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Music Review: Serj Tankian

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  • Music Review: Serj Tankian

    MUSIC REVIEW: SERJ TANKIAN
    By Fiona Shepherd

    RedOrbit
    http://www.redorbit.com/news/en tertainment/1541745/music_review_serj_tankian/
    Sep t 3 2008
    TX

    SERJ TANKIAN *** ABC, GLASGOW

    "ALL empires lie because all they want are natural resources and
    the subjugation of people," bellows Serj Tankian. As a song intro,
    it beats "here's another one from the new album" and as casual banter
    with the audience, it's a change from "Glasgow, you're so crazy" -
    although he tries that one too.

    Tankian is a charismatic figure. Sporting a pale top hat and dress
    shirt, he is the alternative rock ringmaster who never takes himself
    as seriously as his politics. Together with his fellow rock radical,
    Rage Against The Machine guitarist Tom Morello, he founded grassroots
    activist organisation Axis For Justice and his day job is fronting
    politicised metal band System Of A Down.

    With the group currently on hiatus, Tankian has released a solo album,
    Elect The Dead, playing all the instruments himself. For this tour,
    he has recruited a full band, including an intimidating drummer in
    a skirt.

    For openers, they fired off a salvo as rapid and relentless as a
    machine-gun volley, before ducking in and out of contrasting time
    signatures, a typically epic rock chorus and carousel-like interludes
    that reference the folk music of Tankian's native Armenia. In short,
    it sounded a bit like System Of A Down.

    Overall, his solo material is not as ferocious as his parent band's
    assault. Tankian even makes weighty political metal fun, dividing
    up the audience for a satirical chant of "praise the Lord, pass the
    ammunition". The East European folk influence added vital musical
    interest, elevating the set above the usual turgid chest beating
    angst of his nu-metal contemporaries.

    Tankian's powerful rock howl sometimes recalls the pseudo- operative
    pomp style favoured by over-the-top Eurovision entrants, so perhaps
    the fans should not have been surprised to hear a burst of Abba's
    Money, Money, Money incorporated into one of his own tracks. Even
    more unexpected was a cover of The Beatles' Girl that escaped with
    its melody intact.

    There was even entertainment value in an ambient Pink Floydesque
    improvisation, topped with some strangely appealing wailing from
    Tankian.

    It takes an adventurous musician to pull together so many disparate
    influences, yet he seemed entirely in his element throughout.
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