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Albums of the Aughts No. 7: "Toxicity" by SOAD makes "Chop Suey"

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  • Albums of the Aughts No. 7: "Toxicity" by SOAD makes "Chop Suey"

    MLive.com, MI
    Feb 15 2009


    Albums of the Aughts No. 7: "Toxicity" by System of Down makes "Chop
    Suey" of metal conventions

    by Bill Chapin February 15, 2009 05:00AM


    Categories: Albums of the Aughts, MLive Entertainment, MLive Music
    Every Sunday, I'll be posting an entry in my Albums of the Aughts
    series, highlighting 50 great or near-great albums released since
    Jan. 1, 2000. Read more about the series in my initial post.

    7. "Toxicity," System of a Down


    Amazon.com
    Released: Sept. 4, 2001
    For folks who ...

    want to fly their freak flag, rage against the machine and bang their
    head.

    would maybe be more into heavy metal if the bands would simply throw a
    little melody in among those brutal beats and guttural growls.

    need proof that even the most embarrassing of musical movements ' in
    this case nu metal ' can produce a masterpiece.


    The backstory: This is, for better or worse, what America was
    listening to when the planes hit the twin towers on
    Sept. 11. "Toxicity" was the No. 1 album in the country that week.

    The fact that such a discomforting album endured during a time when
    all people wanted was a little comfort, that its revolutionary
    politics didn't turn everyone off during a period of intense
    patriotism, that its lead single cracked the Billboard Hot 100 despite
    a chorus that spoke of "self-righteous suicide" that got it pulled
    from radio station playlists ' it all points to, I think, the power of
    the music. There's nothing weak about "Toxicity," and maybe Americans
    were looking for that, too.

    www.hayemyes.com
    Founded by a quartet of Armenian Americans from Southern California,
    System of a Down had been developing a cult following since their 1998
    debut. With omnipresent producer Rick Ruben at the sound board, they
    recorded and released their follow-up just as the nu metal wave was
    cresting and crashing into a sea of Limp Bizkit jokes. "Toxicity" may
    have even played a role in that, since just by comparison it made
    their contemporaries' work look juvenile.

    System of a Down followed with the conjoined albums "Mezmerize" and
    "Hypnotize," both of which made good use of the formula (thrash metal
    hyperactivity + Eastern European harmonies + Dada-esque weirdness =
    win) established by "Toxicity." Since 2006 the band has been in hiatus
    limbo, with members working on separate projects and hinting they'll
    maybe reunite when the time is right.

    My two cents: I remember being terrified by the video for "Chop Suey!"
    in general and Daron Malakian's body art in particular. Being a nerdy
    wuss, my gut reaction to anything with a double kick drum was to run
    and hide, but I couldn't get over those beautiful harmonies in the
    chorus. I didn't hear the rest of "Toxicity" until after SOAD had
    already won me over with "Mezmerize," but it cemeted their status as
    my favorite metal band.

    Someone else probably said it better: " ... Co-songwriters Daron
    Malakian and Serj Tankain sound like are the bastard children of Frank
    Zappa and Slayer. ... When a band takes this many left turns, you'd
    expect them to start going in circles sooner rather than later, but
    this is not the case with System of a Down. Hands down one of 2001's
    top metal releases, Toxicity may well prove to be a lasting heavy
    metal classic to boot." ' Ed Rivadavia for All Music Guide

    Moment that kills me every time: Whenever Serj Tankian spouts some
    knowledge in "Prison Song," especially: "Drug money is used to rig
    elections and train brutal corporate sponsored dictators around the
    world!" It's really the way that he says it, racing to cram it all in
    before the chorus and tossing off the last three words with indignant
    goofiness. Very few people can pull of indignant goofiness. Serj is
    one of them.

    If you listen to just one track, make sure it's ... : "Chop Suey!"
    (although all three singles from this album are pretty accessible).

    http://blog.mlive.com/citpat-plugged in/2009/02/albums_of_the_aughts_no_7_toxi.html
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