Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

System Of A Down - Hypnotic, Smart

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

  • System Of A Down - Hypnotic, Smart

    SYSTEM OF A DOWN - HYPNOTIC, SMART
    By Jeff Kaliss, CONTRIBUTOR

    Inside Bay Area, CA
    Oct 5 2005

    'IDON'T THINK I've ever really had my hands on the wheel," says rocker
    Serj Tankian, extending a metaphor on his way to a gig in Chicago.

    "I've been a passenger on a plane going wherever I'm supposed to go,
    more than being any type of pilot. And I'm still on the plane.

    Sometimes it goes in directions I didn't anticipate. And sometimes
    it goes to where I think I'm going."

    Tankian's material plane, carrying his rock band System of a Down,
    will touch down in Oakland for System's Saturday show at the Oakland
    Arena. The band is touring behind its most recent, chart-topping album
    "Mezmerize" (American Music/Columbia Records), the first half of a
    protracted two-CD release that will be completed with "Hypnotize"
    at the end of next month.

    The lyricist and vocalist's transcendence of his ego is striking,
    in view of his vocalized forthrightness and System's accelerating
    success. Since its eponymous recording debut in 1998, the group has
    sold more than 10 million discs - no small accomplishment for an act
    whose audible theatricality and lyrical intelligence place it way
    above attempts at rock categorization. (The unique name was lifted
    from its members' visionary poetry.)

    In performance, System magnetizes audiences with visual as well
    as aural impact. Tankian's eccentric bushiness, not to mention his
    confrontational agenda, is evocative of one of his idols, the late
    Frank Zappa.

    Guitarist Daron Malakian, co-creator of most of the band's repertoire,
    wields the wild, wide-eyed magic of a silent-movie comedian. Bassist
    Shavo Odadjian sprouts a braided beard under a bald pate. And drummer
    John Dolmayan, by effective contrast, exudes the trim drama of a
    leading man.

    Although all four are of Armenia ethnicity, only Odadjian was born
    in Armenia. Tankian and Dolmayan were born in Lebanon, Malkian in
    California. Three of the four, including Tankian, attended Pilibos,
    a private school operating under the auspices of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church in Hollywood.

    System's Pilibos alumni haven't hesitated to violate the school's
    published disciplinary policy, prohibiting "inappropriate hair style,"
    "threatening language and gestures," "swearing," and "disrespect for
    authority" - all staples of the band's reputation.

    Both the multi-platinum second album "Toxicity" and the
    curiously-marketed followup "Steal This Album!" featured some
    vocals and ethnic instruments played by Armenian folk artist Arto
    Tuncboyaciyan, to whom Tankian attributes "the voice of the Caucasus,
    a faraway voice that travels."

    But whether or not you concur in Newsweek's description of
    "prog-rock-metal-politico-pop with an operatic twist," System's mode
    and appeal are solid rock.

    Tankian's own voice, in the space of less than a minute, can pass
    from a doleful whisper to sweet bel canto vibrato to an earthquaking
    scream, backed by Malakian's vocal harmonies and the instruments'
    massed molten assault.

    "I like the dynamics of life," Tankian says. "I like it when it rains,
    and suddenly the sun comes out, and I like it when it's really silent
    and then a loud booming noise comes through. Or vice-versa."

    What Tankian is singing about also mutates over the course of
    "Mezmerize," sometimes eluding identification.

    "B.Y.O.B." comes off as a condemnation of the war in Iraq. "Violent
    Pornography" pinions crude commercial television. "Sad Statue" gives
    Lady Liberty a reason to weep about "human suffering." "Old School
    Hollywood" plays off Malakian's jaded experience at a celebrity
    baseball game in Dodger Stadium. As in much rock, there are also
    songs about romance and personal angst.

    "People think our music's very aggressive or angry or whatever, and
    it's just the opposite, really," Tankian says. "I like laughing. And
    I like being really calm before a show, and smiley."

    He acknowledges being "moved by music that had social and political
    commentary, from the Beatles all the way up to Rage Against the
    Machine."

    For Tankian, the most powerful artists have been "those that have
    prescribed the solution through the good feeling of the music itself,
    like the Beatles and Bob Marley and Bob Dylan."

    Musicians like these are "not just talking about the pain and the
    hurt of a mad society or modern entropy or whatever you want to call
    it, but more of just kind of touching the human spirit in a way that
    makes us feel like we are one."
Working...
X