Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Metal's new political voice

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Metal's new political voice

    Jerusalem Post
    June 21 2005

    Metal's new political voice
    By HARRY RUBENSTEIN


    SYSTEM OF A DOWN
    Mesmerize
    (NMC)

    With the dispersion of American political rockers Rage Against the
    Machine, the metal scene needed a new band to don the mantle.

    Enter System of a Down (SOAD), a Los Angeles-based ethnic-Armenian
    nu-metal outfit that blasted onto the scene in the mid-Nineties. With
    one of the most unique sounds around, SOAD literally left its
    contemporaries in the dust (and in used CD bins around the world).

    On Mesmerize, the first of two releases set for 2005 (Hypnotize will
    hit stores this fall), the band opens with "B.Y.O.B." a syncopated
    thrash-inspired number that quickly turns into a maelstrom of chaotic
    noise. When the chorus hits, Serj Tankian melodically belts the R&B
    sounding and incredibly sarcastic line "Everybody's going to the
    party, have a real good time. Dancing in the desert blowing up the
    sunshine."

    The attack on the war in Iraq continues as he screams: "Why don't
    presidents fight the war? Why do they always send the poor?"

    The relentless sonic assault continues as SOAD squeezes 11
    unapologetic, fast-paced songs saturated in melody, inventive time
    signatures and adventurous harmonies into an astounding 36 minutes.

    Besides its obvious musical prowess, SOAD's greatest strength is the
    band's embracing of its Armenian heritage. The group is as inspired
    by Eighties LA hardcore music as it is by its ethnic roots, and there
    are numerous instances when the songs devolve into Armenian folk,
    with the appropriate ethnic guitar riffage eventually taking it into
    a beautifully harmonious mess of metal.

    Guitarist Daron Malakian's harmonies are outstanding, and at times,
    his Middle-Eastern-inspired guitar playing adds to the relevance of
    this quirky yet outstanding metal album.
Working...
X