Search - Toots & The Maytals :: From the Roots

From the Roots
Toots & The Maytals
From the Roots
Genres: Alternative Rock, International Music
 
  •  Track Listings (22) - Disc #1

2003 reissue of 1973 album features eight bonus tracks, 'Israel', 'Your Troubles Are Over', 'Doctor Lester (African Doctor)' (Alternate Take), 'Know Me Good' (Alternate Take), 'Feel So Good' (Alternate Take), 'I Alone' (To...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Toots & The Maytals
Title: From the Roots
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Trojan
Release Date: 10/27/2003
Album Type: Extra tracks, Import
Genres: Alternative Rock, International Music
Styles: Ska, Caribbean & Cuba, Jamaica, Reggae
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1

Synopsis

Album Description
2003 reissue of 1973 album features eight bonus tracks, 'Israel', 'Your Troubles Are Over', 'Doctor Lester (African Doctor)' (Alternate Take), 'Know Me Good' (Alternate Take), 'Feel So Good' (Alternate Take), 'I Alone' (Toots solo), 'One Eye Enos' (2nd Version), & 'Funky Funky', including previously unreleased material. Slipcase. Trojan.

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CD Reviews

I don't give 5 stars very often... Almost never.
D. D. Harwood | Buffalo, NY USA | 08/19/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I have a friend who once moved into an apartment and found a big stack of records abandoned by the previous tenant. Mostly they were the standard stuff, y'know, a couple of Zeppelin albums, the Woodstock Movie soundtrack, a bunch of those lame Doors compilations, a ton of 80's metal along the lines of ZZTop and Def Leopard, and, of course, Peter Frampton Comes Alive! But in there amongst the general trash was this little Gem: From The Roots by The Maytals. When my friend threw a party at his new place we dug through his newfound batch of records and gently poked fun at the previous tenant's poor musical taste (very gently though because we both have a bunch of those records in our collections too). When I picked up From The Roots and made a snide comment about the first song, "Pee Pee Cluck Cluck", my friend stopped me. "Hold on, that record's awesome. That one's the best in the stack and that's probably the best song on the album," he said. "What?! You gotta be kidding me? Pee Pee Cluck Cluck? C'mon," I snorted. He put up his hand and said, "I laughed until I listened to it too, Dude."

Until that moment my experience with reggae was limited pretty much to Bob Marley whom I associated, with a certain degree of hatred, with the hackey-sack-playing dope-smokin'-morons at the end of the hall in my college dorm. As far as The Maytals go I was familliar with The Harder They Come Soundtrack but that was the only record I had that could remotely be considered reggae. From The Roots opened my eyes and "Pee Pee Cluck Cluck" launched the entire party right into space. I Immediately taped it from my friend's scratchy copy, put it in my car stereo and NEVER took it out. In fact that car went to the scrap yard with that tape still stuck in the broken deck. By that time, of course, I'd found my own vinyl copy and to this day it just doesn't feel right to sit on the porch in the sun without that record playing.

I spent a couple of years searching used bins and flea markets for that LP though. At the time Trojan Records was reissuing pretty much their whole catalogue except, for some reason, this album. Now, lucky for you, it's available on Amazon with, basically, another entire albums worth of bonus tracks tacked on the end.

I can't speak to the bonus tracks but the original album contains not one bummer. Not a single one! (Although sometimes I have been known to skip "Give Peace A Chance".) If ever there was a reggae (Not Dub, folks, not Dub) dance record this is it. In fact, if you can keep your feet from moving and a smile from your face during any of these tracks, especially "Revival Reggae", then I surmise that you're at the low end of your manic depressive cycle. Take your meds.

If you're new to the genre or you're just bored of your Bob Marley records then this is the place to start. There are several "Best Of' compilations out there and they're good starts too but for whatever reason there are virtually no songs from this record on any of them. This record was released when they were still calling themselves simply "The Maytals" before they became "Toots &..." Maybe that's why the very few versions of songs from this record that do appear on the Best-Ofs are different versions and all inferior. Who knows.

