Common & Pete Rock | BIO | 2024
An artist’s creative peak isn’t always located in the heat of their first years. Most true masters’ skillsand vision actually strengthen with time. But hip-hop doesn’t often get a chance to witness thisevolution, in part because established artists don’t always get support in a genre obsessed with thenew, and sadly because too many don’t live long enough to even have a chance to receive it. Thenthere are the few, joyous cases where we get to see our heroes grow into their full superhero powers.
That is the experience of listening to Common and Pete Rock—the legendary MC and pioneering
producer—on their first full-length collaboration, The Auditorium, Vol. 1 (Loma Vista Recordings).
Check the stats: Pete Rock’s production has propelled million-selling, chart-topping, award-winning
hits from Nas, Public Enemy, The Notorious B.I.G., and Kanye West to Mick Jagger, Mary J. Blige,
Madonna, and Lady Gaga; and his signature style—collage compositions imbued with complex
harmony and melody—makes him one of the most influential and innovative figures in the history
of popular music. Multi-hyphenate rapper-actor-producer-author-activist Common has created an
unparalleled body of work: 15 landmark albums, standout performances in films from “American
Gangster” and “Just Wright” to “Selma” and “The Hate U Give,” and most recently on Broadway
performing in “Between Riverside and Crazy” and coproducing the revival of “The Wiz.” His
Primetime Emmy, three Grammys, and Oscar for Best Original Song mean that Common has now
transcended his EGO and is already shopping for a T that fits.
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Yet this producer and MC, though they traveled in the same creative circles and soul group for three
decades, collaborated only two times—on a notable song they made together in 1994 and another in
1998. Given their independent, interstellar trajectories, there was no reason their paths should cross,
until Common’s course was altered by the gravity of a big event: the Hip-Hop 50 th Anniversary
concert at Yankee Stadium in August 2023. Common was a featured performer, but his epiphany
came as a fan: “I stood out in that crowd and watched for five-and-a-half hours. I've never done that
in my life. Just to see EPMD, to see Lil Kim, to see Mobb Deep, Snoop, Ice Cube, Run DMC, Nas,
Lauryn Hill, and Fat Joe. It just made me realize how much I love the art form. It made me want to
rap.”
The next month, Common found himself in Pete Rock’s studio north of New York City. “We caught
up with each other and I just started playing music,” says Pete. In those first moments, the two
highly-favored sons of hip-hop realized they were coming from a similar place of gratitude and
enthusiasm for the genre. Common recalls thinking: “We don't have to reach to make it sound like a
throwback. We don't have to reach to try to make it sound like it's new and young. We’ve just got to
be who we are and do what we love.” Then came Common’s second, more urgent realization: “I
can't wait to leave here and go write.”
“We just became glued to each other,” Pete says. “The recording process wasn't long at all. It took
about a couple of weeks to get the first five songs done. And the way we finished it was heroic.” And
though Pete experienced the pace of their work as brisk, Common remembers the time as one of
intense deliberation. “It took time for Pete to dig into these records and find the right sample,”
Common says. “Sometimes he would hook it up right then and there, but sometimes he waited ‘till
he felt it was the right time and the right expression. And it's that time, that care, that diligence that
comes through in the music that we make.” Common wrote steadily, recording his vocals in the
familiar sanctum of Electric Lady Studios. Several more visits, a back and forth of ideas over text
and phone, and the 15 tracks of The Auditorium, Vol. 1 coalesced. “I was reaching for the euphoria of
what we did in the 90s, but updated,” Pete says. “The feel of the album is 90s, but it's not 90s at all.
It's new music.” Cratedigging, making beats, writing verses—these rituals of youth were exercised with an adult’s
patience and control. As they worked, Pete and Common recognized the things they do better now.
Pete has become less judgmental of his own work in a way that allows him to try different sounds
and structures: “Some things you may have to just get used to the more you hear it.” For Common,
it’s simple: “I'm better at figuring out, ‘Okay, what will make this song a song?’ I'm better at
songwriting now because I'm a better musician. And because music is not my only outlet for creating
art and making a living, I'm more free and more confident. Then I can enjoy the music I'm making
and do it with love.”
