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Anything but a silent night

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  • Anything but a silent night

    Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, CA
    Dec 6 2007


    Anything but a silent night

    The medium is always a message for outspoken rocker Serj Tankian

    BY FRED SHUSTER, MUSIC WRITER
    Article Created: 12/05/2007 03:48:05 PM PST


    Serj Tankian has something on his mind.
    A few years ago, the lead vocalist of metal giants System of a Down
    and his Rage Against the Machine pal Tom Morello started Axis of
    Justice, a grass-roots activist organization designed to fund and
    donate to various causes, including labor issues, co-op farming, the
    homeless and official recognition of the Armenian genocide.

    The organization's Web site (www.axisofjustice.org) is a remarkable
    source of political information as well as updates on Tankian's
    various musical projects.

    "The humanitarian things always pop up on me," Tankian said. "It's
    not something I plan, to be honest. Something will come up and I'll
    just kind of get involved."

    For Tankian and other Armenians around the world, the Armenian
    genocide in Turkey almost 100 years ago remains a highly personal and
    emotional issue. A congressional resolution recognizing the genocide
    has stalled because Turkey is an important ally of the U.S. in a part
    of the world where America has few friends.

    "If we want to call ourselves a democracy, then we can't deny a
    well-known genocide in our archives," Tankian said. "To me, the
    victory is already done, because of the fact that the president spoke
    against it and it passed the committee and it garnered international
    attention. All of this interest, awakening and awareness will make it
    impossible for the hypocrisy to continue."

    Tankian can be seen and heard Saturday when he opens the first night
    of this weekend's KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas concerts at the
    Gibson Amphitheatre at Universal CityWalk. He'll perform songs from
    his solo "Elect the Dead" disc, about which Entertainment Weekly
    raved: "Factor in politics, social commentary and highly
    individualistic posey, and `Elect' gets our vote for the liveliest
    mixed-bag marvel of the season."
    The San Antonio Express-News, meanwhile, described the disc as having
    "more than enough crash, bang and strangeness to keep everyone happy"
    until System reconvenes.

    But with or without the multimillion-selling System at his side,
    Tankian has an army of supporters.

    "There's a great deal of urgency in his music," said KROQ programmer
    Kevin Weatherly. "A lot of thought goes into his music and it's
    something our audience believes in. We're all looking forward to
    seeing him Saturday."

    Formed in 1995 in Glendale, System's four members are of Armenian
    descent, grandsons of Armenian genocide survivors, and are known for
    the outspoken views found in many of their songs. The band's five
    albums were among metal's biggest sellers worldwide.

    As for their return, the band's singer is noncommittal.

    "We've taken an indefinite hiatus," said Tankian, 40, who lives in
    Malibu. "We're friends still. The door is open. But we're kind of
    just getting out and doing our own things. So definitely not now, but
    possibly sometime in the future. I mean, one thing with System you've
    got to understand is that, unlike a lot of bands, we're not a
    cookie-cutter organization. We're not a corporation that wants to put
    out Oreos every year, a new brand, new and improved kind of thing.
    That's not us. We speak when we have something to say together."

    Instead, Tankian is focusing on his own material, which boasts arty
    arrangements, dynamic vocals and the titanium riffs System fans
    appreciate.

    "It's a whole different thing to me," Tankian sums up. "It's a lot
    more classical-music oriented, operatic, there are a lot of piano and
    strings. And there's still a lot of progressive dynamics."

    Along with a range of styles covered, each new song has its own
    message, Tankian says, pointing out one track called "The Unthinking
    Majority" as representative.

    "It's a very blatant critique of a number of things, and it's open to
    interpretation," Tankian said. "It could be this administration,
    other administrations, other governments, hijacking a democracy and
    creating a failed democracy, and it speaks to the masses that are
    numb to being taken for granted in that way.

    "There are songs with humor and plenty of other topics, but one of
    the underlying themes is civilization and what it means to us."

    Staff writer Naush Boghossian contributed to this article.
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