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46 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"Faithful" To The Vintage Common Sense... (4.5 Stars),
By Andrew Jacob (Brooklyn, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
Confusion would be the understated way of describing how many felt while listening to 2002's "Electric Circus." Many tried to justify it by stamping it as "eccentric" or "innovatively different" but ultimately, it was a peculiar release that left many fans perplexed. In comes Kanye West, whose 2004 banner year brought along furthermore awareness of "Chi-town" and whose album featured a collaboration that was to some extent a preview of what was to come; Common's 6th studio album "Be" is perhaps the early contender to claim 2005's Hip Hop album of the year. Although only clocking in around 43 minutes, it is a compact and intriguing album whose vintage soulful approach depicts itself to be old school but brings about a refreshingly modern sound. Without overstating, "Be" literally has exceptional song after exceptional song. Courtesy of the aforementioned Kanye West, the flawless production ranges from the jazzy "Be (Intro)," and "Real People"; the soulful "Testify," and "Faithful"; the R&B-esque "Love Is..." and "They Say"; and the gritty throwback sound of "The Corner" and "Chi-City." Lyrically, there is the introspection present from the early days of "Like Water For Chocolate" or "One Day It'll All Make Sense." Although If I were to be nitpicking, I'd say "The Food (Live)" falters when compared to the other tracks. However, considering all of its positive aspects, a notch below excellence is still very good. With quality production and lyrics, "Be" is easily superior to many modern generic albums and it furthermore cements Common's existence as one of Hip Hop's best lyricists.
35 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Brilliant!,
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
I usually do not buy a rap album unless I know that it is destined to be excellent. Common has done this with BE. He is not only a great and DIFFERENT MC, but he has put together a very intellectual album while also being commercial, an incredible feat with a rapper who isn't a gangsta rapper.
The production on BE is mostly handled by Kanye West, which is the best decision that Common could make. Kanye, as always, has done an excellent production job on BE and even makes a few guest appearances. Top tracks from BE include "The Corner" which has a very unique beat (excellent drum programming) along with a very unique choice with THE LAST POETS guest starring. "Go" is an exciting surprise with John Mayer and Kanye West guest starring making an unlikely combination work brilliantly because "Go" is definitely one of the best tracks on the entire album. In "Faithful", a gospel sounding sample is sampled evoking the effect of church and is pulled of very effectively. I could run through the rest of the track list, but I don't think there is any need. You won't find a truly dull listen. For the album, 4 stars and for being different than the other rappers and giving a different sort of album, I give 1 extra star. Keep on doing what you are doing Common.
57 of 77 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Album of the Year so far...,
By
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
Be - Okay, when the synthesizer kicks in I had a panic attack that this was Electric Circus II. By the time the piano hits I calm down. Like this groove, but the aforementioned synth feels extra. "We got arms, but won't reach for the sky."
The Corner - If you aren't nodding your head by the time the chorus hits, you have negative soul. The Kanye part has not aggravated me yet. "Now I roll in an Olds with windows that don't roll." Go! - Intro is too long - 37 seconds before you even hear Common. Almost feels like a Kanye West song feat. Common. Way too much chorus, too little rapping. What exactly did Mayer do here? "Dirty words encourage me." Faithful - Vintage Com - this vibe kind of reminds me of One Day It Will All Make Sense in a good way. Thoughtful and enjoyable. While I like the sample, the sped up vocals during the verses are distracting and unnecessary. Whoa, John Legend and Bilal come out of freaking nowhere. "I'm bad, not as bad as Eric Benet." Testify - Once again the vocals in the sample are competing with Common rather than compliment him. Not really feeling the story. "The Queenpin." Love Is - The difference between Dilla and Kanye is so noticeable (boy I hope he produced this). Com rides this beat, as opposed to sharing space with it. Dunno about singing the chorus. "Heartbreak Hotel then you're home again." Chi City - Production sounds like Premier minus the signature drums. This song would fit in Resurrection. And there are no vocal samples! At this point of the