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Rock Review | System of a Down

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  • Rock Review | System of a Down

    New York Times, NY
    May 11 2005

    Rock Review | System of a Down
    Being Brash to Stir Things Up

    By JON PARELES
    Published: May 11, 2005

    System of a Down doesn't mind taking some cheap shots. The band
    played Irving Plaza on Monday night fresh from its appearance on
    "Saturday Night Live," where its leader, Serj Tankian, used a
    four-letter word and caused the predictable brouhaha, which gave him
    something to brag about onstage.


    Forum: Popular Music
    Televised profanity was just the thing to stir some interest in the
    band's brief new album, "Mezmerize" (American/Columbia), to be
    released on Tuesday, but didn't get much exposure in the band's set,
    which drew mostly on its 2001 album, "Toxicity" (American/Columbia).
    Mr. Tankian's other stage banter was about sex, drugs and pumping up
    a crowd that had already turned the floor into a bruising mosh pit.

    The music was made for that: thrashing, stop-start rock that slowed
    down and got melodic just long enough to give fans a breather before
    the next blast of fast power chords and strobe lights. In concert,
    System of a Down's songs are like throttles governing the speed and
    impact of the crowd. But for all its muscle, the band has more on its
    mind than brute force.

    System of a Down, whose members are Armenian-American, sings about
    genocide, war, religion, oppression and freedom. Between the salvos
    of speed metal, the songs switched - sometimes instantly - to
    minor-mode tunes that hinted at Eastern European origins, and the
    nasal bark that Mr. Tankian used for fast passages turned to a
    sustained, almost mournful tenor.

    For all his sardonic vocal mannerisms, Mr. Tankian rarely jokes; even
    "Cigaro," the hyperbolic sexual boast from "Mezmerize," turned out to
    be about greed and overconsumption: "Burning through the world's
    resources, then we turn and hide." System of a Down can get away with
    slinging a lot of messages as long as the music keeps pummeling.
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