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Concert review: System of a Down is strong upper

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  • Concert review: System of a Down is strong upper

    Minneapolis Star Tribune , MN
    Sept 23 2005

    Concert review: System of a Down is strong upper
    Chris Riemenschneider, Star Tribune
    September 24, 2005 SYSTEM0924



    Most concerts have an energy level that ebbs and flows as much as a
    Twins season, but not Friday night's performance by political
    neo-thrashers System of a Down at Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul.
    This one was like a marathon run at a sprinter's pace.

    You had to be 16 and high-strung to stay up to the energy level of
    the 90-minute show by the Ozzfest veterans. Fortunately, most of the
    10,146 fans fit that description.

    The security guards who were down in front of the stage were the
    hardest-working guys in town Friday night. Throughout the show, they
    handled a constant flow of sweaty kids crowd-surfing over the stage
    barrier, like salmon swimming upstream to spawn.

    Following a solo intro of "Soldier Side" by guitarist Darion
    Malakian, the concert erupted right away with SOAD's current (and
    most bombastic) single "B.Y.O.B.," which was soon followed by the
    topsy-turvy rockers "Revenga" and "Deer Dance."

    The show kept rolling at breakneck speed. By the time the band got to
    its 2001 hit "Chop Suey" (a half-hour into the set), the pandemonium
    stretched out into the center of the arena, where several mosh pits
    broke out on the seat-less concrete floor.

    Hardly just a testosterone-fueled thrash-metal band, System displayed
    its many unique elements throughout the show. The stormy epic "War?"
    hinted at the four members' Armenian heritage with its moody guitar
    bits and unusual tunings. The ironically brawny "Cigaro" hinted at
    their sharp wit. And then there was their politics.

    "They got us divided into blue and red states, but let's make one
    purple one," Malakian said before "Sad Statue." The song's lyrics are
    a little more poetic: "We'll go down in history with a sad Statue
    Liberty and a generation that didn't agree."

    A week after Green Day had teenagers cursing the president at the
    Xcel Center, System's beady-eyed singer, Serj Tankian, had more of
    them chanting the radical words to "Prison Song" and "Science." That
    the fans even still had the breath to sing along was the big
    surprise.

    Opening band the Mars Volta gave the young crowd a lesson in what too
    many drugs and rock-star egotism did to ruin the '70s. The band's two
    leaders seem so ashamed that they helped spawn emo-rock with the now
    defunct At the Drive-In (actually a great band), they subjected the
    crowd to 10- and 15-minute songs with no real structure and lots of
    annoying saxophone outbursts, DJ static and wailing, insufferable
    aria-like vocals. No thanks.
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