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COMMON SET TO RELEASE BLACK AMERICA AGAIN ON NOVEMBER 4

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COMMON SET TO RELEASE BLACK AMERICA AGAIN ON NOVEMBER 4

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17 OCTOBER 2016 (Toronto, ON) – Multiple Grammy®, Golden Globe, and Academy Award-winning Chicago-based rapper, actor, social activist, and philanthropist Common follows up the release of his explosive and politically relevant new single “Black America Again” featuring Stevie Wonder with today’s announcement that BLACK AMERICA AGAIN, the eponymously titled new album will arrive November 4th on ARTium/Def Jam Recordings/Universal Music Canada, the country’s leading music company. "I wrote this song in March,” Common said of Black America Again” recently, “and unfortunately it was as relevant then as it is now.  As it could have been in the 1960s or 1800s or any era that we have existed in this country.”  The song’s socially conscious message resonates with scorching yet uplifting power, akin to Common’s groundbreaking 2014 single from the Selma movie soundtrack, Glory” (with John Legend) for which they received Oscar, Grammy®, Golden Globe, and numerous other awards. “‘Black America Again’,” Common continued, “is centred in the injustices that black people have experienced and endured since we arrived on the shores of America.  ‘Black America Again’ is a call to action.  It is a song about black love, black strength, black justice, black resistance, black resilience, black empowerment, and black people.” BLACK AMERICA AGAIN, the 11th studio album from Common, is the long-awaited follow-up to Nobody’s Smiling (2014), which entered the Rap and R&B charts at #1.  The album marked a creative reunion between Common and long-time friend and collaborator No I.D., who came of age in the ’90s as producer of Common’s first three albums.  The album also features the anthem “Letter To The Free” featuring Bilal, the end-title track to Ava Duvernay’s powerful new documentary ‘13th.’ Centered on race in the United States criminal justice system, the film is titled after the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution which theoretically outlawed slavery. Acclaimed director of Selma, DuVernay argues that slavery is being perpetuated, however, through mass incarceration. Letter To The Free” has already been nominated for a 2016 Critics' Choice Documentary Award for “Best Song in a Documentary.” thinkcommon.com
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