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Roots (Sepultura album)

Roots is the sixth studio album by Brazilian heavy metal band Sepultura. It was released in Europe on February 20, 1996 (1996-02-20) and in the U.S. three weeks later on March 12 by Roadrunner Records. It is the band's last studio album to feature founding member and vocalist/rhythm guitarist Max Cavalera.

Roots
Studio album by
Released
  • February 20, 1996 (Europe)
  • March 12, 1996 (U.S.)
RecordedOctober–December 1995
StudioIndigo Ranch (Malibu, California)
Genre
Length72:08
LabelRoadrunner
ProducerRoss Robinson
Sepultura chronology
Chaos A.D.
(1993)
Roots
(1996)
Against
(1998)
Singles from Roots
  1. "Roots Bloody Roots"
    Released: February 18, 1996
  2. "Attitude"
    Released: June 1996
  3. "Ratamahatta"
    Released: October 1996

Following the shift to slower tempos and Latin-tinged rhythms on the album Chaos A.D., Roots delves even further into Brazilian musical textures and features significant contributions from iconic Brazilian musician Carlinhos Brown, who guided and arranged the sections throughout the album that feature ensemble percussion playing. Both in sound and overall aesthetic, Roots is also a conscious nod to Brazil's marginalized indigenous population and cultures. The song "Itsári" features a Xavante chant that re-appears on the song "Born Stubborn" and serves as a loose thematic thread for the whole album, which on the whole showcases the band's increased affinity for experimentation and collaboration.

"Lookaway" features guest appearances by Korn vocalist Jonathan Davis, then-Korn drummer David Silveria, House of Pain/Limp Bizkit turntablist DJ Lethal, and Faith No More/Mr. Bungle vocalist Mike Patton. Riff-wise, Roots also draws influence from the then-surging nu metal movement, specifically Korn (whose first two albums were also produced by Roots producer Ross Robinson) and Deftones.[1][2] After leaving the band, Max Cavalera would continue to pursue the nu metal and "world" stylings of Roots with his solo project Soulfly.

Since its release, Roots has sold over two million copies worldwide.[3][4]

Initial inspiration and recording Edit

Roots is the product of a concerted effort on the band's part to embrace its Brazilian heritage. On many levels, the album reflects Sepultura's heightened focus on the music, culture, and politics of their native country.[5] The overarching concept for the album was inspired by the film At Play in the Fields of the Lord (particularly the scene in which Tom Berenger's character parachutes onto a tribe[4]). The movie inspired Max Cavalera to want to record with an indigenous Brazilian tribe. After convincing Roadrunner Records to support the project,[4] Cavalera contacted Angela Pappiani, at the time the communications coordinator for Brazil's Núcleo de Cultura Indígena (Indigenous Culture Center). Nearly one year after Cavalera's initial contact with Roadrunner, Pappiani arranged for a small party including band, herself, Robinson, and then-manager Gloria Cavalera to travel to Mato Grosso, Brazil to visit the Xavante tribe and record with them.[6][7][4] At the time, the members of Sepultura were only peripherally aware of the indigenous tribes residing in Brazil's interior.[7]

In a 2016 interview with Nashville Scene, Igor Cavalera remembered:

Every second of that trip was insane in a very inspiring way. But there's a few things that really stand out. Like when they explained to us that the only way they wrote music was if someone in the tribe dreamed of the music. They couldn't just write a lyric or a melody. It has to be transmitted to them in a dream. From a musician's point of view, it was like, "Wow, this is a completely different way of approaching music."[8]

University of Iowa anthropology professor Laura Graham explained the role of music in Xavante culture to PopMatters in 2016:

For them, music functions as a medium for entering into other realms—whether they be other dimensions of existence or other cultures. Well before they had any contact with white people, part of their culture has always entailed that men engage the spirit world, especially through music. This happens in their dreams. Not all, but most of their music is inspired—you could say "composed", although they say received—in their dreams through encounters with other worlds. When people come and visit the community from the outside, one of the things the Xavante ask them to do is sing them a song. Music is this medium for entering into relations with others—others meaning spiritual beings or, for example, white society or other cultures. The Xavante want to be known and they want their culture to be known. They want their music to be known because they think it's beautiful and view it as a contribution to humanity. It's like, "We have something beautiful to contribute to humanity—and, by the way, here we are suffering. We want people to know who we are and that we exist." And so when they got this proposal from a musical group that wanted to come jam and share music with them, they loved it.[7]

A spokesman for the tribe looked back on the collaboration: "We had seen pictures of Sepultura and we knew that they were different, with their long hair and many tattoos. We also knew that they had been discriminated, like we were. Because of that we were very curious about them."[9]

Meeting the Xavante was by several accounts a life-changing experience that has continued to resonate with the members of Sepultura ever since.[4][8] Igor has also said that the band identified a lot with the natives: "In a certain way, I think that we, as a band, had a lot of things in common with the Xavante Indians. We also lived on the edge of society, and our music and lifestyle is a long way from being assimilated and respected by that society."[9]

After the trip, recording resumed with Robinson at Indigo Ranch, at the time Robinson's studio of choice. According to the same 2016 Nashville Scene article, by that point the band had amassed "an overabundance of material." Igor Cavalera remembered that it was a challenge to prevent the album from becoming "a gigantic jam that didn't turn into actual songs." He added: "It was quite a difficult record to finish. We did so much recording that the amount of stuff we had going on was quite crazy. We had to make sure not to let anything really special slip by. It was tricky to go through all of it, and it took a lot of time to find out what would work with what we were already writing."[8]

According to Korn guitarist Brian Welch, in a November 1996 interview, his "own Bigger Muff guitar pedal" that he had initially modified and then used for his band was reused to his "great dismay" for recording the Roots album.[10]

