"Evil Twin" is more or less a direct attack at Shady's persona in 2000, a different character than exists in his own mind now, and contains his most telling lines of the whole album: "Sometimes I listen and revisit them old albums/Often as I can and skim through all them bitches/To make sure I keep up with my competition/Hoarder of beats, hoarder of rhymes/Borderline genius who's bored of his lines/And that sort of defines where I'm at and the way I feel now. Eminem The Marshall Mathers LP Eminem - Drug Ballad, Eminem - Steve Berman, Eminem The Marshall Mathers LP - 18. Nearly twenty-one years after it’s debut in 2000, the imagery, sounds, and themes of the Marshall Mathers LP still persist. Eminem’s second studio album allowed for him to break into super-stardom. But for the most part, the way he addresses his own demons-particularly on "Bad Guy" and album closer "Evil Twin," both of which see him battling alter ego Slim Shady-see Em delving into his intense issue within himself, a dichotomy which only he can articulate with such an uncomfortable clarity. Before the Marshall Mathers LP Stan was just a name and the Real Slim Shady hadn’t yet stood up. The Marshall Mathers LP CD CD Album US6.99 In Stock Eminem The Marshall Mathers LP 2 CD CD Album US6.99 Sorry Sold Out Eminem The Slim Shady LP CD Album US8.99 In Stock Eminem The Eminem Show CD Album US8.99 In Stock Eminem The Slim Shady LP Double Vinyl LP US36. It was recorded over a two-month period in several studios in the Detroit area, and during this time, Eminem felt significant pressure. Dre and Eminem, along with The 45 King, the Bass Brothers, and Mel-Man. There are still problems with some of his lyrical content: the overt homophobia is still there, even though it's addressed (albeit briefly) on album opener "Bad Guy," and at this point it feels pointless to take issue with the violent content in his words. The Marshall Mathers LP is the third studio album by American rapper Eminem, released on by Aftermath Entertainment and Interscope Records.