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One Day It'll All Make Sense

One Day It'll All Make Sense
OneDayMakeSense.jpg
Studio album by Common
Released September 30, 1997
Recorded 1996-1997
Genre Hip hop, Conscious hip hop, Chicago hip hop
Length 70:10
Label Relativity Records
Producer No I.D., Spike Rebel, Karriem Riggins, James Poyser, Ynot, Dug Infinite
Common chronology
Resurrection
(1994)
One Day It'll All Make Sense
(1997)
Like Water for Chocolate
(2000)
Singles from One Day It'll All Make Sense
  1. "Retrospect for Life"
    Released: July 29, 1997
  2. "Reminding Me (Of Sef)"
    Released: August 5, 1997
  3. "All Night Long"
    Released: January 25, 1998
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars
Robert Christgau B+
The Independent 4/5 stars
RapReviews (7.5/10)
Rhapsody (favorable)
Rolling Stone 4/5 stars
The Rolling Stone Album Guide 3.5/5 stars
The Source 3.5/5 stars
Spin (8/10)
Sputnikmusic 4/5 stars

One Day It'll All Make Sense is the third studio album by rapper Common, released on September 30, 1997 on Relativity Records. It was the follow-up to his critically acclaimed album Resurrection and the last Common album to feature producer No I.D. until Common's 2011 album The Dreamer/The Believer. As he explained in his memoir published in 2011, the title of album was figured out to use a word "sense", as he was forced to shorten his stage name to Common.

The album's recording was put on hold for up to a year as Common was busy becoming a father. After the birth of his child, Common returned to finish the album, albeit with a newer sense of responsibility, which he relates to his transformation from bachelor to father. He recorded "Retrospect For Life", with Lauryn Hill, as a dedication to his first child Omoye Assata Lynn. The song became the second single to be released from the album, and was accompanied by a video (directed by Lauryn Hill), as were "Invocation", "Hungry", and the album's first single "Reminding Me (Of Sef)" (a eulogy to a close, deceased friend of Common's). The album's cover is a picture of an 8-year-old Common with his mother, Dr. Ann Hines, at an airport in Montego Bay, Jamaica in 1980.

The multi-talented Cee Lo Green, who at the time was still a member of Southern Hip hop group Goodie Mob, provides the vocals for the spiritual "G.O.D." (which stands for "Gaining One's Definition"). Rapper Canibus makes an early career appearance on the track "Making A Name For Ourselves", as do veterans De La Soul on "Gettin' Down At The Amphitheater". Other guests include Black Thought, and Q-Tip on "Stolen Moments" Parts "II" and "III" respectively, and Common's future love interest Erykah Badu, on "All Night Long", which was produced by The Roots. Chicagoan poet Malik Yusef, waxes lyrical about his hometown on "My City", and as usual Common's father Lonnie Lynn closes the album out with some words of wisdom on "Pop's Rap Part 2 / Fatherhood".


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Wikipedia

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