Culture | MusicJ Hus - Common Sense review: 'Remarkably broadminded debut album'There’s grime fury on the tougher Clartin’, but Common Sense offers so much moreNew album: J Hus' Common SenseDavid Smyth12 May 2017Now that grime’s stark rowdiness has finally broken into the mainstream it’s free to go even further.So we’ve had Stormzy singing, Kano employing a full horn section and now Momodou “J Hus” Jallow incorporating everything from bouncy Afrobeat to Jamaican dancehall on his remarkably broadminded debut album. A Stratford bad boy who was in prison less than a year ago and is banned by the police from putting on concerts in London, here he raps more sweetly than most, piling the Auto-Tune on to his melodic voice on Fisherman — simply a song about his hat.He’s more serious on Spirit, an anthem for positive thinking backed by a bass rumble. There’s grime fury on the tougher Clartin’, but Common Sense offers so much more. Latest music reviews 1/168 (Black Butter) MORE ABOUTJ HusAlbum Review