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Serj Tankian: One Man Army

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  • Serj Tankian: One Man Army

    SERJ TANKIAN: ONE MAN ARMY
    by Andre Mihsin

    ChartAttack
    http://www.chartattack.com/fea tures/64300/serj-tankian-one-man-army
    Dec 19 2008
    Canada

    System Of A Down's frontman has gone solo and not even he knows when
    his band's getting back together

    Serj Tankian, the dynamic frontman of System Of A Down, has just
    released his Elect The Dead debut solo effort. During the second day
    of a short but busy promotional tour, Tankian found time to relax
    with Chart in the intimate confines of Toronto's Opium Room to lay
    back and shoot the shit.

    Chart: When you were planning this solo record, did you ever try
    singing in another language?

    Serj Tankian: I sang a song with a band called Les Rita Mitsouko from
    Paris. I sang the English version, but I also sang backgrounds on the
    French version. There's one song I play in Armenian on acoustic guitar,
    but generally don't sing it out. My mom just loves that. Otherwise,
    I don't think so.

    I think it would be interesting if you wrote an Armenian song and
    performed it in your own unique style.

    I've heard that from other Armenians. It's cool if I write Armenian
    songs and the six million other Armenians might understand them, but if
    I write it in another language I can communicate it to the whole world.

    People listen to black metal sung in Norwegian even if they don't
    understand it.

    Even when they sing it in English you're not going to understand with
    black metal. [laughs]

    You're right. You have a song on the record called "Praise The Lord
    And Pass The Ammunition." It seems that religion and warfare always
    get mixed up together.

    I know exactly what you mean. Religion is never the reason for
    war, but it's what motivates the masses to do things that they
    wouldn't normally. Religion is used as a tool for war, even with
    genocide. The Armenian genocide they always say was a religious
    thing with the Christian minority, and the holocaust Jews were the
    minority in Germany. When you really think about it, it wasn't about
    religion. Most genocides have very strong economic undercurrents
    usually at a time where the government is suffering from another
    giant setback, or currency is low and they're able to take these
    riches from these minorities. It's kind of like gaining this huge
    revenue stream. Of course, the people are not going to go to war for
    that purpose, to give money to the government.

    So they fight for God.

    Yeah.

    Your grandfather passed away a couple of months back. How did all
    the things that he went through influence you?

    Him and my grandmother were both genocide survivors and they always
    told me the story of what happened in their lives and families
    and why I was never able to complete my family tree because of
    the genocide. They didn't necessarily politically motivate me, but
    personally motivated me to find out more, and it made me more active.

    Years ago I had this organization called the Genocide Project, and
    I interviewed survivors of genocides and holocaust. We came by and
    set up audio cassettes in an interview format and it was a six- or
    seven-hour session and I held my own video camera. I literally held it
    in my hand for six hours and taped and kept and made DVD copies and
    gave them to all my uncles. I haven't even watched them since then,
    to be honest. Maybe I should.

    Other bands have taken breaks from each other to work on separate
    projects with not nearly as many break-up rumours as the ones
    surrounding System Of A Down. Why do you have to always remind people
    you're just on hiatus?

    People make their own stories, I guess. We decided to take an
    indefinite hiatus, which means we have not decided what we are going to
    do with each other in the future. We've been a band for 11 years. We
    put out five records. People think we should be a brand like Pepsi
    and should be putting out stuff every year, but we're not. We're not
    a corporation, we're a group of artists and friends. When we want
    to say something with each other and to the world, then we will. And
    when we don't have anything to say through each other to the world,
    then we won't. It's as simple as that. We don't want it to be a brand
    that is completely used all the time to generate us money and other
    people money. That would be abusive.

    To me, we needed time to prioritize other things in our life. The band
    was a priority for 11 years and everything else was secondary. We
    needed time to prioritize our own projects, our own lives, and then
    come together and see if there is room to do stuff in the future or
    not. Nothing is decided. We're all friends and the door's always open
    and the possibility is always there.

    This feature article is from the November 2007 issue of Chart
    Magazine. You can purchase the issue in the Chart Shop.
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