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  • Bring down the dictator

    Sydney Morning Herald , Australia
    Jan 13 2005


    Bring down the dictator
    January 14, 2005

    Page Tools

    "The last one to dodge the train is the band leader." Daron Malakian
    (right) settles the issue the old way.


    Sex, drugs, rock'n'roll ... and politics. Daron Malakian - sorry,
    System of a Down - likes it with the lot. Kelsey Munro has attitude
    with hers.

    SYSTEM OF A DOWN
    Hordern Pavilion, Driver Avenue, Moore Park
    January 25, 7pm
    $66.40
    Bookings 9266 4800
    They will also play the Big Day Out on January 26. Win tickets to the
    sold-out event in next week's Metro

    You couldn't have predicted System of a Down's success. Mixing
    intelligent, experimental, heavy music with a generous dose of
    left-wing politics is not a proven recipe for chart success.

    But their 2001 album Toxicity sold more than 4 million copies,
    propelled by the furiously tight smash hit Chop Suey! The four
    Armenian-Americans went from being an underground Californian band to
    international success.

    Live, they have a bone-buzzing intensity and frenetic
    teenage-boy-laden mosh pits, but this is not easy music. How did they
    get so big?

    "We just stuck to our guns," says guitarist and chief songwriter
    Daron Malakian.

    The band has had a dogged policy of non-compromise since their
    formation in the mid-'90s. A buzz built around the quartet throughout
    the Californian scene on the strength of their live sound and a
    three-song demo that circulated among fans. System's ferocious,
    precise sound got pushed to bigger and bigger audiences. But not even
    the band expected the mainstream to embrace Toxicity.

    Advertisement
    Advertisement"Yes, I'm very surprised that the world has grabbed onto
    it the way it has because it was an experiment for us," Malakian
    says. "We're lucky because we are a very artsy-fartsy band, and
    people get it."

    Malakian is putting the finishing touches on two new studio albums.
    He says he's not a perfectionist: "I just want it to be right, I
    don't nitpick at shit. I get the production credit on the record, and
    I get to be the [AC/DC guitarist] Malcolm Young of System of a Down."

    He laughs uproariously.

    "I respect those people. You look at Slayer and you see Kerry King. I
    look at Slayer and I see [songwriter-guitarist] Jeff Hanneman."

    He says this as though everyone would know what he means - that he
    respects the behind-the-scenes musicmakers in bands over those showy
    frontmen.

    By his own reckoning, Malakian writes about 95 per cent of System's
    music, including the lyrics. He bristles slightly at the suggestion
    that his band is a dictatorship.

    "It's a democracy, everyone respects the way the band works, I don't
    step over anybody," he says. "I really don't want to sound like I'm
    discrediting my band members here because I'm not. It's really how
    System works. Serj [Tankian] writes songs but not in bulk the way I
    write songs ... It works as a team."

    All of the band - singer Tankian, bass player Shavo Odadjian and
    drummer John Dolmayan - share Malakian's eclectic taste in music,
    ranging from Slayer to the Doors.

    Frontman Tankian co-founded the activist group Axis of Justice with
    Audioslave's Tom Morello, which has worked for causes such as
    homeless people and voting issues in the US. Some of System's songs
    have anti-war themes.

    But Malakian is uncomfortable with System being tagged a "political"
    band.

    "We just sing about what the world, about what's around us," he says.
    "We have political songs and we have songs about, y'know,
    psycho-groupie-cocaine crazy.

    "Somebody asked me, 'Are you guys about sex, drugs, rock'n'roll,
    politics, having a good time?' I said, 'Yes!' We're not about a
    history lesson, like, 'You gotta learn all about the Armenian
    genocide' or all about politics. We're not only about that and we're
    not only about sex, drugs and rock'n'roll, we're like a f---ed-up
    mutation of all that shit."

    http://www.smh.com.au/news/Music/Bring-down-the-dictator/2005/01/13/1105582643570.html?oneclick=true
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