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  • Music fans feel down

    Calgary Sun (Alberta)
    September 20, 2005 Tuesday
    EARLY EDITION

    MUSIC FANS FEEL DOWN

    BY GARY GRAFF, SUN NEWS SERVICES
    NEW YORK

    There was a surprise waiting for System of a Down on the group's
    recent tour of Europe.

    The crowds were exuberantly into the material from the Los Angeles
    quartet's latest album, Mezmerize, as well as their three previous
    ones.

    But then, says guitarist Daron Malakian, "we played some of the songs
    we haven't released yet, and some of the kids were already singing
    along to them -- just from what they've heard on the Internet, I
    guess.

    "I think it's amazing," Malakian says.

    "It doesn't freak me out at all. I think the fact that people are
    that interested is great, you know?"

    There's no question interest runs high for System, which played the
    Saddledome last night, these days -- higher, probably, than for any
    other rock band, with the exception of the red-hot Coldplay.
    Mezmerize and the upcoming Hypnotize, a second album that was
    recorded during the same sessions, have raised the excitement to a
    fever pitch.

    After its mid-May release, Mezmerize debuted at No. 1 on the
    Billboard Top 200 chart in the U.S. and in more than a dozen other
    countries, and has sold more than two million copies worldwide.

    Malakian, the group's primary songwriter and co-producer of its
    albums, is stoked by the reception. "Not too many people are
    interested in rock bands these days," he says.

    "For me to be in a rock band people are actually interested in is
    really special for me."

    And how did that band turn out to be System? "Honesty, man. It's just
    honesty," Malakian says. "From the first day, we were never worried
    about, 'Are we going to get a record deal or not? Is radio going to
    play it or not?' When I sit at home writing the songs, I don't think,
    'What's going to be the hook?' or 'Is this going to be a single?' We
    haven't changed the way we think. What we're doing right is basically
    not compromising our real emotions in our music."

    That first day was back in the mid-1990s, when the group -- whose
    other members are singer Serj Tankian, bassist Shavo Odadjian and
    drummer John Dolmayan --formed after meeting in Armenian community
    centres in Los Angeles. All four band members are Armenian-American,
    and their songs reflect their background, delving into issues such as
    genocide and oppression.

    But it was their sound that really set them apart. Rather than
    following after more conventional groups such as Korn and Deftones,
    which defined the new-metal scene, System delivered its own
    aggressive spin, marked by frenetic, jagged arrangements, sharp tempo
    changes and stream-of-consciousness lyrics.

    It was a wholly originally sound, sophisticated and even a little
    weird -- though Malakian says that wasn't by design.

    "I really take a songwriter's approach," the guitarist says. "A lot
    of people talk about the strange time signatures and riffs and all
    this technical stuff, but I'm not chopping up riffs or anything like
    that.

    "I approach it like writing the songs ... It's a very traditional
    songwriting style."

    That weird quality definitely has big appeal. System's eponymous 1998
    debut album went platinum thanks to nearly two years of worldwide
    touring -- including the first of two stints at Ozzfest, the
    heavy-metal concert series. Mezmerize and Hypnotize will keep System
    touring well into 2006, but Malakian is already eyeballing his
    creative life beyond that.

    He has been producing, working with the band Amen for his own
    eatURmusic label and Bad Acid Trip for Tankian's Serjical Strike
    imprint.

    Malakian also talks about doing an electronic music project.

    But, he says, the outside activities will remain adjuncts to the
    band's work.

    "There's plenty of stuff I'd like to do outside System," Malakian
    says.

    "I think it all bounces off each other and makes each thing better."

    - - -

    Editor's note: A review of last night's show was not available by
    presstime. For Mike Bell's review, go to calgarysun.com
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