album - this is the standout track for me. "I rap with the passion of Christ, _____ cross me." The Food - The energy of this damn song is its selling point. I like how they went back and amped up the beat, but cannot help but miss the third verse. I dig the outro. "You love to hear the story, again and again - about these young brothers from the city of wind." Real People - I really like the jazzy beat on this. Sounds like a cheesy 80's TV theme song in a good way. "The way they treat blacks, I wanna snap like paparazzi." They Say - I like John Legend, and this sounds like one of his good grooves. Autobiographical and interesting - an explanation/defense of Electric Circus to my ears. Not a fan of Kanye's verse - very little rhyming, annoying high pitch. Would have been interested in hearing Consequence's verse. "I'm the black pill in the Matrix." It's Your World - I am feeling this one. This could have been on Like Water for Chocolate. Feels good to have Pops back. "My momma gave birth, but she never really had me." Final thoughts: I bought this with the mindset that I would be satisfied if this was Common's third best album, and I think it is. However, the distance between it and One Day is not as big as I would have liked. Rereading my reviews, I think it is obvious that I find some of the album to be overproduced (Go, Faithful, Testify). Common's strength has always been his superior lyricism, and it feels like it is put on the back burner here on some of the songs. I guess everyone is somewhat possessive of their favorite artists. I would be thrilled if Common and Kanye ended up doing a Blackstar duo-type album, but for a solo Common LP the Kanye stamp feels to heavy here. While I believe this will be his most commercially successful album to date, I wonder how well this will age. Favorite songs: Chi City, The Corners, The Food. Least favorite songs: Go, Testify.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"The present is a gift and I just wanna Be",
By Scott D. Gribble (Baltimore MD) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
We've all been waiting for the resurrection of Common. Whether you liked "Electric Circus" or not, you knew deep down you missed the Common that sounded hungry. After his verse on Kanye's "Get `Em High" and his appearance on Chappelle's Show, it looked like his next album would usher the return of Common. "Be" has finally dropped. It is his most focused effort since "Resurrection" because its production is almost completely handled by a fellow chi-town resident. Instead of No I.D, we get his one time apprentice and current hot commodity - Kanye West.
Musically the album feels like a balance between "Resurrection" and "Like Water For Chocolate", heavy in samples, yet a solid amount of live instruments. "Be" starts out with a simple bass cello plucking, almost identical to John Coltrane's "Resolution" from Love Supreme. Slowly other elements come together, until Common's voice drops and blesses the mic. The title track is short, focused and to the point perfectly capturing what the album is about to accomplish. The single "The Corner" is the actually the darkest track on here. The incredible depth of sampling drives the track. For the lighter "Go!" Common uses a nice stop-and-go flow to rhyme ("Freaky like the daughter of a pastor/ said I was -bate for her to master/ 'Little Red Corvette', na she was faster"). To me, "Faithful" is simply beautiful. It's one of those introspective Common raps at its perfection. The typical Kanye West speed-up sample is taken to the next level, and used almost like a muted horn throughout Common's verse. You can't even be mad there are only two verses, because they're so deep and satisfying on their own. "Testify" allows Common to masterfully tell the story of a court testimony. Although it's short, it gets the Slick Rick stamp of approval. Kanye releases a hold on "Be" and turns over the production of "Love is..." to former Common collaborator Jay-Dee (aka J-Dilla). You can't tell at all though, it fits right along with the rest of the tracks, brilliantly sampling Marvin Gaye's "God is Love" amongst other things. The title is pretty self-explanatory, but it doesn't ever get cheesy like on "Electric Circus". Kanye comes back and trades the sped-up sampling for some classic scratching on "Chi-City". The horns and drums give the track a dark-jazz vibe. On here Common sounds the most intense, perhaps in part because he's repping his home town ("What you rapping for? to Get Fame or to get rich?