Biography
Lonnie Rashid Lynn (born March 13, 1972), known professionally as Common (formerly known as Common Sense), is an American rapper, actor and activist. The recipient of three Grammy Awards, an Academy Award, a Primetime Emmy Award, and a Golden Globe Award, he signed with the independent label Relativity Records at the age of 20. The label released his first three studio albums: Can I Borrow a Dollar? (1992), Resurrection (1994) and One Day It'll All Make Sense (1997). He maintained an underground following into the late 1990s, and achieved mainstream success through his work with the Black music collective Soulquarians. After attaining a major label record deal, he released his fourth and fifth albums, Like Water for Chocolate (2000) and Electric Circus (2002), to continued acclaim and modest commercial response. He guest performed on fellow Soulquarian, Erykah Badu's 2003 single, "Love of My Life (An Ode to Hip-Hop)", which became his highest entry — at number nine — on the Billboard Hot 100 and won Best R&B Song at the 45th Annual Grammy Awards. He signed with fellow Chicago rapper Kanye West's record label GOOD Music, in a joint venture with Geffen Records to release his sixth and seventh albums Be (2005) and Finding Forever (2007); both were nominated for Best Rap Album Grammys, while the latter became his first to debut atop the Billboard 200 and contained the song "Southside" (featuring Kanye West), the recipient of Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group at the 50th Annual Grammy Awards. His eighth album, Universal Mind Control (2008), was met with a critical decline and served as his final release with GOOD. Common's label imprint, Think Common Entertainment, was founded in 2011 and entered a joint venture with Warner Bros. Records to release his ninth album, The Dreamer/The Believer (2011), and later No I.D.'s ARTium Recordings, an imprint of Def Jam Recordings to release his tenth album, Nobody's Smiling (2014). Both received critical praise and further disc
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

The College Dropout
2004

Late Registration
2005

Man On The Moon: The End Of Day
2009

Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star
1998

Stakes Is High
1996

Things Fall Apart
1999

Be
2005

Illadelph Halflife
1996

The Grind Date
2004

Fantastic, Vol. 2
2000

Like Water For Chocolate
2000

Resurrection
1994

Worldwide Underground
2003

Energy
2020

One Day It'll All Make Sense
1997

Rising Down
2008

Muddy Waters
1996

Cabin In The Sky
2025

The Shining
2006

Electric Circus
2002

King.
2006

Black Radio III
2022

Finding Forever
2007

The Rising Tied
2005
Credited work
1,986 releases · 239 albums · active 1992–2026
- Performance · 2,215
- Other credits · 194
- Production · 153
- Engineering · 3
Studios: Electric Lady Studios · Sony Music Studios, New York City · Battery Studios, New York · Record Plant, Los Angeles
