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Political ideas aside, System aims for mesmerizing music

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  • Political ideas aside, System aims for mesmerizing music

    From: "Katia M. Peltekian" <[email protected]>
    Subject: Political ideas aside, System aims for mesmerizing music

    Newsday, NY
    Aug 23 2005

    Political ideas aside, System aims for mesmerizing music


    BY RAFER GUZMÁN
    STAFF WRITER

    August 23, 2005


    If you've heard System of a Down's latest singles, you probably have
    some ideas of what the songs are about. But singer-songwriter Serj
    Tankian says your guess is as good as his.

    "I've had people come up to me with the strangest interpretations of
    what lyrics might mean, and I'm like, 'You go! I never thought of
    that, but that works,'" Tankian says, speaking by phone from a hotel
    in Dallas. "I think true art is a universal reflection, and true
    artists are just messengers of that reflection - or, at best, skilled
    presenters."

    It's that kind of articulate philosophy - not to mention some of
    the most brain-punishing metal-rock in existence - that makes System
    of a Down such an unlikely success story. Their previous studio
    album, 2001's "Toxicity," has sold about 3.6 million copies,
    according to Nielsen SoundScan, and the new "Mezmerize," released in
    May, debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard charts. It's already racked up
    sales of 1.3 million. All this, despite the band's decidedly bizarre
    mix of hardcore, heavy metal, opera and Middle Eastern music. (All
    four of the band's members are of Armenian descent.)

    "Mezmerize" is only the first disc System of a Down plans to deliver
    this year. The follow-up, "Hypnotize," is scheduled for release in
    November. In a change of pace, Tankian takes a backseat to guitarist
    Daron Malakian, who wrote most of the lyrics and music on "Mezmerize"
    (perhaps he's responsible for the misspelled title). Shavo Odadjian,
    System's bassist and unofficial art director, helped create the
    band's light show and mirrored stage set.

    Odadjian got the idea for the stage design from his favorite
    neighborhood bar in Los Angeles. "It's really small, but one wall is
    all mirrors, so you think, 'This bar is huge,'" he explains over the
    phone from a West Palm Beach, Fla., hotel. "And then I thought, 'No
    one's ever done that onstage before, made the stage look twice as big
    with a huge mirror.'"

    Odadjian and Tankian both downplay their band's political zeal -
    "We'd really rather concentrate on the music," Tankian says - but the
    lyrics on "Mesmerize" are difficult to ignore. "Violent Pornography"
    is a scathing critique of mainstream television. "Cigaro" seems like
    a crude sexual joke - but a closer listen reveals themes of Western
    arrogance. And the first single, "B.Y.O.B.," features the
    lung-busting refrain, "Why don't presidents fight the war/Why do they
    always send the poor?"

    Tankian says he keeps up with current affairs while on tour by
    reading newspapers and surfing the Internet. "Nations are like
    people," he says. "Once you understand the interactions between
    nations, it's easy to understand why things are done, in terms of
    foreign policy, in a certain way. But nations are not like people in
    the sense that we are cumulatively represented by others - and their
    interpretations of what our interests are may not be the same as what
    they really are. And that's what's dangerous, even in a democracy."

    Are System of a Down's stage-diving, mosh-happy fans as politically
    engaged as Tankian? "I don't find most people to be as politically
    engaged as I am," Tankian says with a laugh. "I do find people that
    appreciate eye-opening events and words, and who want to learn more
    about what's going on. I do find people with a lot of opinions. And I
    get a lot of people who come up to me and give us props for what we
    do."



    WHEN&WHERE System of a Down plays with The Mars Volta and Bad Acid
    Trip at 7 tonight at Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford,
    N.J. Tickets are $32.50-$45. Call 631-888-9000 or go to
    www.ticketmaster.com.
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