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Music video by Common performing Resurrection. (C) 1994 Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment#Resurrection #V. Altan started the Resurrection Remix ROM project in 2012 with android 4.0.x Ice Cream Sandwich. It soon became the most popular ROM with its original Samsung Galaxy S2 thread being the most viewed thread on XDA-developers for many months. He continued the development of the ROM till android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean.
Biography
Common is a celebrated rapper from Chicago who got famous for producing a new wave of hip-hop adding elements of new-age, jazz and funk. He was born Lonnie Rashid Lynn Jr. on March 13, 1972 in a family of a teacher and ex-basketball player who used to be an average NBA professional. As soon as in his high school years, Rashid formed his first band to be called C.D.R. He left it shortly after, with an intention to study business. However, he found he was more into rap rather than into education and came back to music.
In 1992 Rashid produced his first solo album, Can I Borrow a Dollar? He picked up the Common Sense stage name. The composition Take It EZ made a great contribution to the album's popularity among the supporters of the so called intelligent hip-hop widely represented by A Tribe Called Quest, and Gang Starr. In two years, Common Sense released the second album, Resurrection. It was heavily promoted by the track I Used to Love H.E.R., in some way criticizing the gangsta trend of hip-hop. This came to hurt the prominent ‘gangster' Ice Cube which led to a conflict between the two performers, yet never hindered the charts run of the album itself. As soon as Common Sense had got himself a big name he was forced to change it. It became necessary after the same called ska band had threatened him with a claim for copycat. Rashid did not hesitate long to simply reduce his pseudonym to Common.
It took Common three years to prepare his third studio work. It got the name One Day It'll All Make Sense and hit the stores in 1997. The session involved Lauryn Hill, Q-Tip, Black Thought and some other celebrities. The album included such acclaimed hits as Reminding Me (of Sef), and Retrospect for Life. The release ranked twelfth in the hip-hop charts and earned Common an offer from MCA he could not refuse. After signing the contract, the rapper moved from his native Chicago to New York. With the two LPs released on MCA, Like Water for Chocolate (2000), and Electric Circus (2002), Common reached the new level of commercial success and became a leading performer of the new generation rap. He never feared experiments and gladly cooperated with musicians from the genres hardly associated with hip-hop before. Common won his first Grammy in 2003 for participating in Erykah Badu's Love of My life (An Ode to Hip-Hop).
The subsequent album by Common released in 2005 again met all the expectations of his fans. Be was almost entirely produced by Kanye West. A year before that, West released a sensational album of his own called The College Dropout, and his name alone among this album makers was enough to grant Be a large portion of attention. Actually, Be was too proficient an album to need West's name as promotion and rightfully topped the hip-hop Billboard charts staying second in the pop-charts. With 800,000 copies sold out, Be brought Common two Grammy nominations in 2006. In a year, Common released Finding Forever, produced by West again, and despite everything managed to rank first in the pop Billboard charts. This was quickly followed by the announcement of A Tribe Called Quest performer, Q-Tip, about him and Common planning to start the new project The Standard. In 2008 Common consolidated his leading position the rap industry by the powerful album Universal Mind Control. Two years later the performer's discography was enlarged by a wonderful compilation album Go! - Common Classics (2010), which included the artist's best works: The Light, I Want You, Testify and many others. The record's incredible atmosphere and mood will be definitely enjoyed not only by Common's old fans, but also by all the lovers of high quality and sincere music.
Studio Albums
The Dreamer/The BelieverIt took Common three years to prepare his third studio work. It got the name One Day It'll All Make Sense and hit the stores in 1997. The session involved Lauryn Hill, Q-Tip, Black Thought and some other celebrities. The album included such acclaimed hits as Reminding Me (of Sef), and Retrospect for Life. The release ranked twelfth in the hip-hop charts and earned Common an offer from MCA he could not refuse. After signing the contract, the rapper moved from his native Chicago to New York. With the two LPs released on MCA, Like Water for Chocolate (2000), and Electric Circus (2002), Common reached the new level of commercial success and became a leading performer of the new generation rap. He never feared experiments and gladly cooperated with musicians from the genres hardly associated with hip-hop before. Common won his first Grammy in 2003 for participating in Erykah Badu's Love of My life (An Ode to Hip-Hop).
The subsequent album by Common released in 2005 again met all the expectations of his fans. Be was almost entirely produced by Kanye West. A year before that, West released a sensational album of his own called The College Dropout, and his name alone among this album makers was enough to grant Be a large portion of attention. Actually, Be was too proficient an album to need West's name as promotion and rightfully topped the hip-hop Billboard charts staying second in the pop-charts. With 800,000 copies sold out, Be brought Common two Grammy nominations in 2006. In a year, Common released Finding Forever, produced by West again, and despite everything managed to rank first in the pop Billboard charts. This was quickly followed by the announcement of A Tribe Called Quest performer, Q-Tip, about him and Common planning to start the new project The Standard. In 2008 Common consolidated his leading position the rap industry by the powerful album Universal Mind Control. Two years later the performer's discography was enlarged by a wonderful compilation album Go! - Common Classics (2010), which included the artist's best works: The Light, I Want You, Testify and many others. The record's incredible atmosphere and mood will be definitely enjoyed not only by Common's old fans, but also by all the lovers of high quality and sincere music.
