4 igiasi es CONEY ISLAND Meet the four local Jewish guys who've guided Detroit rapper Eminem along the road to success Greek and American Cuisine OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 154 S. Woodward, Birmingham (248) 540-8780 Halsted Village (37580 W. 12 Mile Rd.) Farmington Hills (248) 553-2360 and a trio of Grammy nominations. right There. He said, 'Here, take this guitar,' and he put it in my hands. Then he said, 'Go up there and do your thing. You can do it,'" Bass recalls. "So I did. And I won." But the brothers from Oak Park drifted away from Bacow, continuing with their own lives and producing records out of their sound studio in their basement. In 1989, Mark Bass, driving home from a party at 2:30 in the morning, heard a new voice on the airwaves. It belonged to a talented 14-year-old who was rapping live on a local radio show. Bass called a friend at the sta- tion and was introduced right away to the future phenom, Marshall Mathers. "I told him to come over to my house. At 4:30 a.m., he was banging on my front door," Mark Bass says, laughing. The Bass brothers, known as the Funky Bass Team, worked with Mathers, helping him to learn the ropes of recording while also aiding in refining the then rough-around-the- edges rapper. "From that time, we worked heavy duty in the recording studio up until we put out his first recording, Infinite, in 1996," Mark Bass says. One day, the Bass brothers, hungry for some coney dogs, stopped into the Davison Coney Island in Oak Park. There, they ran into Bacow, who was going by the professional name Joel Martin and was busy with his own recording studio, 54 Sound. Bacow had hooked up with local funk legend George Clinton to produce and sign a few bands and was in the process of developing the hit-but-now-defunct band Sponge. Upon realizing their shared passion for recording, the Bass brothers and Bacow began hanging out in each other's studios. "From that meeting in the coney island, we restarted our friendship," Bacow says. He went on to work with the Bass Brothers in guiding Eminem's career and protect- ing the rapper's artistic interests. 6527 Telegraph Rd. Corner of Maple (15 Mile) Bloomfield Township (248) 646-8568 4763 Haggerty Rd. at Pontiac Trail West Wind Village Shopping Center West Bloomfield (248) 669-2295 841 East Big Beaver, Troy (248) 680-0094 Above: Eminem, Joel Bacow/Martin and Jeff Bass: "There I was working with these legitimate big groups as a producer or as a recording engineer;" says Bacow/Martin. "I knew it was just what I wanted [to do_ 1." Opposite page top: Eminem and manager Paul Rosenberg: "I started o wanting to be an entertainer, but t en I realized I was better of using my smarts," says Rosenberg. Opposite page bottom: Eminem, center, with producers Jeff Bass, left, and Mark Bass: The Bass brothers are up for a Grammy for Best Rap Album as the producers, with Eminem, of triple platinum "The Slim Shady LI?" Eminem also is nominated for Best Rap Solo Performance ("My Name Is') and Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group ("Guilty Conscience", performed with Dr. Dre) both from "The Slim Shady LP" Across town, Paul Rosenberg, son of Stan and Carol Rosenberg, had been busy growing up in Farmington Hills. Always attracted to different things and to the world of music in general, he especially was drawn to rap music during his days at Farrhington Harrison High School. "I started off wanting to be an entertainer, but then I realized I was better off using my smarts," he says. "I decided the logical thing to do was entertainment law, specifically music law." While still an undergrad at Michigan State University, he and a friend traveled to music shops in Detroit to hear the talent spewing forth from open-mike nights. In his first year of law school at the University of Detroit, he attended a performance at a hip-hop shop on Seven Mile Road and Greenfield. It was there that he had his first contact with Mathers. "He would be the only white kid in the place and he would destroy every- one," Rosenberg says. "He was releas- ing an independent recording with Mark and Jeff [Bass] called Infinite. It was good, but it wasn't where he quite needed to be. I wasn't at the place I needed to be either." Rosenberg introduced himself to the future Eminem and soon began managing his career. After graduation, Rosenberg moved to New York, passed the bar exam and began work with the New York City Housing Authority as a defense attorney on personal injury cases. But in his spare time, Rosenberg worked hard to get Eminem into clubs in both New York and Los Angeles. He snagged a spot for the young rapper in the Rap Coalition's 1997 SOUTHFIELD SOUVLAKI CONEY ISLAND Nine Mile & Greenfield 15647 West Nine Mile, Southfield (248) 569-5229 FARMINGTON SOUVLAKI CONEY ISLAND Between 13 & 14 on Orchard Lake Road 30985 Orchard Lake Rd. Farmington Hills (248) 626-9732 UPTOWN PARTHENON 4301 Orchard Lake Rd. West Bloomfield (248) 538.6000 HERCULES FAMILY RESTAURANT 33292 West 12 Mile Farmington Hills (248) 489-9777 Serving whitefish, lamb shank, pastitsio and moussaka not to go with any other offer I with coupon I Expires 12/30/2000 1111111 Mill MN MEI IIIIIII MI MEI =II 2/18 2000 81