Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hairy, scary and violent..ZO: A-ALL

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

  • Hairy, scary and violent..ZO: A-ALL

    New Straits Times (Malaysia)
    June 19, 2005, Sunday

    Hairy, scary and violent..ZO: A-ALL

    by Shanon Teoh; Jeremy Mahadevan


    MEZMERIZE
    System Of A Down
    (Columbia/Sony)
    Review by Shannon Teoh

    SINCE time immemorial, man has been a creature whose every primal
    instinct is to rule, conquer and beat up anyone who refuses to bow
    down
    to its power. Stanley Kubrick himself said so, in his epochal film,
    2001:
    A Space Odyssey.

    Never mind that I never got to the space bits I keep hearing about.
    The
    first half containing those hairy hominids in their tribal wars still
    rings true today. Hairy men need to rock and roll!

    It's hard to get more manly than the likes of System of a Down
    (SOAD).
    It's hairy, scary and violent as hell. It's not just riff after riff
    of
    inane thrashmetal, the assuredness with which it constructs such
    in-your-face loud-soft-loud-barking dynamics is sheer all-conquering
    power of Dodge Viper-like proportions.

    Interesting then that it wears its anti-American Imperialism on its
    sleeves. But could you blame these bug-eyed-on-testosterone (real men
    don't take drugs you see, unlike, ahem, some bands) Armenians whose
    homeland was ravaged by civil war? And like real manly men who beat
    their
    chests and do the Maori Hakka, these warriors are heroes who sound
    the
    gong of a new era.

    A new era that began in the late 1990s when SOAD's eponymous debut
    slayed the arena of nu-metal gladiators with one fell swoop. The
    dominion
    of all that is phallic about the 21st century continued with
    Toxicity.

    Fuelled by irresistible pheromones induced by the fire breathing
    pipes
    of Serj Tankian and Daron Malakian's songcraft, singles such as the
    aptly
    titled Chop Suey - which describes the miscellany that is signature
    to
    their bewildering mix - caught on in mainstream consciousness,
    signalling
    its intent on clubbing even more cavemen and women.

    Mezmerize builds on this intensity and even so, it is but part one of
    a
    new agenda. The autumnal ascension of Hypnotize later this year from
    the
    band's melting pot of grinding guitar chops and 1980s synth-rock
    looks
    set to fully cement SOAD's masculine butts to the throne of
    alternative-hardcore.

    Wearing sociopolitical commentary (read: dissatisfaction) like badges
    on its breastplates and marching out with pyromancy and irrepressible
    choruses, Mezmerize does exactly that, culminating in the closing
    track
    Lost in Hollywood.

    Telling us that we "should've never trusted Hollywood" with its nest
    of
    "maggots smoking fags on Sunset Boulevard" who tell us lies about
    being
    "the best they've ever seen", it is hardly the cleverest stuff on the
    planet but it makes for immediate, straightforward momentum in
    today's
    political climate that takes longer than grannies sewing Christmas
    stockings to resolve anything.

    While the album does suffer from a bit too much of Malakian's
    contribution on the mic, it hardly distracts from an album armed with
    gems like Violent Pornography and This Cocaine Makes Me Feel Like I'm
    On
    This Song - both surely candidates for song titles of the year.

    And titles like song of the year, employee of the month, Time Man of
    the Year (ironically, most recently won by Dubya Bush himself) and
    "rockingest" band of all time are the sort of milestones in what will
    surely lead to SOAD being immortalised in bronze and pigeon droppings
    one
    day. Real men go out in style.

    Righthand men... Rage Against the Machine, Mars Volta, Tool.

    Lord and Master over... Metallica, Limp Bizkit, Korn.

    Best listened to while... priming yourself to face the music after a
    late night out with the boys... and especially not while shaving.

    LULLABIES TO PARALYZE

    Queens of the Stone Age

    (Interscope/Warner)

    Review by Jeremy Mahadevan

    LISTEN, pal: you just got to get your mitts on this album. A little
    discussion on manliness first, though: what makes manly men manly?
    What
    exactly did Captain Arthur Phillip see in those aborigines across
    Sydney
    Harbour, back in 1788, that made him name the spot Manly Cove?

    I think we can all agree that hairy chests and gruesome faces just
    don't cut it. Anybody can decide to stop shaving for three months.
    No,
    really manly folk are the ones who just don't give a hoot.

    A manly man is the one you see cruising across desert roads in his
    Shelby Cobra, one hand on the wheel at all times, speeding but never
    in a
    hurry. He's got things to do, he's at peace, and he'll be relaxing
    even
    in the middle of Armageddon. Smooth and cultured, the man never
    speaks
    until he's got something worth saying. People might be rioting and
    looting outside, but he'll still be at the bar, sipping his bourbon
    and
    trying to decide if it'll be Lisa or Denise for dinner tonight. Then
    he
    waits for them to call. Because a manly man never shows you how he
    really
    feels.

    Lullabies to Paralyze is a lot like some sort of Armageddon through
    the
    eyes of the world's manliest men. The Queens of the Stone Age (QOTSA)
    have always been very adept at maintaining composure through squalls
    of
    its own creation. The music is always heavy, somehow, even when they
    turn
    down the volume.

    The excitement is in seeing the new ways in which it manipulates that
    ancient formula of guitars, drums, bass and vocals - there's no
    mistaking
    the laid-back, measured nuances of QOTSA's sound, it plays with
    texture
    and explore different melodies through to its conclusions, always
    keeping
    the tension up.

    What could be hopelessly tepid and lifeless ends up with a certain
    lazy
    cigar-chomping vigilante cool, commanding attention without ever
    having
    to resort to manic tempo changes, wrecking-ball aesthetics or over
    baked
    theatrics.

    Lullabies is more sober and spooky than previous QOTSA efforts -
    perhaps a reaction to the sudden ejection of lynchpin member Nick
    Oliveri
    from the band prior to the recording of this material.

    Some compare losing Oliveri to losing an arm, and tell me, what's
    manlier than sawing off your arm and just getting on with whatever it
    was
    you were doing before, as if nothing ever happened?

    Songs like Everybody Knows That You are Insane and Someone's in the
    Wolf crackle with the same sort of fiery energy that kept previous
    QOTSA
    work lean and mean, but at the same time there's a growling menace
    permeating the whole thing that makes it unnecessary for the band to
    ever
    have to shout and shriek at you in some unmanly manner.

    All right, so you can tell I'm making none-too-thinly-veiled digs at
    that other band featured today. But let's face it: anything that goes
    out
    of its way to be so visceral, so affecting, so hairychested - well,
    it's
    just not very manly, is it? It's trying too hard. Not that Mezmerize
    isn't a good album, it's absolutely stunning and probably better than
    Lullabies - it just isn't as masculine.

    Unsmiling like... Soundgarden, Jimi Hendrix, MC5.

    Unamused by... Guns n' Roses, Staind, KISS.

    Best listened to while... sipping bourbon, one hand at the wheel of
    your Shelby Cobra, chasing down werewolves and trying to decide
    whether
    it's going to be Lisa or Denise for dinner tonight.
Working...
X