Daron Malakian   Serj Tankian   Shavo Odadjian   John Dolmayan
 
New Members, Register Here

User name Password
Remember me
Support SOADFans

System of A Down, Getting All Worked Up
Posted by sdsj3291 on Wednesday, November 23, 2005 - 12:32 PM

The Washington PostSystem of a Down is a heavy-metal band that can do fury and aggression with the best of them. And yet here is Daron Malakian, the chief architect of the group's sound, shuffling into the 1st Mariner Arena dressing room, shoulders slumped, face drooping, eyes averted, as if he's the most timid person in the building, if not the entire Inner Harbor. He nods at a visitor, then meekly extends his arm and offers a totally un -rock-and-roll handshake, a sort of dead fish with fingers.


His assistant appears more self-assured than Malakian does. So do the System roadies, the band's personal chef, Malakian's leggy fashion-model girlfriend, the tour-bus driver -- even the woman selling hot dogs at a concession stand upstairs on the fan-filled concourse, where the hair is long, the testosterone is thick and the dress code calls for black T-shirts celebrating this god of thunder (Iron Maiden) or that one (Metallica).

 

Oh, if only the belligerent kids could see the new metal deity, Malakian, right now, in the arena's bowels. System's guitarist, part-time singer and principal songwriter -- the man behind the majority of the Los Angeles-based Armenian American quartet's lyrics and melodies, not to mention some of the most unconventional arrangements to reach the top of the Billboard charts in ages -- is slouched in a ratty armchair, appearing fragile, shy and not a little uneasy. Speaking so softly that it's hard to hear his quivering stoner's voice over the hum of an air-conditioning box, Malakian addresses the dichotomy of his System of a Down persona and his downtime self.

"It's crazy, like a complete Jekyll-and-Hyde syndrome," he says, two hours before System takes the stage for a set of artsy, idiosyncratic hard rock that defies tidy definition. He shrugs almost apologetically, then takes a drag from a small pipe packed with weed. "It's like Prozac to me -- it takes the edge off," he says. He is wearing a T-shirt that declares: "Hard drugs made me a better person." He is also wearing metallic-silver sneakers. He is slight and relatively short, with a boyish face lined with a C. Everett Koop-style beard.

While Malakian might seem like a man in need of a self-help book, or at least a pep talk from Stuart Smalley, he needs none of that in the studio or onstage, where he's bold, brash and cocksure.

Just watch him later on this hot August night as he shrieks into a microphone, his posture straightened, his bloodshot eyes popped open like a bug's as he glares at the crowd, which he antagonizes with obscene gestures that, in the calculus of hard-edged music, have a funny way of strengthening the artist-fan bond. His guitar riffs occasionally reach breakneck speed (not to mention ear-shattering volume) and have the overall effect of whipping the audience into a frenzy, particularly in that elbows-up caldron of rage known as the mosh pit. Even the Armenian-flag-waving fans in the green zone of reserved seating can't help but thrash about.

A similar sneering attitude comes through on System of a Down's studio albums, the newest of which, "Hypnotize," will be released Tuesday. (It's the second part of an adventurous double album that the band sliced into halves. The first, "Mezmerize," was released in May.)

"I don't think when I'm doing music," Malakian says backstage. "Things just happen. I've even taken my clothes off while performing. But then I'm so shy that I can't even take my clothes off in the dressing room, even though it's just the other guys in the band in here with me. It's really weird."

Which pretty much sums up System of a Down.

Though hard and heavy at its core, with a strong sociopolitical foundation (Michael Moore directed one of the band's videos), System's music is also funny, satirical and singularly bizarre. The group, which suggests the Mothers of Invention headlining at the Headbangers Ball, has a penchant for spiking even its thrashiest songs with pretty pop melodies, circus-opera flourishes and Middle Eastern and East Asian instrumentation, not to mention tricky time signatures, unusual chord progressions and the occasional oddball lyric such as "gonorrhea gorgonzola."

