Common Market (hip hop group)
Common Market | |
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Common Market performs at the Capitol Hill Block Party in Seattle, July 2006. | |
Background information | |
Origin | Seattle, Washington, U.S. |
Genres | Hip-hop, Northwest hip hop |
Years active | 2005–2009 |
Labels | Massline Media |
Associated acts | Blue Scholars |
Members |
Common Market was an American hip hop duo based in Seattle, Washington, active from 2005 through 2009. Both members, DJ/Producer Sabzi (Saba Mohajerjasbi) and MC RA Scion (Ryan Abeo), had been active hip hop artists in the Pacific Northwest for three years before they combined their talents in 2005 to form Common Market.[1] Together they released two albums, two EPs, and went on several tours.
Early beginnings
Sabzi started his career as DJ and producer in another hip hop duo, Blue Scholars, in Seattle, Washington. RA Scion gained musical skill while in Louisville, Kentucky, before moving to Seattle. RA Scion and Sabzi's paths crossed through the Northwest hip hop scene, where they bonded over their Bahá'í Faith contacts, and their political and spiritual approach to hip-hop music.[1]
Musical career
2005-2007: Common Market self titled LP and touring
After collaborating on a pair of tracks on RA Scion’s 2004 solo project, Live and Learn, the duo began working in an attic-based studio for what would eventually become the 14-track self-titled debut, released in October 2005. An advance copy caught the ear of KRS-One, who praised the album and RA Scion for “spitting in the tradition of the conscious hiphop movement.”[2] KRS-One then drove up to perform at Common Market’s album release party in Seattle, then taking the duo on the road with him on the Temple of Hiphop tour.[3]
The album was hailed by fans as a remarkable improvement over any of their previous works. Common Market takes on questions about religion, politics and the state of mainstream hip-hop. At the core of Common Market’s music is a critical, unapologetic world view that change is not only necessary, it is inevitable, and can only come about through having love for and serving the people.[4]
Shortly after the release of their debut album, Common Market gathered praise as Seattle Weekly’s 2006 Best New Artist and performing slots on grand stages such as the Sasquatch Festival and The Capitol Hill Block Party. They have shared the stage with KRS-One,[5] Zion I, Ghostface Killah,[6] The Coup, Guru of Gangstarr, and the Blue Scholars. The album’s regional success, along with the wave of Northwest hip-hop, poised the group for a serious push into the national scene, and the Common Market LP has been mixed and mastered by Seattle music engineer Martin Feveyear and repackaged with new album cover art. Their debut album was also the first official new release of Mass Line, a co-op indie record label run by Common Market, Blue Scholars and Gabriel Teodros.[7] The now-defunct label's mission statement included the goal of using hip hop as a means of grassroots community organizing and youth outreach.
2007-2009: Tobacco Road
In a 2007 interview on Seattle radio station 107.7 The End, the duo stated that their new album would be titled Tobacco Road and is scheduled for release "on your mom's 50th birthday."[8] In preparation for the album release, Common Market released the EP Black Patch War on May 20, 2008. Tobacco Road was released September 9, 2008, followed by a CD release party on September 11, 2008 at Neumo's in Seattle. Later that month, the album climbed to #50 on the U.S. Billboard Heatseekers chart[9] In September 2008, Common Market released a music video for the single "Trouble Is". The video was shot by director Zia Mohajerjasbi and was filmed at sites around Monroe, Washington.[10] Common Market were winners in the eighth annual Independent Music Award for Rap/Hip-Hop Album in 2009 for Tobacco Road.[11] A second (and final) EP, The Winter's End, followed in March 2009.[12]
Ending
In 2009, RA Scion announced that The Winter's End would be the final release by the group via bandcamp, with both artists going their separate artistic ways.[13]
Name
RA Scion sites the name's origin from Common's song Communism from his 1994 album Resurrection.[14]
Discography
Albums
- Common Market (Pacific Northwest release: SCIONtific, October 24, 2005; National release: Massline, October 10, 2006)
- Tobacco Road (Massline/Hyena, September 9, 2008)
EPs
- Black Patch War (Massline, May 20, 2008)
- The Winter's End (Massline/Hyena, March 24, 2009)
Non-album singles
- Spread (Jul 2006)
- Tobacco and Snow Covered Roads (Jan 2009; web video release)
Videography
- 2008: "Trouble Is"
- 2009: "Tobacco and Snow Covered Roads"
- 2009: "Escaping Arkham"
External links
References
- 1 2 Details published in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- ↑ According to this Archived 2006-05-05 at the Wayback Machine. review by Keith Adam, this quote is on a sticker on the album's cover.
- ↑ The full story was published in Seattle's alternative newspaper, The Stranger.
- ↑ This observation comes from a review at okayplayer.com Archived 2006-10-17 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ One show was mentioned in the Seattle Weekly
- ↑ This noted in a CD review by Seattle Weekly
- ↑ The full story on the record label published in The Stranger
- ↑ Live interview with Sabzi and RA Scion. 107.7 The End. October 19, 2007.
- ↑ Heatseekers, Billboard.com
- ↑ "Common Market: Tobacco Road". PopMatters. Retrieved 2017-02-15.
- ↑ "Independent Music Awards | Past IMA Programs". independentmusicawards.com. Retrieved 2017-02-15.
- ↑ "The Winter's End EP - Common Market — Listen and discover music at Last.fm". www.last.fm. Retrieved 2017-02-15.
- ↑ "The Winter's End [EP], by Common Market". RA Scion. Retrieved 2017-02-15.
- ↑ "Platform8470.com - Hip-Hop Magazine - Interviews". www.platform8470.com. Retrieved 2017-02-15.