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Sepultura - Roots review



Reviewer:
5.0

949 users:
7.58
Band: Sepultura
Album: Roots
Style: Alternative metal, Groove thrash metal
Release date: February 1996


Disc I
01. Roots Bloody Roots
02. Attitude
03. Cut-Throat
04. Ratamahatta [feat. Carlinhos Brown, David Silveria & Ross Robinson]
05. Breed Apart
06. Straighthate
07. Spit
08. Lookaway [feat. Jonathan Davis, Mike Patton & DJ Lethal]
09. Dusted
10. Born Stubborn
11. Jasco
12. Itsári [feat. Xavante tribe]
13. Ambush
14. Endangered Species
15. Dictatorshit
16. Canyon Jam [Hidden Track]
17. Procreation (Of The Wicked) [Celtic Frost cover] [Brazilian edition bonus]
18. Symptom Of The Universe [Black Sabbath cover] [Brazilian edition bonus]

Disc II [Roadrunner Records: The 25th Anniversary Series bonus disc]
01. Procreation (Of The Wicked) [Celtic Frost cover]
02. Mine [Feat. Mike Patton]
03. War [Bob Marley cover]
04. Lookaway [Master Vibe mix]
05. Mine [Andy Wallace mix]
06. Dusted [demo]
07. Roots Bloody Roots [demo]
08. R.D.P. [demo]
09. Untitled [demo]
10. Attitude [live at Ozzfest]
11. Roots Bloody Roots [Megawatt mix 1]
12. Roots Bloody Roots [Megawatt mix 2]

Roots was Max Cavalera's last album with Sepultura before his departure, and he did not exactly go out with a bang. The predecessor to Roots, Chaos A.D., saw the band move away from thrash and towards a simpler, moderately-paced death metal sound that, while differing from their previous material, showed promise. Roots takes this stylistic change further, abandoning thrash-inspired death for death-inspired nu metal. Truthfully, this is largely a nu metal album punctuated by Max Cavalera's recognizable growls, Igor's trademark drumming, and some traditional Brazilian instrumentation provided by Brazilian musician Carlinhos Brown and the native Xavante tribe. The genesis of Soulfly is here, and is not entirely welcome.

Max Cavalera has never been a particularly unique songwriter. Not every band needs an artist at the helm, but Max has an annoying tendency of re-writing the same song over and over again with the same determination as AC/DC and none of the success. Early Sepultura stands out as an exception, but by the mid-'90s he had run out of new ideas. Roots, Soulfly, Nailbomb, Cavalera Conspiracy? there was no need to separate the material by band. It all sounds the same. Simplicity is as much of a songwriting tool as complexity. Used correctly and strategically, it provides for greatness and memorability; used improperly or too often, as is the case here, it leaves the listener with nothing to grasp and nothing to take away from the listening experience.

The incredibly down-tuned guitars mingle with Igor's powerful drumming and Max's raspy exhortations in the same sludgy, Slipknot-Korn-not Sepultura atmosphere on just about every song, and it gets old after "Cut-Throat." This connection to nu metal is only strengthened by the presence of Korn vocalist Jonathan Davis and drummer David Silveria on a couple of tracks, who do nothing to liven up the stagnant swamp of sludge and laziness that encases every song. "Lookaway," which features Davis and Faith No More's legendary Mike Patton, utilizes approximately none of the guest talent and is merely disappointing.

There are three, and only three, songs on this album that are worth a listen. The very first song, "Roots Bloody Roots," is a grinding, pounding anthem that shows the great potential for Max Cavalera's newfound sound. Max has stated that "Roots Bloody Roots" is his absolute favorite song to perform live, which is quite understandable. This is followed up by "Attitude," which, while not exactly a masterpiece, is decent enough (qualifying as head-and-shoulders above the rest of the album). "Ratamahatta," featuring a very noticeable amount of traditional Brazilian influence, essentially finishes off the album at the fourth overall track. Listening to any one of the following songs will provide an accurate representation of what all the rest are like; there is no point in wasting more time on Roots than is necessary.


Rating breakdown
Performance: 5
Songwriting: 4
Originality: 4
Production: 6

Written by ScreamingSteelUS | 17.08.2012




Guest review disclaimer:
This is a guest review, which means it does not necessarily represent the point of view of the MS Staff.

Guest review by
Angel
Rating:
10
What's left to say about Sepultura? That it's probably the best selling third world band ever? That they're going facedown to the ground since the leaving of Max "I am the Soulfly-Ego" Cavalera? "Chaos A.D." went golden and "Roots" went double gold in Holland (trust me, that's a good thing). That the difference between their first and last records is so huge that even the development of a butterfly contains more radical changes? That "Roots" was the first piece of metal I bought? Nah, I think the band-name speaks for itself. The style on this first piece of Sepultura is totally different from "Roots". They started as a full-on death metal band, finding their roots on "Beneath The Remains' (1989) and re-discovered 'em in 1991, with the release of "Arise". And then, five years later, one of the finest works of the 90's is released.

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published 19.09.2003 | Comments (27)


Comments

Comments: 14   Visited by: 142 users
17.08.2012 - 12:42
X-Ray Rod
Skandino
I like a couple of songs but that's it. Quite a mediocre album indeed and I can't say I disgaree with the review except... you know...

The whole part when you imply that Chaos A.D. is death metal. Big LOL on that one.
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Written by BloodTears on 19.08.2011 at 18:29
Like you could kiss my ass
Written by Milena on 20.06.2012 at 10:49
Rod, let me love you.
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17.08.2012 - 12:49
Marcel Hubregtse
Grumpy Old Fuck
Written by X-Ray Rod on 17.08.2012 at 12:42

I like a couple of songs but that's it. Quite a mediocre album indeed and I can't say I disgaree with the review except... you know...

