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DO YOU WANT MORE?!!!??!
[1995]
As on their self-released 1993 debut, Organix, the Roots'
first major-label album fuses jazzy live jams and rap. Original
keyboardist Scott Storch's Rhodes organ and ?uestlove's funk drums
blend seamlessly with verses from Black Thought and Malik B.
[LISTEN]
Key Track: "Swept Away" is a minor-key highlight, featuring silky vocals from Cassandra Wilson. [LISTEN]
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ILLADELPH HALFLIFE
[1996]
The band focuses more on hooks and production, using samples for
the first time (though still only samples of themselves). Common,
D'Angelo and Erykah Badu guest on the disc — a key
inspiration for the budding neosoul movement. [LISTEN]
Key Track: "What They Do" lists a litany of hip-hop clichés and got the band its first major play on MTV.[LISTEN]
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THINGS FALL APART
[1999]
Things come together commercially as the Roots' fourth album hits
Number Four and sells close to a million copies, thanks to the
Grammy-winning hit "You Got Me," featuring an angelic hook from
Badu. [LISTEN]
Key Track: "You Got Me" initially featured Jill Scott on the hook until MCA insisted they rerecord the track with the then-better-known Badu. [LISTEN]
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PHRENOLOGY
[2002]
The band expands its horizons with a flood of guests, including
Nelly Furtado and avant-garde guitarist James "Blood" Ulmer, and,
on "Water," notes the departure of Malik B. due to an ongoing drug
problem. [LISTEN]
Key Track: The funky, guitar-centered "The Seed 2.0" features another discovery, Cody ChestnuTT, and earned the band spins on MTV and BET. [LISTEN]
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RISING DOWN
[2008]
Along with 2006's Game Theory, Rising Down
explores darker, in this case often political, themes, including
poverty, terrorism and police brutality. [LISTEN]
Key Track: On "Singing Man," Black Thought and local MCs P.O.R.N. and Truck North rap from the perspectives of the Virginia Tech shooter, a child soldier in Liberia and a suicide bomber. [LISTEN]