One of the unlikeliest success stories in rock at the turn of the millennium, Detroit rap-rocker
Kid Rock shot to superstardom with his fourth full-length album, 1998's
Devil Without A Cause. What made it so shocking was that
Rock had recorded his first demo a full decade before, been booted off major label Jive following his
Beastie Boys-ish 1990 debut,
Grits Sandwiches For Breakfast, and toiled for most of the decade in obscurity, releasing albums to a small, devoted, mostly local fan base while earning his fair share of ridicule around his home state. Nevertheless,
Rock persevered, and by the time rap-metal had begun to attract a substantial audience, he had perfected the outlandish, over-the-top white-trash persona that gave
Devil Without A Cause such a distinctive personality and made it such an infectious party record.
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