John Legend performed at the opening of the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago on Saturday. He shared the stage with rapper Common and the Uniting Voices choir for a ceremony honoring Barack and Michelle Obama’s legacy.
Legend posted about the event on Instagram the same day. He called the experience “inspiring” and said he loved singing with Common and the choir in “their hometown.” He closed his post with a phrase Barack Obama made famous: “Yes, we can.”
Friends, that phrase still carries a lot of weight.
The Obama Presidential Center has been a long time coming for Chicago’s South Side. The project spent years in planning and faced legal challenges along the way. Saturday’s ceremony in Jackson Park was a milestone for the neighborhood, for the Obama Foundation, and for everyone who has followed the project. For a lot of South Side residents, this opening carried weight beyond the ceremony itself.
Both Barack and Michelle Obama delivered speeches at the event. Legend didn’t quote them directly. But he made clear their words didn’t feel like a look back. He said they reminded him “of the work we still need to do.” That’s not the language of a victory lap. That’s someone who walked out of the ceremony motivated.
Common was a natural choice for the event. He grew up in Chicago and has spent much of his career rooted in the city’s identity. Barack Obama’s story runs through Chicago too. Obama organized communities on the South Side and served in the Illinois state senate. He built strong political relationships there. Those connections eventually carried him to the U.S. Senate and then to the White House. Putting Common on that stage alongside a community choir connected music and legacy in a way that felt earned.
Legend and Common have collaborated before, too. Their song “Glory,” written for the Selma film, won the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 2015. Sharing a stage at a moment celebrating civic progress felt like a natural extension of something they started then.
Uniting Voices is a Chicago-based choral organization with decades of history in the city. Their inclusion brought something to the ceremony that these events don’t always get right. The Obama story doesn’t belong to Washington alone. It started on the South Side, and Saturday felt like a reminder of that.
Legend has long shown up at the intersection of music and public life. He’s pushed hard on criminal justice reform, voting rights, and education access. A ceremony centered on service and legacy was exactly his kind of room.
Obama made that phrase the heartbeat of his 2008 presidential campaign. A lot of people remember that era as a turning point. Hearing Legend close with those words at the presidential center opening sent a clear message. The work didn’t end in 2009 or 2017. It’s still going.
Legend’s Instagram post was brief. He didn’t over-explain the moment. A Chicago stage, a community choir, and a phrase that still means something – sometimes the elements speak for themselves.
