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Live Review: SOAD in Toronto

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  • Live Review: SOAD in Toronto

    JAM Showbiz
    Live Review: SOAD in Toronto
    By Steve Tilley - Toronto Sun


    TORONTO - It had to be the biggest, loudest, hardest, brightest, wildest
    and (to use the proper vernacular) most completely f---ed up `see ya
    later' in modern metal history.

    And if it had been an outright `goodbye' instead, the Molson
    Amphitheatre might have been levelled last night.

    On their final visit to Toronto before a self-imposed hiatus that's
    expected to last at least a few years, System Of A Down closed out the
    marathon of metal that is Ozzfest in a way that had to be seen and heard
    to be fully appreciated. Even if it meant being both temporarily blind
    and deaf, which a good portion of last night's capacity crowd will be
    today.
    This Ozzy Osbourne-less stop on the tour did not suffer from the
    grandpappy of metal's absence one iota. Even Ozzy might have had
    troubJle following System Of A Down's enthusiastically received (read: A
    massive, impromptu mosh pit breaking out on the mid-level concourse
    walkway) headlining set, which drew heavily from last year's Mezmerize.
    Blame that giant photo of SOAD's Serj Tankian to the right, but there
    simply isn't the space to touch on most of the acts that made up
    yesterday's 71/2 hour buffet of molten sonic energy. To try to do so
    would do justice to none of them.
    So, no disrespect to Norma Jean, Bleeding Through, Unearth, Atreyu,
    Lacuna Coil, Hatebreed or especially Avenged Sevenhold and their awesome
    giant, winged silver skull. You guys surely rock like the ves foundation
    of the earth.
    But the reality is the Amphitheatre didn't get jammed all the way back
    to the back of the lawns until Chicago foursome Disturbed took the stage
    and unleashed more than an hour of aggressive yet melodic rib
    cage-rattling metal, from Guarded to the band's cover of Genesis'
    still-relevant Land of Confusion to, of course, Down With The Sickness.
    Uh-WAH-AH-AH-AH!
    A bolder man might even say that Disturbed's bald and barrel-chested
    frontman David Draiman injected more raw passion into the evening than
    System Of A Down's Tankian did. Truly, one of the highlights of the
    night was Draiman's near-religious rant against bands who, in his eyes,
    dilute the purity of genuine hard metal. It's probably safe to say he
    doesn't have any posters of The Killers on his bedroom wall.

    Still, there was no eclipsing the totality of System Of A Down's
    performance, from the hypnotizing lights aimed at the crowd to the
    creative rearrangement of familiar hits (Violent Pornography started out
    sounding suspiciously like a power ballad) to the fans' rabid and
    rapturous response.

    Enjoy your time off, gentlemen. And if you think `so long' was insane,
    wait until you see `welcome back.'

    http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/2006/07/26/1702695.htm l
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