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  • Still bucking the System

    Sunday Mail (South Australia)
    June 5, 2005 Sunday

    Still bucking the System

    by GREG KOT


    Releasing two albums in one year is no problem for this US band, says
    GREG KOT

    SYSTEM of a Down has never been one to conform, despite mainstream
    success.

    So it's no surprise the LA quartet, which has sold nearly 10 million
    albums, is bringing out a double album in two halves - one now, the
    other later this year.

    So far, the oddball strategy is working. The first album, Mezmerize,
    debuted at No. 1 on the Australian charts last week.

    It will be followed by Hypnotize.

    The hard-rock foursome had such a bounty of material, thanks to the
    prolific writing of guitarist Daron Malakian and singer Serj Tankian,
    they could not fathom how to fit it all on one disc during recording
    sessions with longtime producer and collaborator Rick Rubin.

    "The concern was that if we put it all out at once, people would
    gravitate toward certain songs and not really experience all of it,"
    Rubin said. "So we thought: 'Let's put it out in two pieces, even
    though we still think of it as one project.'

    "The nature of System's music is pretty overwhelming to begin with -
    it's complicated, difficult music.

    "Putting two albums of that out at once just might drive you crazy."

    While he shares songwriting duties, Malakian, in particular, has his
    imprint on Mezmerize, not only as a songwriter, arranger and
    guitarist, but also as a singer.

    For him, music is an obsession.

    "I have a house (in an LA suburb) with guitars, keyboards, drums, all
    over the place and I rarely ever leave it. If I'm not playing music
    there, I'm listening to it," he said. "I rarely go out. Music is
    pretty much all I do."

    Malakian's obsession has helped make System one of the signature
    hard-rock bands of the last decade.

    The band's craziness - dramatic leaps in tempo, texture and style
    from thrash-metal stomp to droning East European folk harmonics - is
    compressed into tightly scripted pop songs on everything from Iraq to
    pop-culture "brainwashing".

    It makes the quartet one of rock's boldest bands, and one of its
    unlikeliest success stories - four Armenian outcasts who were told by
    Hollywood talent scouts in the 1990s they didn't fit in. "We weren't
    white, black or Latino," Malakian said. "We didn't belong in any
    category they could market to."

    Tankian was born in Beirut, Lebanon, 38 years ago. His parents
    emigrated to LA in 1975, the year Malakian was born.

    Malakian's parents had just moved from Iraq the year before, and he
    still has relatives there, giving added immediacy to songs such as
    Cigaro that address American policy in the Middle East.

    "We've been cast as a political band, but really, the things we're
    addressing are personal, because they affect us directly," Tankian
    said.

    Malakian sighs when politics comes up. "It's life," he said. "We have
    no choice but to reflect our lives. I can sympathise with a family
    that is endangered by this war, whether they are the parents of an
    American soldier or Iraqis, because I have all sorts of family living
    there.

    "I don't understand some of the music I hear on MTV or the radio,
    because they don't mention the times we live in. Times like this
    should bring out a big, strong creative movement."

    System of a Down is doing its share. The seeds for that ceaseless
    invention were in place long before Malakian was in rock bands.

    His parents were successful sculptors in Iraq, but had to work day
    jobs after they moved to America, cultivating their passion for art
    in their spare time.

    His father's dark and mysteriouis artwork adorns Mezmerize's cover.

    "My dad is my biggest influence on me as a musician, even though he's
    not a musician," Malakian said.

    "I even learned from his mistakes. I remember him working on
    paintings for days and my mother saying, 'Stop, you're ruining it'.

    "It made me realise that sometimes you have to hold back some of your
    ideas to make the art work," he said. "That what you leave out can be
    just as important as what you leave in." Tankian came to music much
    later than Malakian, and projects a more worldly, confident air.

    He's run a software company and worked in jewellery, all the while
    writing poems, lyrics and music.

    "I didn't start writing music and playing instruments until I went to
    college. When I did, I realised I was famished for them. I've been
    playing like a madman ever since," he said.

    On first impression, Mezmerize isn't quite as striking or consistent
    as 2001's Toxicity. Both Rubin and Malakian suggest some of the best
    songs were left for Hypnotize, which suggests with more pruning,
    System could have made a monster single disc. As it is, Mezmerize is
    still a relentless 36-minute thrill ride.

    The most compelling development is the way the voices of Malakian and
    Tankian blend; their eerie harmonies sound as ancient as their
    long-lost homelands.

    "Everything comes down to the song with these guys," Rubin said.

    "That emphasis has grown with each album. On these new albums, they
    take more chances in more directions than ever before.

    "But they know that people don't remember albums because they sound
    great. They remember songs because great songs live forever."

    Mezmerize is out now. It is reviewed on Page 14.
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