James Nicholas Commons (born 22 October 1988)[1][2] is a British singer and songwriter, based in New Cross, London.
Early life and education
Commons was born in Bristol, England, but was raised, in part, in Chicago, Illinois, United States.[3] At age six, Commons' family moved to Chicago, which would lead to his appreciation of American blues, folk and swamp rock music,[4] and of artists, notable among which are The Allman Brothers Band.[5]
Commons returned to the English West Country at the age of 16.[6]
He is featured on Eminem's eighth studio album The Marshall Mathers LP 2, in the track "Desperation" which is only included in the deluxe edition bonus disc.
His song with X Ambassadors, "Jungle", is featured in the trailers for Season 2 of Orange Is the New Black, the video game Battlefield Hardline, season 4 of American supernaturalteen drama television series Teen Wolf and the film Pitch Perfect 2. In addition, the song also appeared in the advertisements for Beats by Dre, which ran during the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil, and the film Horrible Bosses 2. WWE used the song in the commercial for WWEShop.com and as the theme song for the PPV WWE Battleground. "Jungle" played in the end credits for the 2014 film Hercules as well as Project Almanac and the Hitman: Agent 47. This song also plays during an end scene in the TV series The Blacklist. The most recent version of Jungle has been used by Boston, American beer company Sam Adams for their beer.
He is also featured on Big K.R.I.T.'s second studio album Cadillactica, in the track "Saturdays = Celebration." This song is featured in the Sicario - 'Welcome to Juarez' Trailer.
He wrote and produced the title track for the film Skyscraper.
In 2018, he started a project called "The Fever Dreams", a series of singles released leading up to his debut studio album scheduled for release in 2019.[10]
Commons co-wrote "Testify", the lead track of Conrad Sewell's album "Life" was released the same week, this album debuted at #1 on the Australian charts.
During his childhood, Commons attended church with his religious mother,[16] while his father, an atheist, stayed at home. These experiences informed him of religion, which is a theme explored in his music.[17]