Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Live Review: SOAD in Winnipeg

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

  • Live Review: SOAD in Winnipeg

    Winnipeg Sun, Canada
    Sept 23 2005

    Live Review: SOAD in Winnipeg

    Intense SOAD reward fans

    By ROB WILLIAMS -- Winnipeg Sun


    WINNIPEG - Talk about a mesmerizing night of music.

    Last night's System of a Down show at the MTS Centre featured three
    bands playing heavy, challenging, experiential metal that both
    thrilled and bewildered a crowd of 8,000.

    Taking the stage an hour late after being delayed by Hurricane Rita
    at LAX in Los Angeles, SOAD showed why they are one of the most
    unique mainstream metal acts in North America with a jarring display
    of hardcore thrash mixed with Middle Eastern textures inspired by
    their Armenian roots.

    >From the first notes of intro Soldier Side the floor was a swirling
    mass of bodies and fists. The intensity was cranked to eleven when
    they launched into the war-bashing B.Y.O.B., the first single off
    their latest album Mezmerize.

    Frontman Serj Tankian shared vocal duties with guitarist Daron
    Malakian, who handled the grittier side of things while ripping
    through the intricate guitar lines that make up their socio-political
    manifests.

    Bassist Shavo Odajian and drummer John Dolmayan were put to work
    keeping up with the abrupt pauses, fractured rhythms, tempo
    variations and time signature changes that make up the group's
    arsenal.

    The set was heavy on material from Mezmerize and their 2001
    breakthrough Toxicity, although they threw in a few numbers off their
    1998 debut.

    At press time the band were about half-way through their 90-minute
    set getting the crowd airborne with Bounce.

    Before SOAD, The Mars Volta tore through a one-hour set featuring
    only four songs of absurdist avant-garde prog-metal and cerebral
    psychedelia.

    The Texas group performed as an eight-piece, including three
    percussionists and two keyboardists, but the main focus was on
    vocalist Cedric Bixler-Zavala and guitarist Omar Rodriguez-Lopez,
    formerly of emo-heroes At the Drive In. They may have ditched the
    sound of their former band, but it's nice to see they kept their
    famous afros.

    Bixler-Zavala was a madman on stage howling in English and Spanish
    while convulsing like the bastard child of Iggy Pop. Rodriguez-Lopez
    stood beside him at centre stage tearing through solos and thrashing
    his guitar above a roaring wall of drums, horns and effects.

    Each song was its own sprawling mini-epic, starting slowly and
    building to a cacophonous climax before calming down to a dull roar
    and rising again. For a similar effect smash a brick into your head,
    relax with a therapeutic massage then beat yourself stupid.

    As strange as some might have found The Mars Volta, opening act Hella
    were just as mind bending.

    The Sacramento, Calif. duo of Spencer Seim and Zach Hill, on guitar
    and drums respectively, added a bassist and keyboardist-guitarist to
    expand on their experimental noise rock.

    Without following the traditional verse-chorus-verse structure, Hella
    were anything but linear, venturing into adventurous spastic freak
    outs of thrash, surf, electronica, jazz and no wave anchored by
    Hill's out-of-control non-stop drumming.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X