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  • Ozzy knows best

    New York Daily News
    July 28, 2006


    Ozzy knows best

    Alloy of heavy metal headlines Osbourne festival

    By GENE SANTORO
    DAILY NEWS WRITER


    Ozzy Osbourne

    The music commonly gets shoved under just one moniker: heavy metal.
    But the sounds huddled below that handy banner cover a wide range of
    styles and sensibilities. There 's speed, goth, nu, thrash, alt and
    prog-rock strains of metal. And nowhere is this range on healthier
    display than at the annual Ozzfest show, which will have its wicked
    way with Randalls Island tomorrow.
    Though the great and powerful Ozzy Osbourne himself appears at only
    some of the dates on this year's version of the 27-city tour, New
    York is among them. Fans can also expect to be pummeled by Disturbed,
    Hatebreed, Atreyu, Avenged Sevenfold, Black Label Society, Bleeding
    Through and Norma Jean.

    Two of this year's leading bands, System of a Down and Lacuna Coil
    represent the breadth of the genre nicely.

    System guitarist Daron Malakian likes to say, "They call us nu metal
    or prog-rock, but there's all sorts of stuff mixed in what we do."

    >From the quartet's 1995 start in Hollywood, their hard-hitting mix
    has even included addressing social issues in their lyrics. The
    Armenian-Americans have stirred controversy with songs like
    "P.L.U.C.K.," about the death-by-starvation of 1.5 million Armenians
    in 1915. After Sept. 11, 2001, Clear Channel Radio whisked their hit
    single "Chop Suey!" off the air, citing lyrics like "Trust in my
    self-righteous suicide." It was nominated for a Grammy.

    This year they bagged a Grammy for "B.Y.O.B.," which questions the
    value of war.

    At the moodier end of the spectrum is Italy's Lacuna Coil, a novelty
    here because of singer Cristina Scabbia.

    "In Europe, this is common, to have a woman singing this music," she
    says. "But in America, it is so unusual that journalists made a big
    thing of it. I really don't get this. Music doesn't have a sex."

    Formed in 1996, Lacuna Coil finalized its six-piece lineup with
    trademark male/female vocal tradeoffs three years later. They toured
    steadily in Europe, then tried to break into the U.S. - something no
    Italian band had managed.

    But in 2002, "Comalies" made it to U.S. radio and MTV. Two years
    later, the band headlined European and U.S. club tours while joining
    Ozzfest's second stage. This spring, "Karmacode" debuted at No. 28 on
    Billboard's pop-album charts. Now, Lacuna Coil appears on Ozzfest's
    main stage.

    "Naturally we are delighted," Scabbia says. "We worked very hard to
    get here. But we are Italians, [so] we are even happier about the
    World Cup."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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