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It was 1995. Bill Clinton was president of the United States, O.J. Simpson was acquitted in the trial of the century and four Armenian guys in Los Angeles decided to get together to form System Of A Down, a band that has since become one of music’s most anomalous and experimental ensembles.
Fusing thrashabout metal and traces of Old World sounds with impassioned vocals and lyrics that teeter between the fervently political to the overtly puerile, it’s obvious that vocalist Serj Tankian, guitarist Daron Malakian, bassist Shavo Odadjian and drummer John Dolmayan never planned on going with the flow.
Now, nearly four years after releasing 2001’s multi-platinum-selling Toxicity, the group is ready to unleash their most prolific opus to date,
Mesmerize/Hypnotize, the album possesses much of the same urgency found on past recordings, only this time the vocal exchange between frontman and guitarist has taken on a larger role.
“There’s definitely more interplay between Daron and me,” says
Tankian. “The way we harmonize and the different pitches of our voices have
changed the sound of our band.”
Like many System songs, the title
track “Hypnotize” finds Serj and Daron harmonizing on the same line (“I’m
just sitting in my car / Waiting for my girl”) yet the textural differences
between the two keep it interesting. Meanwhile, the band’s herky-jerky
tendencies remain intact on tracks ranging from the raucous “Cigaro” and
“B.Y.O.B.” (which stands for “Bring Your Own Bombs” and pairs an R&B-like
party vibe with weighty lyrics about war) to “Lost in Hollywood” (a
phony-people-suck power ballad) and “Vicinity of Obscenity,” an
irrepressibly screwy homage to Frank Zappa that dishes out absurd lyrics
like “Feel the sweet / Beat the meat.”
“System has always had a broad
spectrum of songs,” says a remarkably mellow Malakian on a sunny February
afternoon. “We’ve had heavier songs and lighter songs, like on Toxicity we
have ‘Aerials’ and we have ‘Prison Song.’ You’ll see that same diversity in
this record, but with different songs.”
A couple of weeks later on a
drizzly March day, Tankian, bearing that peaceful Mona Lisa smile he does so
well, echoes a similar sentiment. “Our new songs have themes that we hit
upon in the past, so there’s still that System continuity,” he remarks. “But
there are new things we address, too. Actually, I think a lot of the songs
are sillier.”
Even the most sobering songs have a funny twinge to
them, says Tankian. “Something as serious as ‘B.Y.O.B.’ is done in a really
silly fashion with its funky chorus, and I think it works with us really
well.”
But while the music does have a certain novelty about it,
lambasting refrains like “Why don’t presidents fight the war? / Why do they
always send the poor?” prove the band is by no means taking a rest from
being political.
“I’ve figured out that it’s not really people that
refer to us as a political band, it’s journalists,” says Tankian. “It’s
understandable because [journalists] don’t generally talk to bands that
really say anything. We are a very socially conscious band, but we’re also
very humorous. I think that’s why people swallow our pill — because it’s a
pill disguised as not being a pill.”
That pill is easiest swallowed
when the testosterone is curbed and the intonations of their Armenian
heritage are able to take center stage as they do on the lilting track
“Question.” Opening with flamenco-like guitars and Tankian gently singing
“Sweet berries for two / Ghosts are no different than you / Ghosts are now
waiting for you,” the song later crescendos with Tankian’s mesmeric bellows
and Malakian’s piquant vocals asking, “Do we, do we know / When we fly /
When we, when we go / Do we die?” It’s these kinds of moments when the
resultant sound can only be summed up in an adjective almost never used
when describing metal: beautiful.
With some 30 tracks in total,
Mezmerize/Hypnotize is indeed both an earful and a mouthful. But as has been
the case since the beginning, Malakian — whose father Vartan Malakian did
the artwork for the album — believes that what happens now is beside the
point. “I’m probably more scared than I am excited, to be honest with you.
But I’m confident people are gonna like it. At the same time, it would be
just as important to me if no one ever heard it. You’ve got to understand
that my dad’s been an artist my whole life and he’s never shown people his
art. And that’s where I come from. I don’t care about whether or not anyone
is going to accept it. What it comes down to is having that emotion come out
of me and being true to the art.”
