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`Elect' Tankian: System of A Down's outspoken leader to go solo

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  • `Elect' Tankian: System of A Down's outspoken leader to go solo

    Boston Herald, MA
    Oct 13 2007


    `Elect' Tankian
    System of A Down's outspoken leader chooses to go solo

    Politicians in Washington spent last week heatedly debating whether
    to pass an official resolution declaring the Turkish slaughter of
    Armenians in 1915 an act of genocide.

    It's a controversy that System of A Down leader Serj Tankian takes
    personally. His 97-year-old grandfather recently died, though not
    before he revealed the horrors of surviving the Armenian slaughter in
    distressing detail to his 40-year-old grandson.

    `He was a very special man to have survived such a horrendous thing
    in his life,' Tankian said. `When we look at this older generation,
    they suffered a lot more than we have because they don't have the
    luxuries we have. How could they have lived so long with all that
    pain? But what I've learned is that all that pain makes them want to
    live longer and want life.'

    Add in Tankian's strong feelings about the war in Iraq and it's easy
    to understand the stomach-clenching frustration, rebelliousness and
    chilling emotion of his new and first solo CD, `Elect the Dead.'

    Tankian brings his solo act to the Paradise on Monday on a bill with
    another politically outspoken musical renegade, Tom Morello of Rage
    Against the Machine.

    Speaking by phone from a New York City hotel, Tankian said his
    grandfather's death `had a strong effect on me.'

    `For me, it's always been a personal issue, not a political one,' he
    said. `His presence and his life has motivated me. And the denial of
    the Armenian genocide has opened my eyes to other issues around the
    world.'

    In addition to being one of metal's quirkiest, most creative and
    engaging frontmen, Tankian is also one of the most talented. Aside
    from contributions from System of A Down drummer Bryan Mantia and
    Primus guitarist Larry LaLonde, he played nearly every note on every
    instrument on `Elect the Dead,' which he recorded at his home studio
    in Los Angeles.

    The CD is a majestic tour de force. Whether Tankian is crafting a
    scale-climbing, sing-along chorus by stringing together the word
    `lie' dozens of times in `Lie Lie Lie' or asking `Wouldn't it be
    great to heal the world with only a song?' in `Honking Antelope,'
    Tankian is able to snap from frantic punk spazz rocker to soothing
    folkster in a nanosecond. And like Jello Biafra and Frank Zappa
    before him, his pointed cultural commentary is scathing, while
    maintaining a sense of wit.

    As for System of A Down, the platinum-draped band that's backed him
    for a decade, it's on indefinite hiatus.

    `We're still friends,' Tankian said. `The door is open for future
    collaborations but we haven't made any plans.'

    Either way, it's clear he'll continue to push boundaries with an eye
    toward halting atrocities like the one that befell his ancestors.

    `We haven't learned the lessons of the past with this disease and
    that's genocide,' he said. `It's a crime against humanity.'
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