Eminem Predicts When He’ll Say Goodbye, Retire From The Rap Game

Written By S. Samuel

Grammy-winning rapper Eminem recently discussed his impressive decade-long run in the music industry and when he will likely hang the microphone up for good.

Eminem
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Although Slim Shady could not pencil in an exact date, he did admit music-making would likely end when he no longer has a hunger for the craft.

As for whether there will be a Marshall Mathers LP 3 in 2026, don’t bank on it. “I hope not,” Eminem says. “I don’t know what I’ll be doing as far as whether I’ll still be making music-I’d like to keep doing it as long as I still have the passion for it. But I hope to always be involved in hip-hop in one form or another. Because when it comes down to it, this is really all I know.” (Billboard)

Back in 2010, Em contemplated how many more years he would keep releasing music.

“…Honestly, I don’t know how much longer I have in this game. I’m always going to love hip-hop. But how much longer am I going to still do it? I couldn’t give you an answer. But the day that this is not better than the last will probably be the day I stop…I do love it so much. But even if I was rapping at 50 [years old], I don’t now if I would put it out. I know it always makes me feel better to lay things to tape, and–‘Lay the tape.’ See, I’m old school. The fans might say the sh*t is garbage. You don’t know how long people are going to want you around…Realistically, if I don’t rap, what the f*ck am I going to do? It’s too late to be unfamous at this point.” (VIBE)

A year prior, Em said he could see himself putting down the microphone for good after at least another solid decade.

“It was, ‘I don’t want to be a rapper when I’m 40,’ and the next time we talk it will be, “I don’t want to be a rapper when I’m 50.” Sixty is the cut-off. I can’t be no 60-year-old rapper, son!” (Complex)

Hip-hop pioneer Rakim previously spoke to SOHH about when rappers should call it quits.

“Yeah, I think what’s happening is, rappers are becoming, especially for people that love a rapper, rap and hip-hop come to party,” Rakim explained. “You can’t just put it down. It’s not like sports where you know, you lose a step. You can lose skills in rapping of course, but it’s a little different man and I think sitting back and watching the R&B genre, you got, at any awards show and you see brothers like Al Green come out and tear it down. It’s longevity in R&B and I think if it’s done right, to an extent, I think we can have a little longer gevity in hip-hop, it don’t just have to be a young music anymore. You got people like myself, I’m in my 40’s now, early, early early like real early. I just touched 40, but still, I don’t plan on stop listening to rap anytime soon and I don’t plan stop rhyming no time soon and it’s that tug-of-war with the fans. Every time you see the fans or go to a show, they’re like ‘Yo, do another album,’ so it’s like that love between the two, the fans and your music. I think we should stretch out our age limit as far as hip-hop ’cause if that’s the case, I think when brothers grow up they just want to leave rap entirely and listen to other genres of music so I think there is room for a little mature sound of hip-hop, for the older, grown and sexy, whatever you wanna call it.” (SOHH)

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Written by S. Samuel

Steven Samuel is the co-founder of SOHH.com.

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