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  • System On The Up

    SYSTEM ON THE UP
    Chris Riemenschneider, Star Tribune

    Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN
    Sept 22 2005

    They front one of today's most political rock bands, and their latest
    single was the most vehement anti-war song to hit the radio since
    9/11. However, don't expect System of a Down's co-leaders to start
    trash-talking the current president of the United States.

    "I don't believe in complaining about George Bush," said Daron
    Malakian, guitarist and occasional singer for the progressive hard-rock
    band. "That's like getting hurt on a ride at Disneyland and complaining
    to Mickey Mouse about it. There are people behind the mouse."

    Those comments are probably surprising to everyone who has heard
    "B.Y.O.B.," the stormy and frantic single from System's new CD,
    "Mezmerize." Short for "Bring Your Own Bombs," the song's hook asks,
    "Why don't presidents fight the war/ Why do they always send the poor?"

    System of a DownIan JenningsAmerican RecordingsIn separate phone
    interviews, Malakian and lead singer Serj Tankian -- friends since
    they attended a grade-school for Armenian Americans in Los Angeles
    -- both talked about the value of being ambiguous and unspecific in
    their music.

    "Hopefully, 'B.Y.O.B.' and many of our other songs will resonate with
    people 20 years from now, long after Bush is gone," Tankian said.

    "One of my favorite bands is ['80s punk heroes] the Dead Kennedys,
    but a lot of their songs were all about Ronald Reagan and lost their
    timeliness."

    Not only did Tankian and Malakian skip the Bush-bashing, they also
    repeatedly emphasized the fact that there's a lot more to System of
    a Down's music than politics.

    "Mezmerize" shows off the diversity. A couple of tracks are
    about Malakian's native city ("Old School Hollywood" and "Lost in
    Hollywood"). One riffs on taboo fetishes ("Violent Pornography"). And
    a few seem downright nonsensical, such "Cigaro," whose phallic lyrics
    exemplify what Tankian called "instinctive songwriting."

    "A lot of times, we don't even know what a song is about," the singer
    said, "but we know the emotions behind it."

    SOAD's link to politics was cemented the week of the Sept. 11
    attacks. That also happened to be the same week that the quartet's
    now-classic sophomore album, "Toxicity," debuted at No. 1 in Billboard,
    largely thanks to its breakout single "Chop Suey!"

    Instead of celebrating the success of "Toxicity," though, Tankian
    sat down and wrote an essay about that week's tragedies titled
    "Understanding Oil." Essentially a plea for peace and tolerance,
    the online message circulated for all of two hours before it spawned
    a flood of hate-mail and a controversy still hanging over the band.

    "We caught a lot of [flak] over it," said Tankian, who now runs the
    grassroots political site www.AxisofJustice.com with Audioslave's Tom
    Morello. "Our single was dropped. A lot of programmers wouldn't play
    us. ... Years later, though, I think people understood where we stood."

    Part of the initial backlash also likely stemmed from the fact
    that SOAD's four members are all of Armenian descent -- hence,
    Middle Eastern in many people's eyes. Their heritage often comes
    through thrillingly in their music, with its sharp time changes and
    sometimes exotic-sounding tunings (think: Zeppelin's "Kashmir" with
    a thrash twist).

    Since they all grew up in California, though, the members bristle
    anytime their patriotism comes into question.

    "I would not be alive if not for the American orphanages that raised
    my grandfather after the Armenian genocide of 1915," Tankian wrote
    in the controversial essay.

    Malakian believes he shares a kinship with families of U.S. soldiers
    serving in Iraq, because he has relatives who live in the war-torn
    country.

    "I worry about them every day, just like anyone with family
    over there," he said. "It's made more compassionate to the human
    realities. To me, putting a ribbon on your car isn't supporting our
    troops. Writing a song like 'B.Y.O.B.' is supporting our troops."

    As unconventional as its messages often are, SOAD has also been
    quite daring in its business practices this year. The group previewed
    "Mezmerize" with a so-called "guerrilla club tour" in May. It included
    a Minneapolis show at First Avenue for which tickets didn't go on sale
    'til that day (resulting in a line around the block).

    "We had such a good time doing that," Malakian said.

    Tonight's show at Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul will include a song
    or two from "Hypnotize," another SOAD album due in the late fall. The
    disc is essentially a companion piece to "Mezmerize" and was recorded
    at the same time.

    "It's really a double album, so I feel like people have only heard
    half of our record," Malakian said, explaining that the split the
    release dates up to avoid "overwhelming" fans with too many songs
    at once. "It's like when you meet 50 people in one day, you're not
    going to remember them all."

    The guys said the new album is pretty similar to its predecessor,
    which means, of course, it will also have a few political firebombs
    like "B.Y.O.B."

    "There's some of that," said Talakian, before breaking into a laugh.

    "But then there's also a song on it called 'Proximity of Obscenity,'
    so I don't know what that tells you."

    It tells us that this is one band that won't be pigeonholed.

    IF YOU GO System of a Down

    With: The Mars Volta.

    When: 7 p.m. Friday.

    Where: Xcel Energy Center, 7th St. and Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul.

    Tickets: $37.50-$45. 651-989-5151.
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