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Chilled Mix #37 Raphael
Here’s an overview of the iconic track and video “Respiration” by Black Star (Mos Def & Talib Kweli) featuring Common — covering its background, themes, the video’s vibe + visuals, and why it still resonates.
The song appears on the album Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star, released in 1998.
The track opens with a sample from the documentary Style Wars (“Escuchela, La ciudad respirando”).
“Respiration” uses the metaphor of a city as a living, breathing entity. The chorus:
“I can feel the city breathing… chest heaving, against the flesh of the evening…”
Mos Def’s verse drills into the dichotomy of life in New York — skyscrapers, working‑class struggle, light & dark.
Talib Kweli’s verse gives a more personal/write‑up lens: streets, “ghetto birds”, broken dreams amidst smog.
Common’s verse shifts to Chicago, telling a story of grief, home, systemic realities:
“I heard the city breathe in its sleep / Of reality I touch, but for me it’s hard to keep.”
The effect: It’s conscious hip‑hop, deep in imagery, city‑life, existential tension. Many call it one of the best rap songs written.
📺 Video & visual vibe
The video aesthetic is gritty, urban — gritty city streets, night‑lights, subway, tall buildings, the hustling city‑scape.
It visually mirrors the lyrical metaphor: a living city, breathing, pulsating through its people, its darkness and its lights.
It features scenes that accentuate the three perspectives (NYC via Mos, Brooklyn via Talib, Chicago via Common) — though not always explicitly labelled in the video, the mood shifts.
Fans note how it captures “the grittiness of New York”. > “Joint and video truly captures the grittiness of New York.”
The songwriting is richly layered: metaphor + narrative + city as character.
The production is soulful, moody, perfectly matched to the theme of urban twilight and reflection.
The collaboration: Mos Def + Talib Kweli (as Black Star) + Common = heavyweight lyricists at their peak.
The message still unfortunately resonates: urban struggle, visibility/invisibility, cycles of hope & oppression.
It stands out against its commercial peers of the era: less about flashy hooks more about substance.
If I had to sum it: “Respiration” is a poetic love‑letter and indictment of urban life. The city breathes, and so do its people — sometimes heavily, sometimes barely. The video supports that by showing us the concrete, the shadows, the lights, the movement.
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