Common’s first brush with hip hop stardom came with a group he formed called C.D.R. with two of his childhood friends. One of whom was called Ernest Dion Wilson, who you might know today as legendary producer No I.D, who would go on to produce most of Common’s early solo work, not to mention Jay Z’s “D.O.A: Death Of Auto-Tune”.
The group toured a bunch and played gigs with the N.W.A and Big Daddy Kane but it wasn’t until Common went solo in 1992 that he started really realizing his true potential. Two years later he released the album Resurrection and all bets were off. Up until that point he’d been a name in Chicago alone but after that album dropped his name spread all over the country.
It says a lot that Common’s first feud came from criticising the path that mainstream hip hop was going down. He lamented the decline of conscious or political hip hop in his immortal track “I Used To Love H.E.R” and put at least some of the blame on West Cost Gangsta rap. Los Angeles super-group Westside Connection took issue with this and the two acts traded barbs for a couple of years.
However, one must only look at Common’s subsequent album to see that he practised what he preached. “One Day It’ll All Make Sense” contains guest appearances from Lauryn Hill, De La Soul, Questlove and Q-Tip, and distanced itself from any hint of Gansta rap culture.
It was the album that got him a Major label contract with MCA records and the rest is history. To this day, Common is hailed as the voice of reason and intelligence in mainstream hip hop.
Albums like “Like Water For Chocolate” and “Finding Forever” have balanced strong sales, eloquent rapping and genre experiments with rock, neo-soul and electronica. A true national treasure that we should be grateful to have.
I had first saw Common back in 2000 on the Spitkickers tour. This was one of my first concert experiences and it was definitely memorable. There was no shortage of greatness on this tour. Common was sharing the stage with the likes of Mos Def, Talib Kweli, and the legendary De La Soul. This was real hip hop. Common was not the headliner but he did steal the show. His performance was unlike any other I’ve ever seen, it was a journey through time spanning different decades of Hip Hop music. He explored funk, soul, the birth of hip hop in the 80s and the 90’s. His performances of ‘Cold Blooded’, ‘The 6th Sense’, and ‘The Light’ were amazing. Not to mention his freestyles which were some of the best I’ve ever seen. Common would drop 16 bars at the drop of a dime. Although not specifically a high-energy rapper, Common vocals were on point delivering dope rhymes with precision. Since then Common’s fan base has grown and so has his commercial success. He released great albums like ‘Be’ and ‘Universal Mind Control’. Now much of his stuff seems to be more radio-friendly positive tunes. Not that’s anything is wrong with this but I prefer the old Common from the Spitkickers tour.