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  • Strange power: System of a Down Smog

    SUNDAY TELEGRAPH(LONDON)
    June 12, 2005, Sunday

    Strange power

    BY Ben Thompson

    System of a Down Smog

    Imagine Jimi Hendrix has been magically brought back to life and you
    are taking him on a voyage of discovery to find out how far rock 'n'
    roll has come (or, more accurately, not come) in the 35 years since
    his tragically early demise. There is probably only one band in the
    world at the moment with the power to make the great man scratch his
    head in appreciative bewilderment and wonder "How on earth did that
    happen?" That band is System of a Down.

    On Sunday, at the third of three sold-out shows at the Brixton
    Academy, this maverick Armenian-American heavy-rock quartet scales
    improbable heights of frenetic precision. Playing in front of
    fairground distorting mirrors which intensify the already
    hallucinogenic vigour of their performance, they take a series of
    disparate musical ingredients - Armenian folk styles, elements of
    electro-pop, funk and rap (with the occasional Dire Straits or Wham
    cover thrown in, just to keep the crowd on their toes) - and mix them
    together in a very large and very metallic cauldron. The sound that
    results is utterly, savagely distinctive.

    Shaven-headed drummer John Dolmoyan blurs the line between human
    beat-keeper and well-oiled piece of industrial machinery. His partner
    in rhythm, the excellently named Shavo Odadjian, plays bass-lines as
    fluid and sinuous as the plaited beard which stretches down from his
    chin to his midriff. But it's the very human entanglement of two
    contrasting front-people which - as with Lennon and McCartney, Page
    and Plant or Peters & Lee - makes System of a Down truly special.

    Singer Serj Tankian cultivates the demeanour of an Old Testament
    prophet and looks like Antony Sher playing the lead in a Frank Zappa
    biopic. With his thinning hair, slightly bulging eyes and undying
    admiration for the early works of Iron Maiden, guitarist Daron
    Malakian initially seems a rather less imposing character, but he is
    hugely talented. Not only can he play the guitar like five or six
    different people at once, he also writes songs that have tunes. And
    good ones, too; the kind that 4,000 people are happy to sing along
    with, even though Mezmerize, the album they're taken from, has only
    been out for a couple of weeks.

    Lyrics such as "What is in us that turns a deaf ear to the cries of
    human suffering?" or "Eloquence belongs to the conqueror" may not be
    conventional karaoke material, but that doesn't seem to bother anyone
    in this crowd. And by the time this performance reaches a thunderous
    climax with "Toxicity", the band's signature 2001 eco-anthem (sample
    lyric: "Eating seeds is a pastime/activity"), System of a Down's
    battle cry - "Somewhere between sacred silence and sleep, Disorder!
    Disorder! Disorder!" - makes an irresistible kind of sense.

    THOUGH HIS records have yet to sell in quite the seven-figure
    quantities that System of a Down's do, any list of America's five
    greatest living songwriters which didn't include Smog's Bill Callahan
    would be based on a fundamental misconception. This master of the
    lugubrious aperu takes to the Islington Academy stage on Thursday
    night with the brittle assurance of a first-year student in an Ivy
    League tutorial. As opening figures of speech go, Callahan's "With
    the grace of a corpse in a rip-tide..." certainly puts down a marker.
    And before the main body of his set concludes with a much loved
    earlier song about "letting himself be held like a big old baby", he
    and his band have ambled the gamut from death to life, from the rush
    of a tidal race to the stillness of sleeping horses.
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