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Musical Serj against war machine

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  • Musical Serj against war machine

    Edmonton Journal, Canada -
    March 15 2008


    Musical Serj against war machine

    Sandra Sperounes, The Edmonton Journal
    Published: 6:59 am
    SERJ TANKIAN

    With: Fair to Midland
    When: Sunday night at 8


    EDMONTON - Artists are often the last to learn about some of the
    smaller, but not less important, details of their careers.

    Until a few days ago, Serj Tankian didn't even know Sunday's show was
    moved to a larger venue -- from the Edmonton Event Centre to the Shaw
    Conference Centre -- due to an overwhelming demand for tickets.

    "Really? That's great. Wow. Awesome. Thanks for telling me. I wish my
    agent would tell me these things," he jokes, chuckling as softly as a
    shy cat.

    Onstage or in the recording studio, he turns into another beast.

    Whether on his own or fronting the Armenian-American ambassadors of
    theatrical metal, System of a Down, his vocal acrobatics are as
    powerful as the first four letters of his last name -- perhaps an
    inappropriate metaphor, considering his staunch antiwar views.

    Tankian's non-profit organization, Axis of Justice, repeatedly
    denounces the war in Iraq. He lobbies American politicians to
    officially recognize the Armenian genocide of 1915, which killed an
    estimated 1.5 million citizens.

    His solo debut, Elect the Dead, is littered with images of burning
    bodies, vanishing hereditary lines, dead farms, oil brigades and the
    damning prayer: "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition." One of
    those songs, Empty Walls, appears on the soundtrack to Body of War, a
    documentary about a U.S. soldier wounded in Iraq.

    "I think it's important for people to be involved with things that
    are above and beyond themselves and their own interests," says
    Tankian of his political activism.

    "We're here for more than one purpose. Whether you do it through a
    non-profit organization, whether you do it with just friends or by
    yourself, volunteering for things, I think we're meant to work
    collectively to achieve certain goals."

    Which means he's not content to simply rage against the machine; he
    also offers solutions. His latest venture, electthedead.com, provides
    suggestions to reform U.S. politics, including abolishing the
    convoluted concept of the electoral college, which requires more than
    a four-year degree to figure out.

    Yet even with America's perplexing voting system, Tankian admits he's
    encouraged, albeit cautiously, by the upcoming presidential election.

    "It's a shake-up," he says. "It's cool, but we're behind the times.
    Are we complimenting ourselves for being 50 years late? So, it's
    kinda funny for me, but I think it's definitely interesting. We went
    into the last election with (John) Kerry and (George W.) Bush
    fighting over the Iraq war and yet Bush won, and now it seems like
    it's almost impossible to win supporting the war. I think that makes
    a major statement as to how public perception has changed in the last
    four years."

    Tankian's solo debut, on the other hand, isn't much of a change from
    his previous work. Elect the Dead could be another balletic,
    ballistic System of a Down album -- with the addition of piano and
    strings. As usual, his vocals run the gamut -- from Kermit the Frog
    to operatic -- and his lyrics are as absurdist as they are grim. He
    refers to honking antelopes and uses "la la la la" phrases like a
    five-year-old taunting his enemies.

    Humour, Tankian believes, is sometimes more effective than heady talk
    about democratic reforms.

    "Originally, I had very serious lyrics and they were great, powerful
    and the music was powerful and vaudevillian, but they weren't working
    with each other," he says of Lie Lie Lie.

    "I had a hard time putting my finger on it -- I liked the lyrics, and
    I loved the music -- but why wasn't it working out? Suddenly, I
    realized that I was barking up the wrong tree and that the music is
    so fun-lovin' and comedic and that the lyrics were too serious. So I
    literally ripped up the lyrics and improvised them."

    His fun-loving spirit is also on display in an electronic press kit
    filmed to promote Elect the Dead. In the deadpan video, posted on
    YouTube, Tankian plays a variety of cliches in the music industry --
    including the geeky journalist, the money-obsessed label executive,
    and the disinterested producer, who sends texts to his friends while
    the hairbag engineer does all the work in the studio.

    Which begs the question: What's Tankian like as the founder and owner
    of his own label, Serjical Strike Records? (One of his prog-rock
    signings, Fair to Midland, is his opening act.)

    "I think I'm generally really good and open until things go bad and
    then I bring down the whip and all hell breaks loose. It takes a lot
    to get me going, but when I do, I get going. I change things. Change
    is good."

    [email protected]

    GE T TANKED: Listen to songs from Serj Tankian's solo CD, Elect the
    Dead.

    http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/n ews/culture/story.html?id=4e5c86dd-d16b-4ad6-a814- cd50a70184ef&k=42944
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