Emineminfinitereissuecdflac2009thevoid
Notice the gap: No official 2009 reissue exists.
If you stumble upon this file in a dusty external hard drive or a private tracker, here is how to know you have the holy grail: emineminfinitereissuecdflac2009thevoid
This is the most cryptic part of the keyword. "The Void" is not a known record label, studio, or official Eminem affiliate. Searching music databases (Discogs, RateYourMusic, MusicBrainz) yields no result for "The Void" associated with Eminem or Infinite. Notice the gap: No official 2009 reissue exists
However, in underground file-sharing culture, "The Void" could refer to several things: If you stumble upon this file in a
You can find Infinite on Spotify or YouTube in lossy, compressed formats. But those versions sound like a photograph that has been photocopied a dozen times.
The FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) version of The Void CD is different. Because Infinite was poorly mastered originally—thin lows, harsh highs—listening to it in MP3 at 128 or 256kbps creates "artifacts" that muddy the already murky production. In FLAC, you hear the hiss of the tape, the subtle clipping on the bass kicks, and the actual room reverb on Eminem’s voice. For a lo-fi record, lossless is essential.
A true 2009 FLAC rip of The Void CD has specific characteristics:
