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System of a Down: Some Very Heavy Metal

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  • System of a Down: Some Very Heavy Metal

    The Washington Post
    May 13, 2005 Friday
    Final Edition

    System of a Down: Some Very Heavy Metal

    by Dave McKenna, Special to The Washington Post


    There was a big-event aura Wednesday around the 9:30 club, where
    System of a Down played a semi-surprise show.

    Tickets to see the Southern California quartet, one of the few metal
    bands that critics and kids root on with equal vigor, only went on
    sale the morning of the concert. Many who made it inside had been on
    or around the premises for more than 24 hours by showtime. Though
    onstage for just 60 minutes, SOAD made the wait worthwhile,
    delivering a performance as pummeling and cathartic as rock gets.

    It helped that followers of the band are accustomed to waiting. SOAD,
    formed in the mid-1990s by four Armenian American friends, is now on
    a short club tour to publicize the upcoming release of not one but
    two CDs, "Mezmerize" and "Hypnotize." SOAD's 2001 CD, "Toxicity,"
    sold millions of copies, produced multiple hit singles and left the
    band poised to kick Metallica off the hard-rock throne. To take
    advantage of that incredible momentum, SOAD released . . . nothing
    new. Now, after a four-year wait, the band is throwing it all at the
    fans over the next few months (just as Guns N' Roses waited four
    years before following its career-making smash, "Appetite for
    Destruction," with "Use Your Illusion" Vols. I and II).

    For Axl Rose and the boys, the time off was a harbinger of implosion.
    Yet based on the 9:30 club show, SOAD has emerged from its hiatus
    prepared to assume control of the universe. Though most popular rock
    acts avoid political screeds, SOAD is full of 'em, and the fans help
    get the message out by memorizing and screaming along with every
    word. The show opened with "B.Y.O.B.," a new tune that rages against
    the Iraq invasion. On it, vocalist Serj Tankian, whose wild hair and
    beard give him the look of a guy who hasn't worked since the
    Renaissance Festival left town, got the audience to pump fists and
    shout lines such as "Why don't presidents fight the war? Why do they
    always send the poor?" (SOAD has donated money and energy toward
    creating awareness of the slaughter of Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire during World War I.) The music is far more complex than most
    metal. A typical SOAD tune mixes Middle Eastern phrases with
    death-metal guitar -- think the soundtrack of "Fiddler on the Roof"
    done by the Dead Kennedys. Daron Malakian's opening guitar solo on
    "War?" set a "Hava Nagila" mood before bassist Shavo Odadjian and
    drummer John Dolmayan kicked in with room-shaking bombast. Tankian
    led the crowd in what sounded like a Gregorian chant in the midst of
    "Aerials." During "Toxicity," the entire room screamed "disorder!"
    over and over. On the floor of the club, where members of a sweaty
    and tattooed horde had been throttling each other from the start, the
    words seemed redundant.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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