The whole part when you imply that Chaos A.D. is death metal. Big LOL on that one.


Yeah, I don't understand why people, especially in the US, keep on labelling old Seputura as death metal when it clearly is thrash metal. Labelling f.e. Arise and Beneath The Remains death metal is like saying Slayer played death metal on their best known albums.
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Member of the true crusade against European Flower Metal

Yesterday is dead and gone, tomorrow is out of sight
Dawn Crosby (r.i.p.)
05.04.1963 - 15.12.1996

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17.08.2012 - 12:51
X-Ray Rod
Skandino
Written by Marcel Hubregtse on 17.08.2012 at 12:49
Yeah, I don't understand why people, especially in the US, keep on labelling old Seputura as death metal when it clearly is thrash metal. Labelling f.e. Arise and Beneath The Remains death metal is like saying Slayer played death metal on their best known albums.


Exactly. Only on the debut and the stuff before that... And even those releases are death-influenced thrash at most and definitely not the reverse.
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Written by BloodTears on 19.08.2011 at 18:29
Like you could kiss my ass
Written by Milena on 20.06.2012 at 10:49
Rod, let me love you.
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17.08.2012 - 13:22
Ace Frawley
The Spaceman
I'd already lost interest in Sepultura by the time this album was released. Chaos A.D. was enough for me. Was a fan of Beneath the Remains back in the day though.
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The sun shines over The Fool...
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17.08.2012 - 18:25
Rating: 7
ScreamingSteelUS
Editor-in-Chief
Written by Marcel Hubregtse on 17.08.2012 at 12:49

Written by X-Ray Rod on 17.08.2012 at 12:42

I like a couple of songs but that's it. Quite a mediocre album indeed and I can't say I disgaree with the review except... you know...

The whole part when you imply that Chaos A.D. is death metal. Big LOL on that one.


Yeah, I don't understand why people, especially in the US, keep on labelling old Seputura as death metal when it clearly is thrash metal. Labelling f.e. Arise and Beneath The Remains death metal is like saying Slayer played death metal on their best known albums.

I know that Sepultura used to be thrash, I just noted that there was a lot less of it on "Chaos A.D." "Propaganda," "Slave New World," and such were obviously thrash, but then there was also "Amen," "Nomad," and songs like "Refuse/Resist" and "Territory" which were kind of a mix.
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"Earth is small and I hate it" - Lum Invader

I'm the Agent of Steel.
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17.08.2012 - 19:49
X-Ray Rod
Skandino
Written by ScreamingSteelUS on 17.08.2012 at 18:25
I know that Sepultura used to be thrash, I just noted that there was a lot less of it on "Chaos A.D." "Propaganda," "Slave New World," and such were obviously thrash, but then there was also "Amen," "Nomad," and songs like "Refuse/Resist" and "Territory" which were kind of a mix.


It has less thrash indeed... but death? Hell no
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Written by BloodTears on 19.08.2011 at 18:29
Like you could kiss my ass
Written by Milena on 20.06.2012 at 10:49
Rod, let me love you.
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18.08.2012 - 17:53
Rating: 10
cobrapel
Concept One
Originality....4???
Please write me down the band/s where they copied this kind of sounds, because i am very intereted to know them!
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22.08.2012 - 03:14
Rating: 8
Sonic MrSumo

Written by cobrapel on 18.08.2012 at 17:53

Originality....4???
Please write me down the band/s where they copied this kind of sounds, because i am very intereted to know them!

Agreed. This is one of the most unique metal releases of the last 20 years!

Furthermore, I don't feel that Max's other projects (i.e. "Roots, Soulfly, Nailbomb, Cavalera Conspiracy?") can be defined as "there was no need to separate the material by band.", as they're all vastly different, with the exception of perhaps Roots and Soulfly.
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All the bridges in the world won't save you, if there's no other side to cross to.
- Rock poetry from Silverchair.
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22.08.2012 - 13:01
Rating: 7
Daniell
_爱情_
Welcome to another instalment of ScreamingSteelUS's series "I want to stand out somehow so I will write retro reviews and bash musical classics!

Even though I don't love this album at all, there is one reason that blows your credibility out the water and makes me not take your reviews seriously. You rated originality with a 4. Your gave a 4 to one of the most original metal albums in the last quarter-century...
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22.08.2012 - 14:22
!J.O.O.E.!
Account deleted
Written by Daniell on 22.08.2012 at 13:01

"I want to stand out somehow so I will write retro reviews and bash musical classics!"

I don't see any musical classics being bashed though?
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22.08.2012 - 16:22
IronAngel

I have no opinion on the album as I've never been interested in hearing it, but I like your writing. Clear, concise and informative but also alive and opinionated.

Also, what Joe said. Even if I thought this was a classic, I can't find a "series" in his previous reviews. Seems to be a pretty mixed bag with a wide range of scores.
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22.08.2012 - 18:01
Rating: 6
Warman
Erotic Stains
Well written review which I mostly agree with. The album has the title song, which is a killer, and a couple of parts here and there which are really good. But during its bad moments - and there's A LOT of them - "Roots" is just a terrible album.
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13.10.2012 - 01:35
Rating: 8
Marcus
Doit Like Bernie
BOO! I've always liked this album since it was one of my first metal cds. Too bad I can agree with most of what you're saying.

Also jasco and itsari are excellent non-nu songs you forgot about
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03.11.2012 - 22:15
Rating: 4
matai65

Absolute RUBBISH!One of the worst albums ever,i was so disappointed after hearing all their other brilliant releases.
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