A System-listening experience, then, might go like this: One moment you're pummeled by speed-metal riffs, a furious kick-drum assault and a howling rant about hypocrisy and war; the next, you're humming along to a buoyant pop-reggae chorus about "going to the party" (in the desert) and having "a real good time" (at war). Then the hammer drops again, and the tempo shifts, and the thrashiness and cartoonish vocal absurdity resume, and the song eventually just takes you to the land of the berserk.

And yet, despite its inherent strangeness, or maybe because of it, this song, "B.Y.O.B.," became one of 2005's biggest rock-radio hits.

"We're still playing it," Jim Fox, station manager for KRXQ-FM in Sacramento, says of the single, which System performed in May on "Saturday Night Live," adding an expletive in the live-TV process. "I think the weirdness is a lot of the band's charm. There's a lot of sameness [in rock]. . . . System of a Down really stands out because it sounds so different."


The band is one of the more unlikely success stories in post-millennial popular music, with two consecutive albums -- 2001's "Toxicity" and this year's "Mezmerize" -- entering the Billboard chart at No. 1.

"It trips me the hell out," Malakian says of the band's success. "We don't make easy music, so it's kind of crazy to be here."

In a separate interview, System's lead singer, Serj Tankian, says: "We always knew people connected with our music. From Day One, even before we toured or got signed, before 'Sugar' [the band's first important single, from 1998], the music seemed to touch people in an honest and raw way. But no, I didn't think we'd do these kinds of numbers."

Tankian and Malakian formed System in 1995 with drummer John Dolmayan and bassist Shavo Odadjian. They were four guys in their 20s with disparate musical interests (Depeche Mode, Chet Baker, Christopher Cross, Madonna, etc.) but a shared love of hard and heavy rock.
While cutting their teeth on the Southern California club circuit and watching other bands with less local success land fat recording contracts, System of a Down was, according to Malakian, told by various music-biz suits that to succeed, the band needed (a) a new lead singer and (b) stronger pop hooks, even though (c) it might be impossible to market them to the mostly white metal audience because (d) the musicians were, you know, so Armenian and (e) too weird, anyway.

Eventually, System signed with the visionary producer Rick Rubin, and the band made its major-label debut on his American Recordings imprint. The operators of the industry propaganda machine at Columbia, which distributes American Recordings, cast the band as a nu-metal outfit. The tag didn't make much sense, since System wasn't aligned stylistically with the Deftones and Tools of the world. Still, the mislabeling may have been a blessing for the band, says Brad Tolinski, the editor of Guitar World.

"These guys were grouped in with bands like Korn and Limp Bizkit, and they were able to sneak in under the wire because of those affiliations, even though they didn't sound like them," he says. "And when nu-metal got cleared away, System of a Down was still standing. It was a neat trick. They were clearly able to create their own identity and unique sound."

Here's what System isn't, says Tankian: "We're not the Armenian Rage Against the Machine. Yeah, we have some political songs, but we have more that are about love and life and sex and pogo-stick orgies and all that." There are also entries in the System songbook about, among many other things, Armenian genocide ("P.L.U.C.K." and "X"), media brainwash ("Violent Pornography"), drug possession penalties ("Prison Song"), riot police ("Deer Dance"), war ("Cigaro") and Tony Danza ("Old School Hollywood").

None of which helps anybody put together a neat, pithy description of whatever it is that System of a Down does.

"I've heard us called a wacky, crazy, political Armenian art band," Tankian says. "I guess I'll take that one after 10 years."

Says Malakian: "I even have a tough time explaining the music myself. If you ask six different people, you'll get six different answers."



By J. Freedom du Lac
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 20, 2005; Page N01
 

Read The Rest of the article in the Washington Post website


Share on Facebook                                         

Comments

    12   >

perculator
23.11.05, 17:19

Haha Daron smoking himself silly

*tamara*
23.11.05, 17:45

ah cool, well-written

hey hey Washington Post, that's serious stuff! :P

toxicityking
23.11.05, 20:01

hahahahaha loved it!