Musical style Edit

Roots represents a significant shift in direction for Sepultura. On several levels, the album reflects a concerted effort on the band's part to embrace its Brazilian heritage, with a heightened focus on Brazilian culture that is strikingly apparent in the music.[5][7] Musically speaking, the inspiration for the shift was twofold: One was the desire to further experiment with both Latin and indigenous strains of the music of Brazil, including the percussive style of the Salvador, Bahia samba reggae group Olodum.[11] Roots was also inspired by Korn's self-titled debut, with its heavily down-tuned guitars.[12]

Roots is a groove metal[13][14] and nu metal[15][16] album that incorporates strong elements of aforementioned nu metal,[17][18] thrash metal,[17] death metal,[19][20][21][22] world music,[21] various Brazilian musical styles (including Brazilian folk music),[23] tribal music,[23] and ambient field recordings.[7][8] All of the songs on Roots draw from these styles, with the band often blending them in unconventional ways and at times super-imposing them onto one another through creative mixing and editing in post-production.[7][8] Several songs feature Brazilian instrumentation that had up to that point never been used by a metal band (certainly not one of Sepultura's stature), and the album is peppered with ensemble percussion sections played by the band along with Carlinhos Brown.

Of the album's prominent Latin influence, Igor Cavalera told Nashville Scene:

I'd always wanted to do a little more stuff with a Latin feel, but it took until Chaos A.D. to realize how we could make that into something that wasn't too clichéd. That was always my fear. I'd been exposed to samba and the African Brazilian rhythms before I played the drums, and I'd always had a lot of caution about incorporating them in the right way, and not doing it for the sake of just having them there. It took us a lot of research and time to make sure that we did it in a way that felt completely natural. It wasn't just like "OK, we like this and it makes sense, so let's just do it." It took a lot to develop.[8]

Lyrical and visual themes Edit

Disparate elements of Brazilian culture permeate every aspect of Roots, from the music to the lyrics to the artwork and visuals to the videos the band made for the songs "Roots Bloody Roots," "Attitude," and "Ratamahatta." The album cover features an indigenous man of the Karajá tribe taken from a 1990 banknote of the discontinued Brazilian cruzeiro, to which artist Michael Whelan added a locket with Sepultura's "tribal S" logo and a background of red roots.[24][7]

Much of Roots references Brazilian culture, history, lore, and politics, either directly or indirectly.[7][23] According to Max Cavalera, "Roots Bloody Roots" is "about believe in yourself, about be proud of your heritage, proud of where you come from. Really powerful but simple lyrics. So it's really about just be down with your own roots and believe in your roots".[25] (In a 1996 MTV Europe clip, Max Cavalera explained the meaning behind the song as: "Don't give in. What you believe is for life, even if people try all the time to change you. The song is about 'don't let the bastards grind you down.'")[7]

"Ratamahatta" is "a celebration of life in Brazil's favela slums, sung all in Portuguese, which tells the stories of people like Zé do Caixão (Coffin Joe) and Lampião, the leader of an early 1900s outlaw gang from north Brazil, whose head was put on public display after he was captured".[26] "Ambush" is "a tribute to murdered South American rain-forest activist Chico Mendes".[26] "Dictatorshit" addresses the 1964 Brazilian coup d'état.[5] "Endangered Species" addresses environmental destruction.

"Cut Throat" is about Epic Records.[26] (The last words in the song are "Enslavement, Pathetic, Ignorant, Corporations". This spells EPIC, the record company with which Sepultura had some trouble during their previous album, Chaos A.D.[5])

The lyrics to "Attitude" were co-written by Dana Wells, Max Cavalera's stepson, whose death (in part) led to the events which caused Max to leave the band. Dana also came up with the concept for the video for the song, featuring Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu experts the Gracie family.

Critical reception Edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [19]
Chicago Tribune    [27]
Entertainment WeeklyC−[28]
Houston Chronicle     [29]
Los Angeles Times    [30]
NME7/10[31]
Q     [32]
Record Collector     [33]
Rolling Stone     [34]
Spin6/10[35]

American newspapers like The New Times, the Daily News and the Los Angeles Times reviewed the Brazilian band: "The mixture of the dense metal of Sepultura and the Brazilian music has a intoxicating effect", wrote a Los Angeles Times reviewer.[9] The Daily News praised the album saying: "Sepultura reinvented the wheel. By mixing metal with native instruments, the band resuscitates the tired genre, reminding of Led Zeppelin times. But while Zeppelin mixed English metal with African beats, it's still more moving to hear a band that uses elements of its own country. By extracting the sounds of the past, Sepultura determines the future direction of metal".[36]

Specialized heavy metal critics also reviewed the album positively. Martin Popoff, author of the book The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal, ranked Roots as the 11th best metal record of all time. "This is a spectacular metal and futurist hardcore LP", wrote Popoff, "a masterpiece, accomplished by a band with an enormous heart and an even larger intellect". Kerrang! magazine awarded Roots second place in the list of "100 records that you have to hear before dying".[36] In 2001 Q magazine named Roots as one of the 50 Heaviest Albums Of All Time.[37] Rolling Stone Brasil named it the 57th best Brazilian music album.[38] Rolling Stone contributor Jon Wiederhorn gave the album three stars out of five and said, "Sepultura play a violent game of sonic overload... the band uses its catharsis as a creative force, funneling torrents of noise into a tunnel of hate" and called the album "a refreshing step forward in a genre full of bands that are creatively bankrupt."[34] Music critic Robert Christgau gave the album a negative "dud" rating.[39] Looking back on the album 20 years later, PopMatters contributor Saby Reyes-Kulkarni described Roots as "inarguably one of the most radical [stylistic] departures from convention in heavy metal history," an album that "blew the doors open on our perceptions of metal and so-called 'world music,'" adding that "we haven't heard anything quite like it since."[7] In April 2005, Decibel inducted Roots into the Decibel Magazine Hall of Fame, becoming the third album overall to receive a coveted spot in their Hall of Fame.[40]

Legacy Edit

Since the release of Roots, there have been cases where other metal bands who are not of Western (i.e.: European or American) origin have combined metal with music from their own native regions, though none of those bands have reached the same level of visibility or commercial success that Sepultura achieved with Roots. Chthonic, for example, blend symphonic death metal with traditional Taiwanese music and mythology; Melechesh play black metal while drawing from Assyrian/Babylonian/Middle Eastern mythology and symbology; Tengger Cavalry combine metal with Mongolian throat singing and classical Chinese instrumentation in both electric and acoustic settings; Alien Weaponry play thrash and groove metal with Māori lyrics, often with Māori cultural and historical themes.

Speaking to Kerrang! in 2008, Max Cavalera looked back on Roots:

Roots came from a blurry dream I had about going to the rainforest. Wine may have been involved. In the end, when we actually went into the forest to record, it was unbelievable. The whole album was a huge personal journey for me, and as a Brazilian, it felt as an incredible achievement. Everyone was inspired and Igor was at the top of his game. The percussion was crazy and we worked with so many great musicians, in the end coming out with a 15-minutes drum jam that someone likened to a crazy Brazilian Pink Floyd. When we took the album to Roadrunner they loved it except for the title. They thought it would sound like a Bob Marley tribute album. We explained it to them, and thankfully they got it.[41]

As for the Xavantes, both their leader at the time of the band's visit (Cipassé) and Pappiani agree that Roots helped the tribe gain some visibility, to the point that people would actually identify them as Xavantes instead of just calling them "indigenous people". Pappiani noticed an increase in people's interest for information on the tribe and their music.[4]

On March 25, 2021, French heavy metal band Gojira released the single "Amazonia", a song about anti-deforestation of the Amazon and the protection of Brazilian indigenous peoples' rights. Shortly after its release on April 15, frontman Joe Duplantier in an interview with Blabbermouth.net was asked his thoughts about comparing Amazonia to Sepultura, to which he said:

I go, "Yup." And it's a compliment, and there is no shame here. And we ripped them off, but we didn't do it on purpose. But we realized it right after. We were, like, "Oh, that sounds like SEPULTURA. Ahhh, whatever." It's a tribute to Sepultura — how about that? It's about Brazil. It's about the Amazon. It's tribal.[42]

Track listing Edit

All lyrics are written by Max Cavalera, except where noted; all music is composed by Sepultura, except where noted

No.TitleLyricsMusicLength
1."Roots Bloody Roots"  3:32
2."Attitude"
  • Max Cavalera
  • Dana Wells
 4:15
3."Cut-Throat"  2:44
4."Ratamahatta" (featuring David Silveria and Carlinhos Brown)
4:30
5."Breed Apart"
 4:01
6."Straighthate"  5:21
7."Spit"  2:45
8."Lookaway" (featuring Jonathan Davis, Mike Patton and DJ Lethal)Jonathan Davis
5:26
9."Dusted"Andreas KisserAndreas Kisser4:03
10."Born Stubborn"  4:07
11."Jasco"(instrumental)Andreas Kisser1:57
12."Itsári"(instrumental)
4:48
13."Ambush"  4:39
14."Endangered Species"  5:19
15."Dictatorshit"  1:26
16."Canyon Jam" (hidden track)(instrumental) 13:16
Total length:72:08
Roadrunner Records: The 25th Anniversary Series bonus disc
No.TitleLength
1."Procreation (Of the Wicked)" (Celtic Frost cover)3:39
2."Mine" (featuring Mike Patton)6:25
3."War" (Bob Marley cover)6:40
4."Lookaway" (Master Vibe mix)"5:36
5."Mine (Andy Wallace mix)"7:58
6."Dusted" (demo)4:27
7."Roots Bloody Roots" (demo)3:32
8."R.D.P." (Ratos de Porão cover)1:15
9."Untitled" (demo)4:14
10."Attitude" (live at Ozzfest)5:37
11."Roots Bloody Roots (Megawatt mix one)"4:01
12."Roots Bloody Roots (Megawatt mix two)"4:08

The Roots of Sepultura Edit

The Roots of Sepultura
 
Compilation album by
Released29 November 1996
Genre
Length73:37
Language
LabelRoadrunner
Compiler
Sepultura chronology
The Roots of Sepultura
(1996)
Blood-Rooted
(1997)

The Roots of Sepultura is a double-disc album by Sepultura, released in November 1996. The second disc contains a collection of unreleased tracks, B-sides, alternate mixes, and live recordings.[43] This release differs from Roots and the 2005 25th Anniversary Roots album as the B-sides disc has a different series of tracks. This album includes covers of tracks by Motörhead, Dead Kennedys, Os Mutantes and Ratos de Porão and also includes tracks from their first live home video, Under Siege (Live in Barcelona).

Track listing
No.TitleLength
1."Intro"1:33
2."C.I.U. (Criminals in Uniform)"4:17
3."Orgasmatron" (Motörhead cover)4:15
4."Dead Embryonic Cells" (original mix)4:31
5."Desperate Cry" (original mix)6:42
6."Murder" (original mix)3:25
7."Under Siege (Regnum Irae)" (original mix)4:44
8."Necromancer" (demo)3:59
9."The Past Reborns the Storms"5:08
10."A Hora e a Vez do Cabelo Nascer" (Os Mutantes cover)2:21
11."Drug Me" (Dead Kennedys cover)1:53
12."Crucificados pelo Sistema" (Ratos de Porão cover, "Slave New World" 1994 B-side)1:03
13."Anticop" (live)3:02
14."Intro" (live)1:30
15."Arise" (live)2:51
16."Inner Self" (live)4:42
17."Mass Hypnosis" (live)4:25
18."Escape to the Void" (live)5:03
19."Troops of Doom" (live)2:53
20."Altered State" (live)5:20

Personnel Edit

Charts Edit

Certifications Edit

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[65] Gold 35,000^
Austria (IFPI Austria)[66] Gold 25,000*
Canada (Music Canada)[67] Gold 50,000^
France (SNEP)[68] Gold 100,000*
Netherlands (NVPI)[69] Gold 50,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[70] Gold 100,000^
United States (RIAA)[71] Gold 500,000^

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

References Edit

  1. ^ "IGOR CAVALERA Admits KORN Influence On SEPULTURA's 'Roots' But Says 'There Was A Lot More Going On'". BLABBERMOUTH.NET. 2016-10-09. Retrieved 2017-01-22.
  2. ^ "JONATHAN DAVIS Recalls Thinking SEPULTURA's 'Roots' Album Was 'Blatant KORN Rip-Off'". BLABBERMOUTH.NET. 2016-10-07. Retrieved 2017-01-22.
  3. ^ "Max & Iggor Cavalera to Perform Sepultura's 'Roots' Album in Full on North American Tour". Loudwire.com. 29 July 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Dehò, Maurício (19 March 2016). "Há 20 anos, visita a índios e choque cultural criavam clássico do Sepultura". UOL (in Portuguese). São Paulo: Grupo Folha. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d Barcinski & Gomes 1999, page 150.
  6. ^ Chirazi, Steffan (2005). "The Roots of Sepultura". Roots (CD booklet). Sepultura. New York, NY: Roadrunner Records. p. 15.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Greetings From the Third World: Revisiting Sepultura's Genre-Changing 'Roots'". PopMatters. Retrieved 2017-01-22.
  8. ^ a b c d e f "Roots Run Deep: Twenty Years Later, Sepultura Founders Max and Iggor Cavalera Perform Their Former Band's Pinnacle Album in Full". Nashville Scene. Retrieved 2017-10-03.
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  11. ^ Barcinski & Gomes 1999, pages 113 & 150.
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  68. ^ "French album certifications – Sepultura – Roots" (in French). Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique.
  69. ^ "Dutch album certifications – Sepultura – Roots" (in Dutch). Nederlandse Vereniging van Producenten en Importeurs van beeld- en geluidsdragers. Enter Roots in the "Artiest of titel" box. Select 2000 in the drop-down menu saying "Alle jaargangen".
  70. ^ "British album certifications – Sepultura – Roots". British Phonographic Industry.
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Further reading Edit

  • Barcinski, André & Gomes, Silvio (1999). Sepultura: Toda a História. São Paulo: Ed. 34. ISBN 85-7326-156-0
  • Sepultura (1996). Roots [CD]. New York, NY: Roadrunner Records. The 25th Anniversary Series (2-CD Reissue, 2005).
  • Thoroddsen, Arnar (2006). Dimery, Robert (ed.). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. Quintet Publishing Limited. ISBN 0-7893-1371-5.
  • Bukszpan, Daniel; James Dio, Ronnie (2003). The Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal. Barnes & Noble Publishing Inc. ISBN 0-7607-4218-9.

