Eminem hesitated, then began to pour his heart out to Dre. "I've been working on some new material, but it's just not coming together. I'm trying to prove something to myself, to the world, but it's not working."
To understand Encore , you have to understand the context. In 2003-2004, Eminem was everywhere—and everywhere exhausted. He’d just survived a near-fatal overdose of methadone (the same drug that would later kill his idol, Proof). He was touring relentlessly, churning out hits for D12 and 50 Cent, and battling a worsening addiction to sleeping pills. Encore wasn't made by the hungry, venomous Slim Shady of 1999. It was made by a man running on fumes and Valium. eminem - encore
The production on Encore, handled largely by Dr. Dre and Eminem himself, stayed true to the polished, cinematic sound of the era. The beats were heavy, the mixing was pristine, and the guest features from 50 Cent, Nate Dogg, and D12 solidified the G-Unit/Shady Records dominance of the mid-2000s. Even the album’s title and artwork—featuring Eminem taking a final bow before a theater audience—suggested a sense of finality, leading many fans to believe this would be his retirement. Eminem hesitated, then began to pour his heart out to Dre