** Sepultura
NATION
(Roadrunner)
Although Sepultura’s ’96 Brazilian-metal fusion disc Roots
remains a landmark for heavy music, its legacy became diluted when
the band split into two warring camps shortly after its release.
Frontman Max Cavalera took Sepultura’s heart and soul (not to mention
most of their fans) with him when he formed Soulfly, but his old mates
kept the name and quickly re-emerged with American hardcore singer
Derrick Green at the helm.
On their second disc with Green, the group continue to prove
themselves worthy of the brand name, if little else. Like Cavalera,
they’ve slowed things down a bit since Sepultura’s early-’90s
death-metal days, but their vision of tribal metal seems painfully
unfocused next to his. Worse, they mimic Soulfly by inviting loads of
celebrity guests along, including Hatebreed singer Jamey Jasta,
New York dub-reggae singer Dr. Israel, and the semi-esteemed
Metallica tribute string quartet Apocalyptica. Even with Jasta
and noted East Coast hardcore producer Steve Evetts along, the
band offer up only two speed-metal maulers: “Revolt” and Jasta’s
“Human Cause,” which clock in at a combined two minutes. The rest
of the disc is a somber affair sprinkled with touches of Brazilian
percussion and some impressive guitar trickery from Andreas Kisser.
Green is an impassioned vocalist, but by the end of the disc his
sloganeering becomes as tedious as the band’s awkward attempts
at experimentation.
— Sean Richardson