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Roots is the sixth studio album by Brazilian heavy metal band Sepultura It was released in Europe on February 20 1996 1996 02 20 and in the U S three weeks later on March 12 by Roadrunner Records It is the band s last studio album to feature founding member and vocalist rhythm guitarist Max Cavalera RootsStudio album by SepulturaReleasedFebruary 20 1996 Europe March 12 1996 U S RecordedOctober December 1995StudioIndigo Ranch Malibu California GenreGroove metal nu metalLength72 08LabelRoadrunnerProducerRoss RobinsonSepultura chronologyChaos A D 1993 Roots 1996 Against 1998 Singles from Roots Roots Bloody Roots Released February 18 1996 Attitude Released June 1996 Ratamahatta Released October 1996Following the shift to slower tempos and Latin tinged rhythms on the album Chaos A D Roots delves even further into Brazilian musical textures and features significant contributions from iconic Brazilian musician Carlinhos Brown who guided and arranged the sections throughout the album that feature ensemble percussion playing Both in sound and overall aesthetic Roots is also a conscious nod to Brazil s marginalized indigenous population and cultures The song Itsari features a Xavante chant that re appears on the song Born Stubborn and serves as a loose thematic thread for the whole album which on the whole showcases the band s increased affinity for experimentation and collaboration Lookaway features guest appearances by Korn vocalist Jonathan Davis then Korn drummer David Silveria House of Pain Limp Bizkit turntablist DJ Lethal and Faith No More Mr Bungle vocalist Mike Patton Riff wise Roots also draws influence from the then surging nu metal movement specifically Korn whose first two albums were also produced by Roots producer Ross Robinson and Deftones 1 2 After leaving the band Max Cavalera would continue to pursue the nu metal and world stylings of Roots with his solo project Soulfly Since its release Roots has sold over two million copies worldwide 3 4 Contents 1 Initial inspiration and recording 2 Musical style 3 Lyrical and visual themes 4 Critical reception 5 Legacy 6 Track listing 7 The Roots of Sepultura 8 Personnel 9 Charts 9 1 Weekly charts 9 2 Year end charts 10 Certifications 11 References 12 Further readingInitial inspiration and recording EditRoots is the product of a concerted effort on the band s part to embrace its Brazilian heritage On many levels the album reflects Sepultura s heightened focus on the music culture and politics of their native country 5 The overarching concept for the album was inspired by the film At Play in the Fields of the Lord particularly the scene in which Tom Berenger s character parachutes onto a tribe 4 The movie inspired Max Cavalera to want to record with an indigenous Brazilian tribe After convincing Roadrunner Records to support the project 4 Cavalera contacted Angela Pappiani at the time the communications coordinator for Brazil s Nucleo de Cultura Indigena Indigenous Culture Center Nearly one year after Cavalera s initial contact with Roadrunner Pappiani arranged for a small party including band herself Robinson and then manager Gloria Cavalera to travel to Mato Grosso Brazil to visit the Xavante tribe and record with them 6 7 4 At the time the members of Sepultura were only peripherally aware of the indigenous tribes residing in Brazil s interior 7 In a 2016 interview with Nashville Scene Igor Cavalera remembered Every second of that trip was insane in a very inspiring way But there s a few things that really stand out Like when they explained to us that the only way they wrote music was if someone in the tribe dreamed of the music They couldn t just write a lyric or a melody It has to be transmitted to them in a dream From a musician s point of view it was like Wow this is a completely different way of approaching music 8 University of Iowa anthropology professor Laura Graham explained the role of music in Xavante culture to PopMatters in 2016 For them music functions as a medium for entering into other realms whether they be other dimensions of existence or other cultures Well before they had any contact with white people part of their culture has always entailed that men engage the spirit world especially through music This happens in their dreams Not all but most of their music is inspired you could say composed although they say received in their dreams through encounters with other worlds When people come and visit the community from the outside one of the things the Xavante ask them to do is sing them a song Music is this medium for entering into relations with others others meaning spiritual beings or for example white society or other cultures The Xavante want to be known and they want their culture to be known They want their music to be known because they think it s beautiful and view it as a contribution to humanity It s like We have something beautiful to contribute to humanity and by the way here we are suffering We want people to know who we are and that we exist And so when they got this proposal from a musical group that wanted to come jam and share music with them they loved it 7 A spokesman for the tribe looked back on the collaboration We had seen pictures of Sepultura and we knew that they were different with their long hair and many tattoos We also knew that they had been discriminated like we were Because of that we were very curious about them 9 Meeting the Xavante was by several accounts a life changing experience that has continued to resonate with the members of Sepultura ever since 4 8 Igor has also said that the band identified a lot with the natives In a certain way I think that we as a band had a lot of things in common with the Xavante Indians We also lived on the edge of society and our music and lifestyle is a long way from being assimilated and respected by that society 9 After the trip recording resumed with Robinson at Indigo Ranch at the time Robinson s studio of choice According to the same 2016 Nashville Scene article by that point the band had amassed an overabundance of material Igor Cavalera remembered that it was a challenge to prevent the album from becoming a gigantic jam that didn t turn into actual songs He added It was quite a difficult record to finish We did so much recording that the amount of stuff we had going on was quite crazy We had to make sure not to let anything really special slip by It was tricky to go through all of it and it took a lot of time to find out what would work with what we were already writing 8 According to Korn guitarist Brian Welch in a November 1996 interview his own Bigger Muff guitar pedal that he had initially modified and then used for his band was reused to his great dismay for recording the Roots album 10 Musical style EditRoots represents a significant shift in direction for Sepultura On several levels the album reflects a concerted effort on the band s part to embrace its Brazilian heritage with a heightened focus on Brazilian culture that is strikingly apparent in the music 5 