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Zero 7
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed albums.
Rooty

Universal acclaim
Based on 23 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 6 votes
Read user comments
Rate this album >
Album Info
Label: Astralwerks
Release Date: 26 June 2001
Discs: 1 disc
Genre(s): Electronic, Dance, House
Summary
The follow-up to the Jaxx' critically-acclaimed 1999 debut album, 'Remedy,' 'Rooty' finds the British house duo adding to the party vibe with elements of pop and R&B thrown into the mix. The lead single is "Romeo."
Also By This Artist: Crazy Itch Radio Kish Kash Remedy
Also On The Web: Official Artist Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
All Music Guide
Rooty is the second straight triumph from a pair of producer/DJs who look set to carry the torch for dancefloor electronica in the years to come.
Read Full Review >Village Voice (Consumer Guide)
No catchier collection of jingles has come to my attention since Steve Miller made his mint off jet airliners.
Read Full Review >Entertainment Weekly
But sound for sound's sake isn't what makes the disc work; it's the recurring female singers, who add forlorn soul to the rhythms.
Read Full Review >New Musical Express
The nerve of it all is breathtaking. Turbo-beats poke up a gospel-jazz revivalist meeting, a mariachi band wanders into the hazy disco sashay of 'Broken Dreams', a Gary Numan sample gets bludgeoned to credibility in the Van Helden-esque pogo of 'Where's Your Head At?'.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club)
Basement Jaxx traffics in some of the most shamelessly insistent and inventive beats around.
Read Full Review >Billboard
Rooty revels in exploiting rhythmic combinations that shouldn't work--but definitely do.
Read Full Review >Launch.com
Basement Jaxx do this so much better than anyone else, including Daft Punk, that you root for their mad programed sounds and unknown cast of determined singers. It's totally daft disco, sexy and sweaty, stupid and stupendous. This is pop.
Read Full Review >Playlouder
'Rooty' isn't going to change your world - 'Remedy' did that - but it is another indispensable, truly, properly, madly inventive and utterly enjoyable album of the sort that, at the moment, only Basement Jaxx make.
Read Full Review >Spin
Despite Rooty's many delights, it feels like Basement Jaxx didn't really know how to top Remedy. [Aug 2001, p.127]
Mojo
In pursuing the anarchic, joyous mash-up of their debut Remedy to its twisted conclusion, Basement Jaxx find themselves in androgynous, genre-bending territory that is Prince-ly in spirit even when it isn’t in sound.
Read Full Review >Blender
Rooty boasts a raw, bustling edge and compulsive experimentalism closer in spirit to the hypersyncopated, R&B-flavored two-step garage currently ruling London clubland. [Jun/Jul 2001, p.104]
Neumu.net
It's no different from the formula that made Fatboy Slim and the Chemical Bores such big hits, but something's different this time around: Basement Jaxx have soul.
Read Full Review >Dot Music
The album misses the addictive funk of 'Red Alert', the off beat quirks of 'Yo Yo' and the engulfing production depth of 'Same Old Show'. But it's a powerful package and a proof that the Basement Jaxx have the confidence and vision to pursue their own path.
Read Full Review >Q Magazine
At a time when Fatboy Slim has gone chill-out, Orbital have gone noodly, and Underworld, nd Prodigy seem to have just gone somewhere else, Basement Jaxx are, happily, on hand with another brilliantly messy blueprint for UK dance music - and dance music that you can actually dance to, at that.
Read Full Review >New York Magazine
On Rooty, Basement Jaxx refines the ambitious but untidy sprawl of its debut into a carnivalesque mix of two-step, house, funk, and disco with a modern take on George Clinton's late-seventies mission of "rescuing dance music from the blahs."
Read Full Review >Alternative Press
Eschewing the DJ-friendly club format they perfected on 1999's Remedy, the Jaxx are now writing R&B-flavored pop songs... But their success is hit-and-miss... [Jul 2001, p.60]
Rolling Stone
With Rooty they fine-tune their classy thump into a pop-house hybrid that owes something to a little guy named Prince.
Read Full Review >PopMatters
Like Remedy, Rooty is either a brilliantly innovative record, or an unlistenable mess, depending on your point of view. To my ear it's somewhere in between, the work of two very talented house producers and songwriters with a taste for old-school sounds that's sometimes entertaining, but often unfortunate.
Read Full Review >Armchair DJ
Oh, there are moments of pure wonder, to be sure, but they're sandwiched between tracks that either retread old ideas or execute less impressive new ones.
Read Full Review >Pitchfork
A few fatal flaws eclipse all of Rooty's abundant qualities. Basement Jaxx have taken kitsch a few steps too far.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this album is 9.5 (out of 10) based on 6 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Billy Boy gave it a10:
Where's your head at is a timeless classic. I could listen to that song alone over and over. But the rest of the album is great as well.
Matt gave it a 10:
Best dance album of the year. You could easily dance yourself to death.
Henry H. gave it a 9:
Hey! The duo that can make the whole music scene celebrates the fun of dance music again made a even more cheerful and groundbreaking LP that will make every listener get high all night.
Jason B. gave it an 8:
Very fun to listen to and makes you want to dance in your car.