/I slap a n***a like you... and tell e'm Rick James B***H!!"). Whatever the case, it's another spectacular track. I've been listening to "The Food" Mp3 since this summer, which was directly ripped from the Chappelle Show performance. You might be surprised as I was when the track opens with Dave introducing Common and Kanye. Instead of re-recording the track, they left the performance as is from the show. It doesn't seem like a smart move at first, but then again why do it over again? The performance was flawless the first time, and it really adds a lot to the feel of "Be". Regardless "The Food" is an amazing track and as mentioned earlier Common is hungry ("It's all good in the hood like racks in gyms/ throwbacks and Timbs/ blacks and rims/ whether on ball courts/ attires of all sorts/ we never fall short/ with us it's all Force like Air one's/ some waves some handguns/ the days of the fair one is over for/cats is colder than 4 below/ with self I go toe-to-toe/ Wondering if it's for the art or for the dough/ Though I know to grow a n***a gotta learn to let go/ Though I know the dough I got to bring back to the ghetto"). Some Grover Washington type sax and upbeat horns lace the entire length of "Real People" the production could actually stand on it's own as a jazz track (I wouldn't be surprised if the whole thing is lifted from one sample). John Legend lends the chorus to "They Say" and Kanye drops a verse. Overall it's laid-back and pretty simple. Really good, just nothing that stands out as outstanding. Well, except for Common who has been killing every verse and still hasn't faltered once on this album ("Played my cards right, they say I went too left/ They show me Strange Love like I was Mr. F/ Played chess in this game of pawns and knights/ now I claim King like Don a Frank White/ They say my life is comparable to Christ/ the way I sacrifice and resurrected twice/ they say the crochet pants and sweater was wack/ seen `The Corner' now they say `That n****'s back!' ") "Be" ends on the magnum opus "It's Your World (Part 1 & 2)". The whole thing should be listened to at one time and the end provides a perfect closure for "Be" (it's always great to hear "Pops" at the end of a Common album). As stunning as it sounds, it's not even debatable that Common lyrically surpasses any other of his previous efforts. No doubt Common has fully resurrected. Lyrically and musically it's a work of genius from start to finish. You'd be hard-pressed to find faults in this piece of art, it's the perfection of what a Hip-Hop album should be. Is it a classic? Only time will tell what kind of impact it will have. Regardless, of what it will be... "Be" is a masterpiece right now. (10/10) [Note: This version also contains a bonus DVD. It's about 40 min long, but really only about 15-18 min are worth watching. Highlights include an interview by Sway with Common & Kanye, Studio shots, and a session with the Last Poets at a school in Chicago. The live version of "The Corner" and other material isn't really interesting. Only reccomended for hardcore Common fans]
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Renovating The Hip-Hop World,
By Real Mason "Real" (Chicago, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
Renovating the Hip-Hop World
A Review of "Be" by Common Over the past couple of years the hip-hop world has declined further and further down the slop of "bad music". Finally this year, an album has come to light that will lift the hip-hop world to a new level. This album is "Be" by Common. The hip-hop world needed this album. The album contains hypnotizing lyrics, catchy beats, and support from artists like John Legend, John Mayer, Kanye West and Bilal. This album will lift him from the underground, neo-soul/hip-hop label to mainstream artist. With production from Kanye West, this album is sure to be the best this year. The album opens up with "Be (Intro)", a jazz influenced beat that is sure to catch your attention. The lyrics are sure to motivate and lift your spirit to a higher plain. The first single "The Corner" is a sure-fire song that is sure to be a classic. It give it's listener a view of the south side of Chicago through words. The next song "Go" featuring John Mayer and Kanye West shows off Common's lyrical skills. The whole album is incredible. In the Hip-Hip world today, you wouldn't think that you would be able to find such an album as "Be". It was in the best interest of Common to hook-up with Kanye West to create an album that erases all stereotypes of Hip-Hop today. Common is a lyrical genius and one of the best artists in the world this year.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Truth,
By
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
Common proves that he is anything but with his latest CD that is breath of fresh air to the grown & sexy who grew up on hip hop and are not feeling all this simpleminded mess permeating the airwaves. This emcee is rapping with a message, but he is not corny or preachy. Far from it, because his beats and lyrics will have you nodding your head for the duration of the CD. Common is definitely a wordsmith -- when is the last time you heard the word 'overt' in anyone's rap?