Love is the message, from the opening fanfare of “Dreamin’” to the sunset of “Now and Then.”Pete repeats sonic feats, beat after beat: launching Curtis Mayfield’s languid, live rendition of “We’veOnly Just Begun” into a rollicking groove in “We’re On Our Way”; turning bits and bytes ofBrazilian funk into jams like “Fortunate”; chopping baroque harpsichord and jazz piano into night-and-day music beds for “Stellar” and “When The Sun Shines”; casting down the words of Shan andRakim like lightning bolts from vengeful Gods over skull-cracking drums in “Wise Up” and “AllKind of Ideas.” In an album with no skips, you can hear the vinyl crackle, but the mastermanipulator of music and puzzle-solver of sampling is mos def hi-def, not “lo-fi,” whatever that is.The great joy of listening to Common rhyme has always been that you get to watch his mind work,while he makes that work look like play. His lyrical leaps and complex connections could yieldflowcharts and Venn diagrams. Listen for the opening lines of “Chi Town Do It,” a chance meetingthat becomes a nest of nested references. Listen to how Common cruises through the alphabet inthe second verse of “This Man’s Arms” (“E’ase up, I don’t F with em cause it’s G’s up”), and then inthe third recounts a performance early in his career, downloading “hard Drives on Lakeshore” for agrateful audience while he struggles to “to pay for the rent and the parking tickets/while they payfor tickets.” Listen for his description of the three wise men in “Wise Up” a few lines before he callshimself the “Solomon of Common men.” Pay attention to the sequence of double meaning in“Stellar” (meteor and planet, planet and rock, rock and Gibraltar) and the triple entendre of “pipes” in“When The Sun Shines Again.” This man—who is at this point “fucking with three decades” in hiscareer “like an orgy”—is not playing with you. Only someone who’s read a million movie scriptscould open a song with “Rack focus to the Black Moses.” His own favorite moment in an album offavored moments is the first verse of “Now and Then,” wherein he speaks of Gods andResurrections, and of “learning like Sha’Carri/Long nails in our bodies, they try to crucify us/Don’tknow if Lake Michigan can purify us.” Common adds: “It’s fun, but it's spiritual. It’s got layers to it.”Common is not only the prodigious free-association poet, but consistently the intrepid explorer ofhis own emotional world. On that note, Common delivers a piece of work nothing short of astartling with “Lonesome,” which begins with some self-reflection that’s better than tea from anytabloid or TMZ (“Every love I’m in/My endless love always comes to an end”) but ends as aconversation with his adult daughter, Omoye, now a lawyer, about encountering her own challengesas she moves through life. “I wanted to talk to her as a young woman who needs to know that herfather is there for her.” There has never been anything like it in hip-hop.
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The Auditorium, Vol. 1 is the product of one producer and one MC, another rarity in today’s musicmarketplace where high-profile projects are usually occasion for a cavalcade of stars. Here, the fewfeatured guests are chosen with requisite mindfulness. “I'm only going to work with people who aregoing to elevate the song,” says Common. To that end, superstar and fellow Chicagoan JenniferHudson lifts a refrain to the heavens in “There is a God”; and the chorus for “Everything Is SoGrand” was written and sung by PJ, whom Common calls “one of the greatest writers I've ever beenaround.” Then there is the stealthy omnipresence of Common’s longtime collaborator Bilal, whosesonic shapeshifting powers approach the supernatural. “Bilal is one of those vocalists who can makehis voice do all these different things. In ‘So Many People,’ you’d think he's the sample.” De LaSoul’s Posdnuos laid a dozen bars of gold on “When The Sun Shines Again.” And then there’s Pete’sturn on the mic in “All Kind of Ideas,” which is not so much a verse as it is a murder. After therecording, another lon
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gtime comrade came through: Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, offeringhelpful advice on the album sequence.
But the most important working relationship on the album was the one Common and Pete Rockforged, not a foregone conclusion for two famous figures used to calling the musical shots. “Therewere a couple of times when me and Common bumped heads like, ‘Yo, man, I don't know aboutthat one.’” They were usually small things — the timing of a particular lyric, for example. “I had tosit and live with his idea, and he had to sit and live with my idea. And then we just said, ‘You knowwhat? We're going to work through this because what we're doing is nothing less than great. If wedisagree with each other, we'll find a common ground.’ And I enjoyed that a lot.” Common echoesthe sentiment: “It taught me a lot about being in a group in many ways because all the decisions arenot just mine. I love teammates, but I had to get used to it on a musical level. Most producers that Iworked with would just create the music, but it wasn't a collaboration where it was like, ‘Okay, the weboth need to like the title or the album cover.’ But Pete cares about his music a whole lot. He isstrong-willed because the work needs to be at the level that he feels is right. And I'm like, I'm withthat.” It is a mutual admiration, says Pete: “Lemme tell you how sharp that dude is when it come tothe music and the hip-hop. He remembers lyrics, he remembers hooks, he remembers everything.”Pete continues: “The understanding we had as two grown men thats been doing this for so longwas, ‘Heres the goal where we're trying to reach. Do you think we can reach that?’ And I'm like, ‘Ofcourse we could do that, with your history mind and my history. That's the least that can beaccomplished."
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A victory for the art of MCing and the mad science of sampled music, The Auditorium, Vol. 1succeeds because it accomplishes what its makers hoped for. Says Common: “I want this to be takenas a complete piece of work, a complete piece of art, and for it to exist in different time periods.”The Auditorium, Vol. 1 is the past, present, and future happening all at once. In any decade, anabsolute banger. Separate or together, they are in top form. And they’re already working on Vol. 2.
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