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MUSIC REVIEW: Serj Tankian Truly Goes Solo On His First Solo Album

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  • MUSIC REVIEW: Serj Tankian Truly Goes Solo On His First Solo Album

    MUSIC REVIEW: SERJ TANKIAN TRULY GOES SOLO ON HIS FIRST SOLO ALBUM
    By Rafer Guzman, Newsday

    Modesto Bee, CA
    Oct 26 2007

    PM Serj Tankian, lead singer for System of a Down, may be one of
    the most politically active figures in music - a member of Amnesty
    International, an advocate of free speech, a vocal critic of the
    current administration - but even he can get tired of democracy. "With
    System, it's a process where four people have to agree on what songs
    to use," Tankian said, explaining his decision to release his first
    solo album. "When you're doing it by yourself, all the decisions come
    and go with you." He's not kidding: "Elect the Dead," due Oct. 23,
    features almost nobody but Tankian.

    Though System of a Down drummer John Dolmayan appears on one song,
    and a handful of session musicians sit in on other tracks, nearly all
    the instruments - piano, guitars, bass, synthesizers - were played by
    Tankian. He produced it himself and is releasing it on his own label,
    Serjical Strike Records. In some ways, the album is a natural sequel
    to "Mezmerize" and "Hypnotize," the two wildly ambitious albums
    System of a Down released in 2005. Once again, there are plenty of
    hard-rock rhythms, operatic arias and the melismatic vocal lines that
    reflect Tankian's Armenian heritage (which he shares with all the
    members of System). There are also some tough issues at hand. The
    song "Unthinking Majority" asserts, "I believe that you're wrong,
    insinuating they hold the bomb," a reference to Iraq or Iran or
    "perhaps both," Tankian suggested. And the album's overall lyrics
    reflect a deep dissatisfaction with current events. But the disc is
    also fairly introspective, often conflating the personal with the
    political. When Tankian sings, "Why do we sit around and break each
    other's hearts tonight?" (on the song "Saving Us") it's hard to tell
    whether he's addressing a lover or all humankind. Speaking by phone
    from his home in Los Angeles, Tankian described this album as "more
    philosophical than political." His thoughts, he said, tended toward
    larger ideas of civilization, history and the sustainability of life
    on the planet, though he tried to avoid preaching. "I never use the
    words `global warming,'" Tankian said. "Any time you use cliches or
    key words, it raises thoughts and feelings that you think or don't
    think. I'd rather have you come in with a clean palette." So what about
    the title track, "Elect the Dead?" Despite its title, it sounds almost
    like a love song. "Death we know comes for us alive," Tankian sings,
    "but all I want is you." "I've heard a lot of interpretations on what
    `Elect the Dead' might mean," Tankian said. And though he didn't offer
    his own, he cited one of his favorites: "Maybe the people who are the
    victims of the epitome of civilization should be the ones who elect
    our next leaders."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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