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                          "Ihr könnt mich nicht brechen", singt Jamie N Commons in seinem Song "Not Gonna Break Me". Im eindrucksvollen Video zum Track wird die Geschichte eines Boxers verbildlicht. Betrübt erzählt dieser im Intro des Clips: "Ich habe in meinem Leben viel durchmachen müssen. Es hat mir echt das Herz gebrochen", doch rafft er sich in den darauffolgenden Szenen auf und kämpft für seinen Traum. Pausenlos dreht sich für ihn alles um seine grösste Leidenschaft - das Boxen. Und so wehrt er sich auch seelisch auf seine Weise gegen den Kummer vergangener Tage.    Biography - Jamie N Commons    With  his rich, rasping vocals and penchant for darkly passionate songwriting,  British singer/guitarist Jamie N Commons delivers a gritty brand of rock &  roll that instantly transports any listener to another era. Already counting  Elvis Costello among his fans and the UK press drawing comparisons to Nick Cave,  the 25-year-old songwriter is now deepening his sound and further warping time  by teaming up with Alex Da Kid (the Grammy-winning producer best known for his  work with hip-hop game-changers like Dr. Dre, Eminem, and Nicki Minaj).  Signed to Alex’s KIDinaKORNER , a label under  Interscope Records that is also home to Imagine Dragons, X Ambassadors and Skylar  Grey,  Commons is gearing up to release a  full-length album that will wield heady beats and boldly inventive grooves to  create an entirely fresh style of blues-drenched rock.   In  2013, Commons served up a selection of songs that veer from stompy retro-soul  to moody ballads to fiery, fuzzed-out pop on the six-track EP Rumble And Sway. Rumble And Sway finds Commons backed by the four-piece band he  assembled while attending Goldsmiths College in London. The follow-up to  Commons’s 2011 debut The Baron (an EP  nominated for the BBC Sound Poll of 2012), Rumble  And Sway also features leading-edge production from Alex Da Kid, as well as  heavy-hitters like Eg White (Florence + the Machine, Adele) and Eliot James  (The Futureheads, Bloc Party).   For  Commons, a fierce love for the blues at the heart of his high-powered rock  began at a very early age. Born in Bristol but raised in Chicago, Commons  accompanied his music-obsessed father to Allman Brothers Band and Neil Young  concerts when he was a little kid. At 10, the back-to-back releases of Moby’s  gospel-infused Play and the  Americana-tinged O Brother, Where Art Thou? Soundtrack prompted Commons to delve more deeply into the roots of rock music.  By the time he was 15, Commons had scored his own guitar and started teaching  himself to play. “I learned guitar the way most people do—just sitting in my  bedroom for hours, copying Jimi Hendrix riffs,” he recalls. “After a while I  was coming up with my own riffs, which probably sounded exactly like Jimi  Hendrix at first but eventually took on their own sound.”   After  several stints in high-school punk bands, Commons headed to Goldsmiths and soon  became fascinated with British folk troubadours like Nick Drake and John Martyn  and Delta blues legends like Mississippi John Hurt. While at school he put  together a band and began playing shows at local dive bars, taking on a rigorous  gigging schedule that quickly led him to land a publishing deal. “We did things  the old-fashioned way when it came to our live shows, which means we just kept  on playing and playing and gradually the venues got bigger and bigger,” Commons  notes.   In  December 2011, on the way to see Coldplay in Newcastle, Alex Da Kid ended up on  a train with several representatives from Commons’s publishers. “They played me  Jamie’s music and I fell in love with it right away,” says Alex. “He’s making  rock and roll that’s in an entirely different space from anything else out  there, and he’s got this amazing voice that can completely transform whatever  he sings.” Upon returning from Newcastle, Alex met with Commons in a pub  and—about a month later—flew him out to Los Angeles so the two could hole up in  the studio and start making music together.   Once  in the studio, the duo plunged into the process of dreaming up a genre-bending  new sound that would capture Commons’s raw, wild energy while weaving in some  of the larger-than-life elements of Alex’s artistry as a hip-hop producer.  “Alex would make beats and I’d come up with song ideas, and pretty soon we  started speaking the same language and figuring out how to make it all come  together,” says Commons. “What we ended up creating is a really varied,  eclectic batch of songs that gives you the feeling of skipping through genres  and maybe even skipping through time.”   Kicking  off with the lead single and title track, Rumble  And Sway comes on full throttle with a strutty, smoldering, horn-soaked  rave-up that offers the perfect intro to Commons’s unforgettably masterful  vocals. Another fast-driving powerhouse, “Worth Your While” merges a fat, fuzzy  groove with scorching guitar riffs and vocal work that alternates from lustful  growling to Motown-esque harmonies. Both “Wash Me In The Water” (an anguished,  gospel-inspired number) and “Have A Little Faith” (a piano-laced plea built on  bright, crisp beats) blend midtempo rhythms with soul-stirring lyrics about  pain and redemption, while “Caroline” emerges as a dreamy, lovesick ballad  intensified by sorrowful strings. And on the slow-building and stormy “The  Preacher,” Commons mines his British folk influences for a downright  bone-chilling epic about an evangelical preacher who murdered his own wife.   Despite  charting new musical territory throughout Rumble  And Sway, Commons retains the same rugged spirit that’s instilled his  songwriting and performance since he first claimed boundary-pushing artists  like Tom Waits, JJ Cale, and Johnny Cash as his heroes. “The swampy, bluesy  rock and roll stuff is always the first place I go when I’m writing a song,” he  says. “But at the same time, it’s important to me to create something new and  different to put out into the world.” For Commons, the formula of  straight-from-the-gut songwriting and slick, stylish production allows him to  both expand his creativity and fill a highly crucial void in today’s pop scene.  “Right now there’s plenty of music that’s got a huge, loud, punchy sound,” he  says. “When you bring in that blues element, the music takes on a heaviness and  rawness that’s harder to come by but incredibly powerful.”    In 2014, Commons made the move to Los Angeles to begin work on his debut full  length.  Along with label mates X  Ambassadors and producer Alex Da Kid they wrote “Jungle,” a song that has  become an unofficial anthem of the 2014 World Cup when it was included in the  Beats by Dre “The Game Before The Game” commercial. |