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Every time you hear people talk
about Madonna – whether it is a critic, fan or peer – they
always laud her for her ability to “reinvent” herself. I guess
that’s to say that Madonna has managed to stay relevant for the
past quarter century by reshaping and reinventing her
persona and
music to coincide with whatever is or was the current climate.
It’s a skill, a great one. The hip hop equivalent would be LL
Cool J. LL turns 40 next January, having released 13 albums
beginning with the classic Radio
in 1985. Every time you see him – say, at June’s BET Awards – he
looks as faddish as a 21-year old shopping on 125th
in Harlem. When his albums and singles drop, they’re flavored
like whatever the radio is offering at the moment. Folks like
Madonna and LL change with the times, but it’s a change dictated
by the times. Then you have a dude like Common. Common changes,
alright, but it’s not a reinvention, more like an evolution.
Later this month, Comm will drop his seventh album,
Finding Forever, in the midst of
an evolution/change that might be the most dramatic of his
15-year career. From Can I Borrow A
Dollar (1992) to Resurrection
(1994) to One Day It’ll All Make
Sense (1997) to Like Water For
Chocolate (2000) to Electric
Circus (2002) to Be (2005),
Common surfaced as a different man and artist. In the 2 years
since Be – his highest selling,
critically acclaimed, Grammy-nominated artwork – Common has
become a sought after actor and a high profile product
spokesman, lost his good friend and classic collaborator J Dilla
to lupus and been anointed by Oprah as some pseudo-hip hop
mouthpiece for mainstream America. Since Common has always been
an artist whose music was very personal and reflective, one can
only wonder what to expect from
Forever.
In an article on MTV.com, Common gave us an abstract clue as to
what we might expect or at least what his intentions are:
"For me, Finding Forever means being able to exist
through music and art forever. Finding a place where I can make
something that will be here and be timeless, transcend age
barriers and color barriers. And I look at music like Bob
Marley's or Marvin Gaye's or Stevie Wonder's or A Tribe Called
Quest's, that's forever music. I always wanted to do that with
my music, but this is just making a statement of seeking that
place of forever music. And now with the death of J Dilla and
other things, you start thinking about forever lasting for real
through music. Jay Dee will last forever through his music and
hopefully generations down the line will know about Common
through his music. And it's also saying: I've been doing this
for a nice period of time, so I'm trying to find the place where
I can keep existing in the game and make music I love."
So maybe that’s it – that’s where Forever is taking us,
on a quest for timelessness. On Resurrection, Comm was a
young buck, resisting commercial trends to do it for the love
and lamenting a perceived loss of organic love for hip hop.
One Day dropped at the height and near-end of hip hop’s
golden age; and it featured Common at the height of his
straight-up, raw, naked emcee powers. Then he hit us with
Like Water, perhaps Comm at his most artistic moment,
serving somewhat as frontman for what was actually a supergroup,
The Soulquarians (Comm, D’Angelo, J Dilla, ?uestlove, James
Poyser, Bilal, Erykah Badu, Roy Hargrove, etc.). When you make
such a strong artistic statement, the only thing left to do is
search for new territory, which is what we got with his next
evolution,
Electric Circus, featuring Comm The Explorer and his odes
to Jimi Hendrix and 9-part suites about the meaning of “Heaven”.
Next the man recentered and evolved to a hip hop wiseman and
gave the most sagacious and adult hip hop album in recent years
–
Be. It’s maybe one of the most under-appreciated 5-album
strings of his generation.
But what now? What now, after his new-found Hollywood stardom,
with a role alongside Jeremy Piven, Andy Garcia and Ben Affleck
in
Smoking Aces and an upcoming part with Denzel Washington
and Russell Crow in the Ridley Scott epic, American Gangster?
What now, after international exposure as the face of clothing
giant Gap or his new turn as conscious spokesman for a new line
of Converse? Comm’s mug is on big billboards in Time Square and
he’s the subject of feature stories in Billboard magazine. In
the May 26th article,
Common: The People’s Champ, Tim Reid, senior
marketing executive at Geffen Records, says, Comm “… has a brand
that stands the test of time and he’s constantly getting new
fans.” Well, Madonna and LL have managed to remain relevant and
iconic by towing the line of personal integrity (relatively
speaking) and at the same time, appeasing the changing and
shifting tastes of broad fan bases as fickle as ornery toddlers.
Common has managed to stay respected and cultishly revered by
simply being a product of himself. His music has stayed true to
his personal journey as an evolving emotional and physical man,
his own artistic progressions and interests and his keen
choices of musical acquaintances (NO.I.D., The Soulquarian crew,
Kanye West). But what will this new Pop Culture Common render?
The anticipation for
Forever is primarily in wondering whether or not Common
will be able to balance Hollywood and Madison Avenue with art.
He’s stated that he’s seeking to make timeless music, classic
art that age and years can’t wear down. That’s ambitious given
his new fame and the artistic vices he’s bound to encounter.
Will
Finding Forever be his latest evolution? Or will we get a
reinvention?
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