This is the first hip hop recording that I've bought in a long time, and it was worth the wait. I can listen to it all the way through without skipping tracks. I read an interview with Common where he said that he set out to create a classic that would resonate with people for years to come. I think that he's accomplished that. Although all the tracks are strong, my favorites are "Go" "The Corner" and "Chi-City." Go talks about fantasies and the thrill of getting buckwild without being vulgar about it. The latter sums up Common's overriding message as he warns the wack emcees that they are the reason that people say they are tired of rap. I love it when he says "You spit hot garbage son of Sanford." I will admit that I was not feeling Common in his Badu phase, but he has redeemed himself with "Be." I hope this CD does well -- he deserves it.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It's Only Common Sense..,
By Heavy Deezy "Dave" (Winnipeg, MB) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
Its really only common sense to realize anything that comes from common will be truely a fresh of breathe air in an industry full of rims and "YEA!?" "WHAT!?"'s, "Be" is an album that makes you listen to the well crafted lyrics and appreciate the poetry that rap is, it is very soulful compiled with well crafted beats by Mr.West himself. It is truely another great Common album, further more make sure it makes its way into your Hip Hop Collection Today.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Finally.,
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
Finally, an excellent hip hop album has been released to counter the garbage that's been released nowadays. After stuff like Encore from Eminem, where he lost his way, and the Massacre by 50 Cent, which is exactly that, a massacre of true hip hop, I was beginning to lose hope that real hip hop would ever return. Then I heard The Corner on Sirius, and realized that Common's new CD was due. Mos Def's and Talib Kweli's CDs, although not bad in their own right, were shortcomings compared to Black on Both Sides and Quality. BE does not fall short in any aspect. It's incredible. The word I would use to describe this album is "soul". Because it's full of it. There are so many clever lines and wordplay weaved throughout the album that you simply could not analyze the whole thing in one listen. From the cold streets of "The Corner" to the betrayal in "Testify", Common's new tracks are spectacular in every sense. If you want a breath of fresh air and simply the best example of hip hop to be released this year, pick this up. Support soulful and meaningful hip hop. Buy this album.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is how Hip-Hop should be,
By
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
I've constantly criticized people for buying only the "50 cent" and "Snoop Dogg" type albums. Those CD's are the direction in which Hip-Hop shouldn't be headed. Glamorizing thuggery, encouraging disrespecting women and etc.... In an age where "Wait" by the Ying Yang twins gets played on a daily basis and knowing I could've created a track like that on a $200 keyboard cheapens music as a whole and makes it seem as if it is devoid of talent.
That's where Common comes in. This CD is magnificent and even though on the song "Go", he starts to be a little like those I mentioned above, thankfully this is the only track where this occurs. "Real People" is a track that I wish he would've kept going. The vibe is nice. That's my favorite one. "The corner" is also a really good one. The others are really good as well, but I really like how he ends the CD talking about the positive things in the Black community on "It's your world pts 1 & 2". This is a great CD and I know the reason why they're even playing some of it is because Kanye West is still hot. If he wasn't, sadly, you wouldn't have heard much. And I still don't think radio will play anything other than "Go" and "The corner"... Oh well, typical urban radio.... It sucks...
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
common desrves more credit along with a grammy on wednesday night,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) (Audio CD)
common was one of the best rappers of 2005 he surpassed the game in the middle of the year and slightly to almost outdid ludacris all the joints he submitted as a music video were good my favorite song of his is testify and go because they both have to excellent unique beats but go i like slightly better than testify because his lyrics was off the tops the corner was a very good hit as well when kanye is n the mix it usually slightly helps common songs sound better a bit but in testify there was no kanye and he proved to me that he can get the job do without kanye as he did in the passed he made one of the most underexposed rab/r and b songs of 2003 it was with the queen of r and b soul mary j. blige i like that song because it had a good heaven beat to it that never left my ear in the video it was so unique common was using cards with words and pictures to express his feelings to his death girlfriend while rapping now that is talent
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Be (Bonus Dvd) (Spec) (Dlx) (Spkg) by Common (Audio CD - 2005)
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