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Now it's personal; System of a Down is playing a benefit concert

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  • Now it's personal; System of a Down is playing a benefit concert

    Los Angeles Times
    April 22, 2004 Thursday
    Home Edition

    THE ARTS;
    POP MUSIC;
    Now it's personal;
    System of a Down is playing a benefit concert to bring attention to
    the Armenian genocide.

    by Susan Carpenter, Times Staff Writer

    Tackling everything from shortsighted social policies to media
    consolidation to the lemming-like conformity of the masses, System of
    a Down is one of the most overtly political bands in modern rock, but
    don't call them a political band. The Los Angeles four-piece prefers
    the more neutral "art" label.

    Even so, they'll be using their art to make a loud political
    statement when they headline "Souls, 2004," a concert benefiting
    organizations working to eradicate genocides across the globe and to
    encourage recognition of the Armenian genocide. The concert takes
    place Saturday, on the commemoration of the Ottoman Empire's killing
    of about 1.5 million Armenians from 1915 to 1923. It's an atrocity
    few Americans know about. It isn't written in most school textbooks,
    nor is it formally recognized by the U.S. government, despite decades
    of promises from various presidents and present-day Congressional
    initiatives. But it's a deeply personal issue to the band's members,
    all of whom are of Armenian descent.

    "My grandfather never knew how old he was because so much of my
    family history was lost in the Armenian genocide," said guitarist
    Daron Malakian, the only member of the band who was born in the U.S.

    "If not for my grandfather's memories, I would know nothing of my
    family tree before his lifetime," said singer Serj Tankian, whose
    accent still bears traces of a faraway land.

    "It's just really personal for all of us," bassist Shavo Odadjian
    said. "There's a lot of political issues of course that go with it,
    but the reason why it's called Souls for me is there's all these
    souls that aren't at rest right now. Their deaths are overlooked."

    The subject of the Armenian genocide is not the group's only concern,
    though it has long been addressed by the band. The band's 1998 smash
    success, the self-titled "System of a Down," concluded with an
    incendiary, metal-edged takedown called "P.L.U.C.K. (Politically
    Lying, Unholy, Cowardly Killers)." Three years later, on their
    Grammy-nominated follow-up, "Toxicity," they again brought it up on
    the short but effective "X."

    With "Souls, 2004," they take the power of those lyrics and turn them
    into direct action. The second in what they hope will be an annual
    concert series designed to raise awareness of the issue and exert
    political pressure on the U.S. and Turkish governments to recognize
    the genocide, the band expects to raise about $100,000 from this
    weekend's concert at the Greek Theatre.

    But the show will not be a political rally. There will be no fiery
    speeches, no sloganeering, no banners, though booklets about the
    genocide will be available for those who are interested. Everyone
    else can just rock out to System's unique, thinking man's metal,
    which will be primed with warmups from Saul Williams, Zach Hill and
    Bad Acid Trip, the latter of which is signed to Tankian's label,
    Serjical Strike.

    "People don't like hearing speeches," Tankian said. "We're just gonna
    play."

    Playing is, after all, what they do best. Long before their signing
    to American Recordings in 1997, they had developed a huge following
    based entirely on their live shows -- tireless episodes of intense,
    hard-core mayhem led by the cynically messianic Tankian and propelled
    by a tightly wound rhythm section. Seven years and three records
    later, their shows have lost none of their spit and sizzle.

    Heralded as the vanguard of the nu-metal scene -- another label they
    disdain -- the group is at work on its next record. In the North
    Hollywood studio where System rehearses, more than 20 songs are
    listed on a marker board, but how many or which of those songs will
    make it on the record hasn't been decided. Nor has the record's
    release date.

    All the group will say about the new album is that "it will make you
    think and laugh at the same time," according to Malakian, who pens
    the music. In other words, it will do what their records have always
    done -- juxtapose the absurd and the serious while playing with
    tempos and temperaments.

    During a recent interview with the band, the conversation danced from
    subject to subject with little prompting -- the evils of television,
    short-attention-span political coverage, corporate mind control,
    two-party politics, individualistic selfishness, apathetic teens, the
    Armenian genocide, spirituality. How much, if any, of those topics
    will be addressed on their new record is unknown. What's clear is
    that ever since the group's first hit single in 1998 -- the lyrically
    sarcastic, vocally schizophrenic and rhythmically nonlinear "Sugar"
    -- System of a Down hasn't played by conventional rock rules.

    "We're a band that reflects life," Malakian said. "Even though we do
    talk politics, life is all around us. Politics is a part of life. We
    just mesh it all into our art. We're more a social band than a
    political band."

    Perhaps more accurately, they are a social band concerned with
    political issues that are shaped by a common ancestry and anchored
    with a deep spirituality.

    "I kind of always had the vibe from when we were first on tour, just
    the souls of the genocide of our ancestors, of our grandparents, of
    our grandparents' parents, that they had something to do with our
    success, spiritually saying, and pushed us along," Malakian said.

    Addressing the Armenian genocide, he said, "is our duty in a way.
    There isn't exactly a million Armenians out there who are so famous
    in the entertainment industry."

    Susan Carpenter can be reached at mailto:[email protected].

    *

    System of a Down

    On their heritage and calling attention to the Armenian genocide:

    Serj Tankian, vocalist

    "Geopolitics or military strategy is not an excuse to deny the
    killing of 1.5 million people.... Could you envision us making a deal
    with modern Germany if they backed us on the war on Iraq if only we
    go back and we destroy the Holocaust museum? Well, that's what we're
    doing with Turkey."

    Daron Malakian, guitarist

    "Everybody used to tell us, 'Change this, change that. Four Armenian
    guys? Who's gonna buy that?' ... One thing that kept me confident we
    were doing the right thing is we have a huge backing on the spiritual
    side."

    John Dolmayan, drummer

    "We've come from very similar places in one respect, and in another,
    all four of us come from very different backgrounds. So we have that
    heritage in common. It all came out of our love for music. Everything
    we have together is built on our love for music."

    Shavo Odadjian, bass player

    "To me, it's not really a political thing, it's more of a personal
    thing because I don't know beyond my grandparents. My grandfather
    never knew his birthday. It's not just me; most Armenians went
    through this."

    *

    `Souls, 2004'

    Where: The Greek Theatre, 2700 N. Vermont, L.A.

    When: Saturday, 7:30 p.m.

    Price: $45

    Info: (323) 665-1927 or www.systemofadown.com

    GRAPHIC: PHOTO: (no caption) PHOTO: (no caption) PHOTO: (no caption)
    PHOTO: (no caption) PHOTO: PLAYING POLITICS: Lyrics by System of a
    Down frequently deal with social and political issues. PHOTOGRAPHER:
    Photographs by Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times
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