The Freeman

With new album, Eminem finds political voice

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Just how much has America changed since Donald

Trump’s election? Eminem, knee-deep in controvers­y a generation ago for misogyny and homophobia, is back as a self-styled moral conscience.

The top-selling rapper in history rips into

Trump on “Revival,” his first studio album in four years, in which Eminem openly muses on whether he can stay relevant as his career enters its third decade.

“Revival,” which came out Friday, returns to

Eminem’s musical tropes as he recrafts pop tunes into quick-tongued raps and taps some of the biggest names in music as collaborat­ors, including Beyonce, Ed Sheeran, Alicia Keys and P!nk.

But the 45-year-old also shows a new side – a politicall­y sensitive Eminem, woke and alarmed at the direction of the United States a year into Trump’s presidency.

“Someone get this Aryan a sheet / Time to bury him, so tell him to prepare to get impeached,” Eminem raps on “Like Home,” juxtaposin­g the imagery of death and the racist Ku Klux Klan.

“He’s trying to divide us,” Eminem warns, taking the language of a street activist, while vowing, “He’ll only unite us.”

Eminem – who has faced criticism throughout his career for employing a homophobic slur, although he insists it is just a narrative device – also attacks Trump for seeking to ban transgende­r people from the military.

Familiar beats

“Revival” opens on a fresh note for Eminem – “Walk on Water,” the album’s first single, a piano ballad about self-doubt that features a Gospelting­ed chorus by Beyonce.

But the 19-track album quickly returns to more familiar territory. “Believe” and “Chlorasept­ic,” which is assisted by the up-and-coming New York rapper Phresher, are backed by minimal, ominous beats with nods to horrorcore.

“Remind Me” refashions the singalong chorus of “I Love Rock and Roll,” the boisterous classic by Joan Jett and the Blackheart­s, while “In Your Head” builds off a riff in The Cranberrie­s’ “Zombie.”

On “Untouchabl­e,” Eminem – who has brought hard-edged hip-hop to a white audience like no one else – embraces the slogans of the Black Lives Matter movement as he voices outrage at police brutality.

“I admit there have been times when it’s been embarrassi­ng to be a white boy,” he raps, as he offers solidarity with quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick and other American football players who have kneeled during the national anthem as a protest over racial injustice.

Not all of the political bent on “Revival” is likely to sit comfortabl­y even with Trump’s opponents. Eminem, whose songs have often imagined violence against women, depicts Trump’s daughter and adviser Ivanka inside his car’s trunk on “Framed.”

Passionate opponent of Trump

Eminem’s political passion appears deeply felt, with the rapper going public with harsh denunciati­ons of Trump even before “Revival.”

While Trump enjoys little celebrity support, Eminem’s hostility is notable as the two share much of the same demographi­c base. Eminem hails from Michigan and has personally struggled with some of the affliction­s of working-class white Americans from the Rust Belt – addiction to painkiller­s and junk food and, to put it mildly in Eminem’s case, complicate­d family relationsh­ips.

Eminem – who on his last album apologized to his mother whom he once spoke of raping and killing – on “Revival” offers his regrets to Kim Mathers, his high school sweetheart whom he married and divorced twice.

“I loved you, but I hated that ‘me’ / And I don’t want to see that side again / I’m sorry, Kim,” he raps on “Bad Husband.”

Eminem’s oldest child – Hailie, who turns 22 on Christmas Day – makes a cameo in “Bad Husband” and also inspires one of the strongest songs on “Revival” – “Castle,” written around a series of letters addressed to his daughter over the years.

“Things that should have been private with me and your mother is public,” Eminem raps ruefully of his past songs.

And the song may draw a curtain. With the track, Eminem rapped that he is “100 percent finished” with airing family baggage.

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