7 Musically speaking the inspiration for the shift was twofold One was the desire to further experiment with both Latin and indigenous strains of the music of Brazil including the percussive style of the Salvador Bahia samba reggae group Olodum 11 Roots was also inspired by Korn s self titled debut with its heavily down tuned guitars 12 Roots is a groove metal 13 14 and nu metal 15 16 album that incorporates strong elements of aforementioned nu metal 17 18 thrash metal 17 death metal 19 20 21 22 world music 21 various Brazilian musical styles including Brazilian folk music 23 tribal music 23 and ambient field recordings 7 8 All of the songs on Roots draw from these styles with the band often blending them in unconventional ways and at times super imposing them onto one another through creative mixing and editing in post production 7 8 Several songs feature Brazilian instrumentation that had up to that point never been used by a metal band certainly not one of Sepultura s stature and the album is peppered with ensemble percussion sections played by the band along with Carlinhos Brown Of the album s prominent Latin influence Igor Cavalera told Nashville Scene I d always wanted to do a little more stuff with a Latin feel but it took until Chaos A D to realize how we could make that into something that wasn t too cliched That was always my fear I d been exposed to samba and the African Brazilian rhythms before I played the drums and I d always had a lot of caution about incorporating them in the right way and not doing it for the sake of just having them there It took us a lot of research and time to make sure that we did it in a way that felt completely natural It wasn t just like OK we like this and it makes sense so let s just do it It took a lot to develop 8 Lyrical and visual themes EditDisparate elements of Brazilian culture permeate every aspect of Roots from the music to the lyrics to the artwork and visuals to the videos the band made for the songs Roots Bloody Roots Attitude and Ratamahatta The album cover features an indigenous man of the Karaja tribe taken from a 1990 banknote of the discontinued Brazilian cruzeiro to which artist Michael Whelan added a locket with Sepultura s tribal S logo and a background of red roots 24 7 Much of Roots references Brazilian culture history lore and politics either directly or indirectly 7 23 According to Max Cavalera Roots Bloody Roots is about believe in yourself about be proud of your heritage proud of where you come from Really powerful but simple lyrics So it s really about just be down with your own roots and believe in your roots 25 In a 1996 MTV Europe clip Max Cavalera explained the meaning behind the song as Don t give in What you believe is for life even if people try all the time to change you The song is about don t let the bastards grind you down 7 Ratamahatta is a celebration of life in Brazil s favela slums sung all in Portuguese which tells the stories of people like Ze do Caixao Coffin Joe and Lampiao the leader of an early 1900s outlaw gang from north Brazil whose head was put on public display after he was captured 26 Ambush is a tribute to murdered South American rain forest activist Chico Mendes 26 Dictatorshit addresses the 1964 Brazilian coup d etat 5 Endangered Species addresses environmental destruction Cut Throat is about Epic Records 26 The last words in the song are Enslavement Pathetic Ignorant Corporations This spells EPIC the record company with which Sepultura had some trouble during their previous album Chaos A D 5 The lyrics to Attitude were co written by Dana Wells Max Cavalera s stepson whose death in part led to the events which caused Max to leave the band Dana also came up with the concept for the video for the song featuring Brazilian Jiu Jitsu experts the Gracie family Critical reception EditProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 19 Chicago Tribune nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 27 Entertainment WeeklyC 28 Houston Chronicle nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 29 Los Angeles Times nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 30 NME7 10 31 Q nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 32 Record Collector nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 33 Rolling Stone nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 34 Spin6 10 35 American newspapers like The New Times the Daily News and the Los Angeles Times reviewed the Brazilian band The mixture of the dense metal of Sepultura and the Brazilian music has a intoxicating effect wrote a Los Angeles Times reviewer 9 The Daily News praised the album saying Sepultura reinvented the wheel By mixing metal with native instruments the band resuscitates the tired genre reminding of Led Zeppelin times But while Zeppelin mixed English metal with African beats it s still more moving to hear a band that uses elements of its own country By extracting the sounds of the past Sepultura determines the future direction of metal 36 Specialized heavy metal critics also reviewed the album positively Martin Popoff author of the book The Collector s Guide to Heavy Metal ranked Roots as the 11th best metal record of all time This is a spectacular metal and futurist hardcore LP wrote Popoff a masterpiece accomplished by a band with an enormous heart and an even larger intellect Kerrang magazine awarded Roots second place in the list of 100 records that you have to hear before dying 36 In 2001 Q magazine named Roots as one of the 50 Heaviest Albums Of All Time 37 Rolling Stone Brasil named it the 57th best Brazilian music album 38 Rolling Stone contributor Jon Wiederhorn gave the album three stars out of five and said Sepultura play a violent game of sonic overload the band uses its catharsis as a creative force funneling torrents of noise into a tunnel of hate and called the album a refreshing step forward in a genre full of bands that are creatively bankrupt 34 Music critic Robert Christgau gave the album a negative dud rating 39 Looking back on the album 20 years later PopMatters contributor Saby Reyes Kulkarni described Roots as inarguably one of the most radical stylistic departures from convention in heavy metal history an album that blew the doors open on our perceptions of metal and so called world music adding that we haven t heard anything quite like it since 7 In April 2005 Decibel inducted Roots into the Decibel Magazine Hall of Fame becoming the third album overall to receive a coveted spot in their Hall of Fame 40 Legacy EditSince the release of Roots there have been cases where other metal bands who are not of Western i e European or American origin have combined metal with music from their own native regions though none of those bands have reached the same level of visibility or commercial success that Sepultura achieved with Roots Chthonic for example blend symphonic death metal with traditional Taiwanese music and mythology Melechesh play black metal while drawing from Assyrian Babylonian Middle Eastern mythology and symbology Tengger Cavalry