Likewise, Tankian, who says he
finds inspiration from “visuals, sound, music, motion and movies” to
“conversations and wind chimes,” affirms that the creative process is really
what it’s all about. “I think the best artists are those that do what our
vision tells us to do regardless of recognition. We never started this to be
a critically acclaimed band or a popularly accepted band. That’s after the
fact, so it’s a double blessing and we’re grateful. But if there were no
praise or popularity, we’d still be doing what we want to do.”
Such
talk may seem idle considering System Of A Down has already reaped
mainstream acclaim and multimillion sales. But Malakian is careful to point
out the history of the band’s commercial success. “Before Toxicity blew up,
our first record went gold and then some. And that was strictly off touring;
no singles, no nothing. It wasn’t until the powers-that-be got a hold of it
that System was constantly getting played on the MTVs and KROQs of the
world,” he explains.
“And that’s exactly why we’ve taken so damn long
to put out another fucking record,” he reveals.
“When I saw that
happen and I saw that we put out three singles [from Toxicity] and all of a
sudden everybody in the mall knows who the fuck I am, I realized that we had
to go away. Yeah, we put out Steal this Album!. But we didn’t tour and we
put out one single. And the reason we put out the single ‘Boom!’ was
because we felt we had to because the war was coming out and we had an
opportunity to say something. It was more of an integrity thing.”
That the band has maintained their level of integrity is “the reason we’re
ten years old,” Malakian declares. “We’re not big because we’re four cute
guys! It’s because we’re honest. It’s because the one thing you can’t fuck
with is someone going out there and really doing it on their own. It’s
because we speak the things that people don’t have the balls to say.”
After talking with Malakian for hours, it becomes clear that
Mezmerize/Hypnotize, like everything else in System, has been a labor of
love. Having produced the album with Rick Rubin and having written the music
and a bulk of the lyrics (not to mention actually playing many of the
instruments), Malakian undoubtedly plays a central role in the band.
“There’s no law in System Of A Down. There’s no rule that says one day John
won’t play some keyboards or that I might get behind the drums or that Shavo
will sing. It’s all about how to make the song better.”
Even so, one
wonders if there isn’t a Malakian solo project on the horizon.
“I
always want to be a part of a band, I want to be a part of a group,” he
promptly replies. “I’m not about calling it ‘The Daron Malakian Show.’ Serj
plays a big part in what happens with System Of A Down. I write a lot of the
shit, but there are a lot of things that he comes in with lyrically. What he
and the other guys bring to the table is important and I don’t want to
discredit anybody. I don’t have any reason to have it be a solo project to
cater to my ego. I dig being with those guys, even kind of being the quiet
one. I know that’s tough to believe after seeing me on stage, but it’s
true.”
As the discussion comes to a close, Malakian says this:
“There’s a line from one of our old songs ‘War’ that Serj wrote, and his
line was ‘You must enter a room to destroy it.’ So when we’re being played
on the radio and on television, to me it’s like we’ve entered a room and
that’s our way of destroying it. We have more access now and power not to
necessarily destroy the powers that be, but to destroy their way of doing
things.”
For Malakian, “their” way of doing things is “playing it
safe” in a world that requires courage and reform. “I think a lot of these
powerful outlets like MTV clog themselves with bands that follow a formula
and don’t say much. We don’t move in that direction. We’re moving with
complete animal instinct. It’s like the drug companies coming in and telling
me this drug’s good and this drug’s bad. They put out ads for new drugs that
make your dick longer and they’re like, it’s great, look how happy everyone
is dancing in the fucking commercial. They put out antidepressants like
candy. So who’s deciding? Same with the radio trying to dictate what’s good
and what’s bad.”
“The fact that we’re four Armenian guys from L.A. …
who would’ve imagined that shit?” he muses. “That’s what I mean about
entering a room and destroying it. I don’t think we’re gonna change the
world, but I do believe that we can make some kind of dent.”
When
it’s time to say goodbye to Tankian during his interview, the always-humble
frontman puts it all in perspective. “We do System because we love it. It’s
not one of those things that we can fake. To some, success means making
lots of money or having people like you. To me, success is based on
following your path. If I wasn’t happy doing what I’m doing, then I would
just stop.”
A decade has come and gone for System Of A Down. Let’s
hope the path has a long way to go.
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Photo by Kevin Scanlo "We’re not big because we’re four cute
guys! It’s because we’re honest."-SOAD |
Article wrote By Mar Yvette
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