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Voicing Their Outrage: System of a Down Has Plenty to Howl About

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  • Voicing Their Outrage: System of a Down Has Plenty to Howl About

    Washington Post, DC
    Jan 20 2007

    Voicing Their Outrage
    System of a Down Has Plenty to Howl About in Genocide-Awareness Film

    By Chris Richards
    Special to The Washington Post
    Sunday, January 21, 2007; Page N01

    Anyone familiar with Serj Tankian's larynx knows the System of a Down
    singer can rock-and-roar with the best of them. He's a screamer.

    Carla Garapedian is a screamer, too, but she doesn't front a nu-metal
    band. She's a former BBC World anchor and the director of
    "Screamers," a new documentary about System of a Down's efforts to
    promote genocide awareness. A "screamer" is someone who can "actually
    process what a genocide is without defense, without guile," Pulitzer
    Prize-winning author Samantha Power says at the beginning of the
    film. "And when you do that . . . there's no other alternative but to
    go up to people and to scream."

    Photo
    Serj Tankian and his Armenian American band mates have personal ties
    to "Screamers' " topic. (By Sarah L. Voisin -- The Washington Post)


    The film's release comes at a time when celebrities such as George
    Clooney, Don Cheadle and the activist-hydra known as Brangelina are
    preaching genocide awareness. But where Hollywood types aim to save
    the world by putting their pretty faces before the cameras, System of
    a Down confronts the issue with some of the most abrasive rock ever
    to hit the airwaves.

    After a decade together, they've sold more than 16 million albums
    that favor throat-shredding vocals, schizophrenic guitar riffs and
    general rhythmic anarchy. Their activism is much more focused: Their
    concerts play host to grass-roots political organizations including
    Axis of Justice, a nonprofit that Tankian founded with former Rage
    Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello.

    Garapedian, in Washington to promote the film's opening Friday,
    concurs with the band's approach. "We've all got to stand up and
    scream and tell our politicians we've got to do something about this
    now."

    She's referring to the estimated 450,000 dead in Darfur, Sudan, which
    her film depicts as the latest in a chain of atrocities dating back
    to the Armenian genocide almost 100 years ago. A history refresher:
    Between 1915 and 1917, Ottoman Turks systematically took the lives of
    1.5 million Armenians. Turns out the grandparents of the four
    musicians in System of a Down were among the survivors of this
    tragedy. Turkey and the United States still do not recognize the
    events as genocide.

    "It was important for my grandfather and to all those that survived
    the Armenian genocide to be remembered correctly," Tankian, 39, says
    of his band's activism in an e-mail from his vacation in New Zealand.
    "I didn't want their sacrifice to be further victimized by
    geo-political expediency."

    Like the band members, Garapedian, 45, is an Armenian American raised
    in Los Angeles. She attended the London School of Economics and
    Political Science, pursued a career in journalism with stops at the
    BBC and NBC, and directed documentaries, including her 2002 film
    about women in Afghanistan, "Lifting the Veil."

    And while her work has always gravitated toward social injustice,
    "Screamers" hits much closer to home. "I never thought, though, that
    I would make a film like this," she says. "It seemed to me like it
    was too personal. And as a journalist, one tries to be objective in
    the best sense of the word."

    Garapedian hopes the band's abrasive touch will prick viewers' ears.
    "We've lost our connection to the debate about genocide, and that
    music brings out the emotion and allows you to access it," says the
    director, who speaks with the eloquence of a television anchor and
    the passion of a campus activist.

    She first approached the band in 2004, and followed them on tour last
    summer. "They didn't want it to be a concert documentary film. They
    wanted the film I envisaged, which was a music-politics film where we
    use the energy and passion of the music to tell the story of genocide
    in the last century."

    The result is seriocomic. System of a Down bassist Shavo Odadjian is
    playing tour bus pranks one minute and talking about the
    extermination of his bloodline the next.

    "I did that purposefully because that's who they are," Garapedian
    says of the scene. "For me, it's important to show humor and joy
    because we are celebrating the fact that we've survived."

    Ironically, there was one thing about the band Garapedian couldn't
    abide: their screaming.

    "I grew up with the Beatles and Elton John," she explains. "I
    thought, 'Oh my God, what am I going to do?' I have this mega-popular
    rock band and they're all grandchildren of survivors, just like me. I
    have a way to tell the story . . . and now I'm listening to the music
    and I can't listen to it."

    But after recognizing the political bent of some of the band's
    lyrics, Garapedian realized that she had found the perfect score for
    her film.

    "How could I use Coldplay or something that was easier on the ear
    when you're talking about genocide? You need the rage and the anger."

    Much like the band's music, the film makes some manic jumps --
    heartbreaking testimony from Tankian's grandfather cuts to blaring
    concert footage, to carnage in Rwanda, to a House International
    Relations Committee debate in Congress.

    In one scene, Tankian and System of a Down drummer John Dolmayan
    confront then-House Speaker Dennis Hastert in the Capitol's rotunda
    regarding a bill that would force the United States to recognize the
    Armenian genocide. (The bill may come to the House in the coming
    weeks, and while current House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office says she
    endorses the bill, there's no word on whether she'll introduce it.)

    "Of course I was nervous," Tankian recalls in the e-mail. "Here was
    the 3rd most powerful person in the country who can call the shots
    about my government officially recognizing this historical tragedy
    once and for all. . . In my heart I knew Dennis wouldn't do the right
    thing, but I wanted to inspire him to do so anyway. I may have
    failed, but hope that the story will inspire Nancy Pelosi, or other
    leaders in Congress not to take the same route."

    Garapedian hopes this film has an influence on Congress, but she's
    also aiming to win the hearts of American youth. She describes her
    audience as "younger people, but not exclusively. . . . You're
    sending a message to Washington: The kids in America are going to see
    a film about genocide."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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