combine metal with Mongolian throat singing and classical Chinese instrumentation in both electric and acoustic settings Alien Weaponry play thrash and groove metal with Maori lyrics often with Maori cultural and historical themes Speaking to Kerrang in 2008 Max Cavalera looked back on Roots Roots came from a blurry dream I had about going to the rainforest Wine may have been involved In the end when we actually went into the forest to record it was unbelievable The whole album was a huge personal journey for me and as a Brazilian it felt as an incredible achievement Everyone was inspired and Igor was at the top of his game The percussion was crazy and we worked with so many great musicians in the end coming out with a 15 minutes drum jam that someone likened to a crazy Brazilian Pink Floyd When we took the album to Roadrunner they loved it except for the title They thought it would sound like a Bob Marley tribute album We explained it to them and thankfully they got it 41 As for the Xavantes both their leader at the time of the band s visit Cipasse and Pappiani agree that Roots helped the tribe gain some visibility to the point that people would actually identify them as Xavantes instead of just calling them indigenous people Pappiani noticed an increase in people s interest for information on the tribe and their music 4 On March 25 2021 French heavy metal band Gojira released the single Amazonia a song about anti deforestation of the Amazon and the protection of Brazilian indigenous peoples rights Shortly after its release on April 15 frontman Joe Duplantier in an interview with Blabbermouth net was asked his thoughts about comparing Amazonia to Sepultura to which he said I go Yup And it s a compliment and there is no shame here And we ripped them off but we didn t do it on purpose But we realized it right after We were like Oh that sounds like SEPULTURA Ahhh whatever It s a tribute to Sepultura how about that It s about Brazil It s about the Amazon It s tribal 42 Track listing EditAll lyrics are written by Max Cavalera except where noted all music is composed by Sepultura except where notedNo TitleLyricsMusicLength1 Roots Bloody Roots 3 322 Attitude Max Cavalera Dana Wells 4 153 Cut Throat 2 444 Ratamahatta featuring David Silveria and Carlinhos Brown Sepultura Carlinhos BrownSepultura Carlinhos Brown4 305 Breed Apart Andreas Kisser Max Cavalera 4 016 Straighthate 5 217 Spit 2 458 Lookaway featuring Jonathan Davis Mike Patton and DJ Lethal Jonathan DavisSepultura DJ Lethal5 269 Dusted Andreas KisserAndreas Kisser4 0310 Born Stubborn 4 0711 Jasco instrumental Andreas Kisser1 5712 Itsari instrumental Xavante Tribe Sepultura4 4813 Ambush 4 3914 Endangered Species 5 1915 Dictatorshit 1 2616 Canyon Jam hidden track instrumental 13 16Total length 72 08 Roadrunner Records The 25th Anniversary Series bonus discNo TitleLength1 Procreation Of the Wicked Celtic Frost cover 3 392 Mine featuring Mike Patton 6 253 War Bob Marley cover 6 404 Lookaway Master Vibe mix 5 365 Mine Andy Wallace mix 7 586 Dusted demo 4 277 Roots Bloody Roots demo 3 328 R D P Ratos de Porao cover 1 159 Untitled demo 4 1410 Attitude live at Ozzfest 5 3711 Roots Bloody Roots Megawatt mix one 4 0112 Roots Bloody Roots Megawatt mix two 4 08The Roots of Sepultura EditThe Roots of Sepultura nbsp Compilation album by SepulturaReleased29 November 1996GenreThrash metal death metalLength73 37LanguageEnglish PortugueseLabelRoadrunnerCompilerMonte Conner Borivoj KrginSepultura chronologyThe Roots of Sepultura 1996 Blood Rooted 1997 The Roots of Sepultura is a double disc album by Sepultura released in November 1996 The second disc contains a collection of unreleased tracks B sides alternate mixes and live recordings 43 This release differs from Roots and the 2005 25th Anniversary Roots album as the B sides disc has a different series of tracks This album includes covers of tracks by Motorhead Dead Kennedys Os Mutantes and Ratos de Porao and also includes tracks from their first live home video Under Siege Live in Barcelona Track listingNo TitleLength1 Intro 1 332 C I U Criminals in Uniform 4 173 Orgasmatron Motorhead cover 4 154 Dead Embryonic Cells original mix 4 315 Desperate Cry original mix 6 426 Murder original mix 3 257 Under Siege Regnum Irae original mix 4 448 Necromancer demo 3 599 The Past Reborns the Storms 5 0810 A Hora e a Vez do Cabelo Nascer Os Mutantes cover 2 2111 Drug Me Dead Kennedys cover 1 5312 Crucificados pelo Sistema Ratos de Porao cover Slave New World 1994 B side 1 0313 Anticop live 3 0214 Intro live 1 3015 Arise live 2 5116 Inner Self live 4 4217 Mass Hypnosis live 4 2518 Escape to the Void live 5 0319 Troops of Doom live 2 5320 Altered State live 5 20Personnel EditSepulturaMax Cavalera lead vocals 4 and 6 string rhythm guitar berimbau Andreas Kisser lead guitar backing vocals sitar Paulo Jr bass timbau grande Igor Cavalera drums percussion timbau djembeAdditional personnelMike Patton vocals on Lookaway David Silveria drums on Ratamahatta Carlinhos Brown vocals percussion berimbau timbau wood drums lataria xequere surdos on Ratamahatta Jonathan Davis vocals on Lookaway DJ Lethal turntables on Lookaway Xavante Tribe percussion chanting on Itsari RecordingRecorded at Indigo Ranch Malibu California Produced by Ross Robinson and Sepultura Engineered by Chuck Johnson Additional engineering by Richard Kaplan Second engineered by Rob Agnello Mixed by Andy Wallace at Soundtrack Studios New York City Mix engineered by Steve Sisco Mastered by George Marino at Sterling Sound New York CityCharts EditWeekly charts Edit Charts 1996 PeakPositionAustralian Albums ARIA 44 3Austrian Albums O3 Austria 45 2Belgian Albums Ultratop Flanders 46 5Belgian Albums Ultratop Wallonia 47 3Dutch Albums Album Top 100 48 6Europe European Top 100 Albums 49 2Finnish Albums Suomen virallinen lista 50 5German Albums Offizielle Top 100 51 7New Zealand Albums RMNZ 52 8Norwegian Albums VG lista 53 8Scottish Albums OCC 54 13Spanish Albums AFYVE 55 18Swedish Albums Sverigetopplistan 56 5Swiss Albums Schweizer Hitparade 57 16UK Albums OCC 58 4UK Rock amp Metal Albums OCC 59 1US Billboard 200 60 27 Year end charts Edit Chart 1996 PeakPositionAustrian Albums O3 Austria 61 35Dutch Albums Album Top 100 62 66Europe European Top 100 Albums 63 45German Albums Offizielle Top 100 64 73Certifications EditRegion Certification Certified units salesAustralia ARIA 65 Gold 35 000 Austria IFPI Austria 66 Gold 25 000 Canada Music Canada 67 Gold 50 000 France SNEP 68 Gold 100 000 Netherlands NVPI 69 Gold 50 000 United Kingdom BPI 70 Gold 100 000 United States RIAA 71 Gold 500 000 Sales figures based on certification alone Shipments figures based on certification alone References Edit IGOR CAVALERA Admits KORN Influence On SEPULTURA s Roots But Says There Was A Lot More Going On BLABBERMOUTH NET 2016 10 09 Retrieved 2017 01 22 JONATHAN DAVIS Recalls Thinking SEPULTURA s Roots Album Was Blatant KORN Rip Off BLABBERMOUTH NET 2016 10 07 Retrieved 2017 01 22 Max amp Iggor Cavalera to Perform Sepultura s Roots Album in Full on North American