LastStand
23.11.05, 20:21

I love it that in every interview, Daron is always, always, always doing weed. It cracks me up. No pun intended.

I_am_from_Bulgaria
23.11.05, 20:36

lol im going to read these whole day :/

Wilson_SOAD
23.11.05, 22:42

Cigaro's about war? First i'd heard about that

MisunderstoodRose_x
23.11.05, 23:47

Pogo-stick orgies...sexeh...

shavosofficiallover
24.11.05, 00:46

WTF?!? htey r still together? jessica and daron? wat? no!!!!!!! i rthought they broke up already a long time ago wtf? i'm soo shocked i swear oh well this article cracks me up lol is so cool andplus he's smokin how cool is that well oh yeah and it also says that jessica cooks? and that sells hot dogs? wtf? well bye peeps.

SnoopKatt
24.11.05, 00:55

"There are also entries in the System songbook about, among many other things, Armenian genocide ("P.L.U.C.K." and "X"), media brainwash ("Violent Pornography"), drug possession penalties ("Prison Song"), riot police ("Deer Dance"), war ("Cigaro") and Tony Danza ("Old School Hollywood")." lol they mention the media, the genocide, the riot police, and then they sudden;y mention Tony Danza.

Jag6770
24.11.05, 01:09

the concert they were talkin about was in august so they miht of broken up since then

meofcourse
24.11.05, 02:28

"There are also entries in the System songbook about, among many other things... Tony Danza " (4th last paragraph, last sentence).

BEST PART! I can imagine someone who's never heard of soad reading that and thinking "What... the... fuck" Ahh.. good times, good times.

antipodeananarchist
24.11.05, 03:21

Wicked article. But wtf?? They called Tool nu-metal!!! How dare they!

imyourbeauty89
25.11.05, 01:44

...they are probably together still.

never know.

btw kick ass article,i enjoyed it:)

bozodaclown
25.11.05, 04:43

well...system of a down is the quintessential example of tolerance and enlightened understanding..saying they are sexist is bulshit..there is not one man on the planet to has never called a girl a bithc, whore, slut..and the heroin reference of prostitution shows how they view the sexual, basic natural side of women...these musicians are extemely inteligent and anyone who doesnt like daron can kiss my ass!!!!!!!!!!!!

bozodaclown
25.11.05, 04:44

o wait wrong article....daron still rocks

markimsoad
25.11.05, 11:26

Fantastic interview...

and fantastic hypnotize heheh

BringYourOwnBombsBitch
29.11.05, 05:13

I was at that concert, August 22nd. 1st Mariner Arena. Amazing show. Fucking spectacular....

musicislifeismusic
29.11.05, 23:10

WHAT??????????????? NEW LEAD SINGER????????????? BASTARDS!!!!!!!!!

    12   >

Only logged in users are allowed to comment. register/log in


 
 Related Stuff

Most-read story in System of a Down related articles:
System's 'Hypnotize' is mesmerizing disorder


Recent News

Random Picture
Achozen in the Studio, early 2008 - photos by greg watermann

Store
Search
Google

Web SOADFans

Home | Forums | Gallery | Downloads | FAQ | GAMES! Songs List | SUPPORT
Daron's Page | Serj's Page | Serj Tankian's Tour Dates |Shavo's Page | John's Page | Scars on Broadway's Page
Disclaimer |  Privacy Policy | Sitemap | Team | Credits | myspace |  Wallpapers | Polls | Tour Dates | Lyrics | UrSession | Facebook
SOADFans RSS    |    SOADFans Forum RSS

Copyright SOADFans.com © 2003-2008. Other Posted Topics, Comments & Images are Property of Their Respective Posters/Owners.