This record does lean a little to the religious end of the reggae spectrum but the infectious beats (oh God, I can't believe I just said "infectious beats") still make songs like "Thy Kingdom Come" absolutely unskippable. That said though if you're looking for reggae like "No Woman, No Cry" then this ain't it. Some would call The Maytals ska but I disagree on a technicality. Reggae sounded more like ska before there was ska but then reggae slowed down and got more stoned and stole the reggae label, so then, what was originally reggae became ska. Undesrtand? (This is why I hate labels; it's all rock-n-roll to me.) In fact, just to demonstrate the broad appeal here, the Specials [ska] covered Monkey Man on their 1980 LP and The Clash [rock] covered "Pressure Drop" on their classic London Calling in '79. Neither of those songs are on the LP I'm currently talking about but... You get point.

Anyway, to simplify things it's more ska-ish than reggae if you're used to that Bob Marley sort of thing. But you should be bored with that stuff by now. Broaden your horizons and pick up this record. You'll be happier for it.

"
"...All Over The World...Share Out The Gold And Silver..."
Mark Barry at Reckless Records, Lon | UK | 10/25/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Jamaican born Frederick "Toots" Hibbert was just 18 when he formed the earliest version of The Maytals in 1961 with his two friends Nathaniel "Jerry" Mathias and Henry "Raleigh" Gordon (the three are pictured on the cover). A couple of albums and a Sixties jail-sentence for their leader later, and you jump forward to the 1970s - and the same wiser trio made this wonderful, but now largely-forgotten reggae LP.



UK issued in December 2003, Sanctuary TJCCD091 is an expanded version of that rare album (Sanctuary acquired the entire Trojan catalogue in 2001 for over £10 million) and in a slew of superb CD reissues - this is another genuine goody...



It breaks down as follows (62:56 minutes):

Tracks 1 to 14 are the album "From The Roots" issued in 1973 in the UK on Trojan TRLS 65 (recorded in/copyright date 1969)

Track 15 is "Israel", a 1970 Jamaican 7" single

Track 16 is "Your Troubles Are Over", an album outtake

Tracks 17, 18 and 19 are "Alternate Takes" of 3 album tracks, "Doctor Lester [aka African Doctor]", "Know Me Good" and "Feel So Good"

Track 20 is "I Alone" - a 1971 single issued is Jamaica on Starapple Records

Track 21 is "One Eye Enos" - a different version to the album cut; it was issued in the UK in 1971 on a 7" single Summit SUM 8520

Track 22 is "Funky Funky" - a 1971 Jamaican 7" single issued on Beverley's Records



The album was produced by the legendary but short-lived LESLIE KONG (he died in 1971 aged only 37) - a young Chinese immigrant who was instrumental in the recording and acceptance of Jamaican music in its formative years (he did Bob Marley's 1st single in 1962). The 12-page foldout insert has affectionate liner notes by HARRY HORNBY while the whole project was co-ordinated and compiled by LAURENCE CANE-HONEYSETT and JOHN REED - both of whom have extensive writing and compiling experience across a huge range of Trojan releases. Excepting the cover of John Lennon's "Give Peace A Chance", all tracks are Hibbert originals - and there's even a card wrap on the outside depicting the original album sleeve that gives the whole release a classy feel...



Given the less-than-stellar quality of the original recordings (reggae is notoriously non-audiophile), the sound quality on these Cedar-improved remasters is superb - muscular and clear. Personal favourites include the sharing-out-our-wealth song "Gold And Silver" (lyrics above) and the superb "Loving Spirit" which is imbibed with Hibbert's strong belief in love channelled through God and music. The extras are ace too - personally I feel the 'Alternate Take' of "Know Me Good" is better than the released album version and "Funky Funky" is a wicked little groover of a record that must be impossible to find on original vinyl...and a cool rediscovery.



"From The Roots" is a sweetheart of an album and it's listed value at £30 in the Record Collector Price Guide of 2010 doesn't in any way reflect the difficulty you would have in locating an original copy. For under eight dollars, you can easily get this expanded CD instead. It's a journey you should take...and well done to all the good people involved in keeping this particular reggae flame alive.



PS: if you're looking for more music in the same vein, see my reviews for the 2CD DELUXE EDITIONS of the following 4 iconic British LP releases all of which were also on the Trojan Records label - "Tighten Up Volume 1" and "Tighten Up Volume 2" by VARIOUS ARTISTS, "1000 Volts Of Holt" by JOHN HOLT and "Skinhead Moonstomp" by SYMARIP



PPS: for Island Records UK - see also my review of the 2009 mini box set "War Ina Babylon" (3CDs)"