Studio Albums
The Dreamer/The BelieverCompilation albums
This weekend marked the 25th Anniversary of Common's classic sophomore LP 'Resurrection'. The follow up to his 1992 debut 'Can I Borrow a Dollar?', the album is produced almost entirely by No I.D., with contributions from Ynot. With a heavy reliance on jazz, samples on the LP come from the likes of George Benson, Freddie Hubbard and the The Modern Jazz Quartet among others. The album spawned two popular singles, the timeless ode to Hip Hop's ever changing nature 'I Used to Love H.E.R' and the Ahmad Jamal sampling title track 'Resurrection'. Bleach mugen character. In celebration of the album's landmark anniversary, we've teamed up with Wax Poetics to present this exclusive mixtape of album tracks, alt versions, interview snippets and of course sample material used in the making of the album. Mixed by Chris Read.
Listen to the mix on below and check out the tracklist (with sample credits) beneath:
Track list:
Common Resurrection Lyrics
1. Common - Resurrection (Extra P Remix)
2. Chris Read - Theme #3 (Scratchapella)
3. The Jonah Jones Quartet - Lisbon Antigua (sampled in 'Sum Shit I Wrote')
4. Common Video Music Box Interview [Extract]
5. Brethren - Outside Live (sampled in 'Sum Shit I Wrote')
6. Marley Marl feat Heavy D & Biz Markie - We Write the Songs [Extract] (sampled in 'Sum Shit I Wrote')
7. Common - Sum Shit I Wrote
8. Archie Whitewater - Cross Country (sampled in 'Chapter 13')
9. Detroit Emeralds - You're Getting a Little Too Smart [Loop] (sampled in 'Chapter 13')
10. Eric B & Rakim - I Know You Got Soul [Extract] (sampled in 'Chpater 13')
11. Common - Chapter 13
12. Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five feat Melle Mel & Duke Bootee - The Message [Extract] (sampled in 'Chapter 13')
13. The Modern Jazz Quarter - But Not For Me (sampled in 'In My Own World')
14. Clyde McPhatter - Mixed Up Cup [Loop] (sampled in 'In My Own World')
15. A Tribe Called Quest feat Large Professor - Keep It Rollin' [Extract] (sampled in 'In My Own World')
16. Common - In My Own World
17. EPMD - Get Off The Bandwagon [Extract] (sampled in 'In My Own World')
18. Gary Burton - Leroy the Magician [Loop] (sampled in 'Nuthin' To Do')
19. Living Jazz - Walk on By (sampled in 'Nuthin' To Do')
20. Wu-Tang Clan - Protect Your Neck [Extract] (sampled in 'Nuthin To Do')
21. Common - 'Nuthin to Do'
22. Grover Washington Jr. - Hydra [Loop] (sampled in 'Orange Pineapple Juice')
23. Keith Murray - Hostile [Extract] (sampled in 'Orange Pineapple Juice')
24. Common - Orange Pineapple Juice
25. Ahmad Jamal - Dolphin Dance (sampled in 'Resurrection')
26. Power of Zeus - Sorceror of Isis [Loop] (sampled in 'Resurrection')
27. Nice and Smooth - No Delayin' [Extract] (sampled in 'Resurrection')
28. Common - Resurrection
29. Alton McClain & Destiny - The Power of Love (sampled in 'ThisIsMe')
30. Paul McCartney - Momma Miss America [Loop] (sampled in 'ThisIsMe')
31. Boogie Down Productions - Build and Destroy [Extract] (sampled in 'ThisIsMe')
32. Common - ThisIsMe
33. George Benson - The Changing World (sampled in 'I Used to Love H.E.R')
34. Common - I Used to Lover H.E.R
35. King Curtis - Sweet Inspiration (sampled in 'Watermelon')
36. Johnnie Taylor - Watermelon Man [Extract] (sampled in 'Watermelon')
37. The New Apocalypse - Get Outta My Life Woman [Loop] (sampled in 'Watermelon')
38. Common - Watermelon
39. Big Daddy Kane feat Biz Markie - Just Rhymin' Wth Biz [Extract] (sampled in 'Watermelon')
40. The Modern Jazz Quarter - But Not For Me (sampled in 'Maintaining')
41. A Tribe Called Quest - Scenario (Remix) [Loop] (sampled in 'Maintaining')
42. Common - Maintaining
43. Common - Communism
44. Freddie Hubbard - The Surest Things Can Change (sampled in 'Communism')