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Political System Early exposure to real-life evil still fuels band

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  • Political System Early exposure to real-life evil still fuels band

    Charleston Gazette (West Virginia)
    August 18, 2005, Thursday

    MUSIC Political System Early exposure to real-life evil still fuels
    band

    Evelyn McDonnell Knight Ridder Newspapers

    Among the myriad norm deviations that make System of a Down one of
    the millennium's strangest musical acts is the fact that a holocaust
    indirectly spawned the group.

    >>From 1915-23, an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed by the
    Turkish government in a horrific campaign of massacres, deportation,
    starvation and torture. For System, this brutal history is something
    more than prime heavy metal song fodder: It's personal.

    "Because of the genocide, Armenians scattered," System bassist Shavo
    Odadjian explains over the phone from his Los Angeles home. A number of
    the displaced, including 4-year-old Odadjian and his future bandmates,
    eventually made their way to America's 20th-century promised land:
    Hollywood. System of a Down is probably the first group whose members
    all attended an Armenian-American academy.

    Odadjian, guitarist/singer Daron Malakian, singer Serj Tankian and
    drummer John Dolmayan all speak Armenian. And while their music
    isn't filled with Armenian instruments, their shared ethnic history
    undoubtedly unites them - and shapes their distinct worldview.

    They're a thrash band that throws in operatic trills. Progressive in
    their musical tastes and politics, they've shot a video with Michael
    Moore. On "Mesmerize," their recently released fourth album, they
    mostly seem to be channeling the goofy, artsy ghost of Frank Zappa,
    if he were in Metallica.

    The band members' experiences as progeny of the Armenian diaspora
    provided the fuel for "Mesmerize" and "Hypnotize," its companion CD
    to be released in late fall. Malakian's family fled from Armenia to
    Iraq before winding up in California. (Malakian was born in Hollywood,
    Odadjian in Armenia, Tankian and Dolmayan in Lebanon.)

    His personal and politicized fear, anger and sorrow drive "Mesmerize,"
    from the opening "Soldier Side," through the fierce anti-war
    "B.Y.O.B." to the melancholy "Sad Statue," in which the Statue of
    Liberty - the beacon of immigrants - weeps over her torn domicile.

    "He sees it totally differently," says Odadjian of Malakian's view
    of the war in Iraq. "It's not because he's from there, but because
    it's family. He doesn't know when he's going to get that call saying
    something's happened to somebody."

    Malakian's need to express his feelings on global politics changed
    the very dynamic of the band. For the first time, on "Mesmerize," the
    guitarist wrote the majority of lyrics and sings leads, while Tankian,
    the traditional front man, plays such instruments as acoustic guitars,
    piano and synthesizers (and co-writes and sings). It's as if Keith
    Richards and Mick Jagger traded roles in the Rolling Stones.

    System built a reputation by gigging before releasing their self-titled
    debut, on Rick Rubin's American label. Rubin produced the band's
    four records to date, including '01's "Toxicity," which became an
    unlikely multiplatinum global hit with such singles as "Aerials" and
    "Chop Suey!"

    System's intense, sometimes grandiose music has also earned the
    group its share of detractors. For the haters, the best thing about
    "Mesmerize" is the fact it's mercifully short, just 36 minutes.
    Odadjian says the group chose to release the two CDs separately,
    rather than as a double album, because they thought songs would get
    lost to modern listeners' short attention spans.

    "The youth of today has ADD, or at least they like to say they do.
    The school we came from, albums were 11, 12, 13 songs, and every song
    meant something."

    With his videos and the CD art, Odadjian says he tries to supplement
    the songs, not duplicate or explicate them. Like the band's odd name,
    or such lyrics as "Gorgonzola gonorrhea," some things are better
    left unprobed.

    "We don't like to explain what we mean. It takes away the mystery.
    It's good to leave it to the person that's seeing it or experiencing
    it. I think our band is like an abstract painting."
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