Tour Loudwire com 29 July 2016 a b c d e f Deho Mauricio 19 March 2016 Ha 20 anos visita a indios e choque cultural criavam classico do Sepultura UOL in Portuguese Sao Paulo Grupo Folha Retrieved 3 November 2020 a b c d Barcinski amp Gomes 1999 page 150 Chirazi Steffan 2005 The Roots of Sepultura Roots CD booklet Sepultura New York NY Roadrunner Records p 15 a b c d e f g h i j Greetings From the Third World Revisiting Sepultura s Genre Changing Roots PopMatters Retrieved 2017 01 22 a b c d e f Roots Run Deep Twenty Years Later Sepultura Founders Max and Iggor Cavalera Perform Their Former Band s Pinnacle Album in Full Nashville Scene Retrieved 2017 10 03 a b c Sepultura Chapter 9 The Calm Before the Storm Sepultura be Archived from the original on October 5 2011 Retrieved October 27 2010 Rabasse Manuel November 1996 Published January 1997 Korn Unusual Suspect Interview concert review Hard N Heavy Magazine in French No 31 Clichy Cyber Press Publishing p 64 ISSN 1252 2279 Barcinski amp Gomes 1999 pages 113 amp 150 Chirazi Steffan 2005 Closing Thoughts on Roots Roots CD booklet Sepultura New York NY Roadrunner Records p 22 Roots by Sepultura on Apple Music iTunes 20 February 1996 Plymouth Shane May 5 2011 Sepultura Roots HMV The 10 Best Nu Metal Albums To Own On Vinyl VMP The 50 best nu metal albums of all time April 2022 a b Dimery 2006 pg 782 Drawing on Brazilian Latin and tribal music nu metal and Sepultura s own thrash death style the results were unique Distefano Alex April 29 2015 The 10 Best Brazilian Metal Bands OC Weekly a b Huey Steve Roots Sepultura AllMusic Retrieved November 16 2011 Bukszpan 2003 pg 226 In 1996 they released Roots whose down tuned death metal aggression was tempered by the incorporation of Brazilian musical and precussion instruments a b Rivadavia Eduardo Sepultura Music Biography Credits and Discography AllMusic Retrieved 2012 10 28 Sepultura is coming Philstar Archived from the original on 2013 01 31 Retrieved 2012 10 28 a b c Epstein Dan September 9 2016 Max and Iggor Cavalera Talk Revisiting Sepultura s Roots for Tour Rolling Stone SEPULTURA s Roots Is One Of Ten Greatest Covers In Roadrunner History Blabbermouth Prato Greg February 20 2014 Max Cavalera of Soulfly ex Sepultura Songfacts a b c Holthouse David October 24 1996 Boys From Brazil Phoenix New Times Golemis Dean March 21 1996 Sepultura Roots Roadrunner Chicago Tribune Retrieved June 10 2018 Eddy Chuck May 10 1996 Roots Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on October 17 2015 Retrieved December 3 2012 Chirazi Steffan March 24 1996 Digging for Roots of Brazilian Metal Houston Chronicle Retrieved June 10 2018 Masuo Sandy March 10 1996 Sepultura Roots Roadrunner Los Angeles Times Retrieved June 10 2018 Sepultura Roots NME 46 February 24 1996 Sepultura Roots Q 114 103 March 1996 McIver Joel January 2018 Sepultura Roots Expanded Edition Record Collector 475 Retrieved April 18 2020 a b Wiederhorn Jon March 21 1996 Sepultura Roots Rolling Stone p 98 Archived from the original on December 29 2007 Retrieved December 3 2012 Hermes Will April 1996 Sepultura Roots Spin 12 1 110 Retrieved June 10 2018 a b Barcinski amp Gomes page 153 Q 50 Heaviest Albums Of All Time Rocklist net Retrieved November 16 2011 Os 100 maiores discos da musica brasileira in Portuguese Umas Linhas 2007 12 20 Archived from the original on 2010 07 02 Retrieved 2009 04 20 Christgau Robert Sepultura Retrieved June 7 2019 Chase Jesse 20 April 2005 Sepultura Roots Decibel Retrieved 2018 05 11 Cavalera Max Beebee Steve Kerrang Magazine 1213 June 07 2008 Treasure Chest An Intimate Portrait Of A Life in Rock P 52 blabbermouth net news gojiras new song amazonia is a tribute to sepultura says joseph duplantier Prato Greg The Roots of Sepultura review AllMusic Retrieved 20 December 2011 Australiancharts com Sepultura Roots Hung Medien Retrieved April 25 2021 Austriancharts at Sepultura Roots in German Hung Medien Retrieved April 25 2021 Ultratop be Sepultura Roots in Dutch Hung Medien Retrieved April 25 2021 Ultratop be Sepultura Roots in French Hung Medien Retrieved April 25 2021 Dutchcharts nl Sepultura Roots in Dutch Hung Medien Retrieved April 25 2021 Eurochart Top 100 Albums March 16 1996 PDF Music amp Media Vol 13 no 11 March 16 1996 p 22 Retrieved November 18 2021 Sepultura Roots in Finnish Musiikkituottajat IFPI Finland Retrieved April 25 2021 Offiziellecharts de Sepultura Roots in German GfK Entertainment Charts Retrieved April 25 2021 Charts nz Sepultura Roots Hung Medien Retrieved April 25 2021 Norwegiancharts com Sepultura Roots Hung Medien Retrieved April 25 2021 Official Scottish Albums Chart Top 100 Official Charts Company Retrieved April 25 2021 Salaverri Fernando September 2005 Solo exitos ano a ano 1959 2002 1st ed Spain Fundacion Autor SGAE ISBN 84 8048 639 2 Swedishcharts com Sepultura Roots Hung Medien Retrieved April 25 2021 Swisscharts com Sepultura Roots Hung Medien Retrieved April 25 2021 Official Albums Chart Top 100 Official Charts Company Retrieved April 25 2021 Official Rock amp Metal Albums Chart Top 40 Official Charts Company Retrieved April 25 2021 Sepultura Chart History Billboard 200 Billboard Retrieved April 25 2021 Jahreshitparade Alben 1996 austriancharts at in German Hung Medien Archived from the original on 2 August 2015 Retrieved 18 November 2021 Jaaroverzichten Album 1996 dutchcharts nl in Dutch Hung Medien Archived from the original on 19 September 2015 Retrieved 18 November 2021 Year End Sales Charts European Top 100 Albums 1996 PDF Music amp Media December 21 1996 p 12 Retrieved 18 November 2021 Top 100 Album Jahrescharts in German GfK Entertainment Retrieved September 8 2016 ARIA Charts Accreditations 1997 Albums PDF Australian Recording Industry Association Austrian album certifications Sepultura Roots in German IFPI Austria Canadian album certifications Sepultura Roots Music Canada French album certifications Sepultura Roots in French Syndicat National de l Edition Phonographique Dutch album certifications Sepultura Roots in Dutch Nederlandse Vereniging van Producenten en Importeurs van beeld en geluidsdragers EnterRoots in the Artiest of titel box Select 2000 in the drop down menu saying Alle jaargangen British album certifications Sepultura Roots British Phonographic Industry American album certifications Sepultura Roots Recording Industry Association of America Further reading EditBarcinski Andre amp Gomes Silvio 1999 Sepultura Toda a Historia Sao Paulo Ed 34 ISBN 85 7326 156 0 Sepultura 1996 Roots CD New York NY Roadrunner Records The 25th Anniversary Series 2 CD Reissue 2005 Thoroddsen Arnar 2006 Dimery Robert ed 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die Quintet Publishing Limited ISBN 0 7893 1371 5 Bukszpan Daniel James Dio Ronnie 2003 The Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal Barnes amp Noble Publishing Inc ISBN 0 7607 4218 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roots Sepultura album amp oldid 1172203388, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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