for, and if your not comparing this cd to Eminem's last cds, then let it be known that you would have never heard this cd in the first place......no one would take this serious. Even the singles can't even compete with such horrid junk-a-crunk songs such as "freek-a-leek" and endless lil' john remixes. If Slim Shady has moved on and "grown-up" then perhaps all we are waiting for is his fans - who still think that any cd he brings out is above average.

It's over...deal with it1
Em's creativity was at an end with The Eminem Show. Here, the beats are all bog standard and unimaginative and the lyrics are all recycled from his first 3 albums. Dr. Dre is going through the motions as a producer and Em is afraid to break his now typecast molde and try anything new. There's nothing for you here but more of the same minus the passion.