Not long ago, accepted sonic belief held that
rock music, certainly hard rock music, had been stretched,
manipulated and tinkered with to its logical end. With no new forms
looming, the genre would slip into malaise and the kids would look
elsewhere for an outlet. Enter Los Angeles quartet System of a Down,
who, over seven years and two albums have revived and revitalized
heavy music with their manic brand of post-everything hardcore.
Millions of records on, they charge into the new century as living
proof that for those brave enough to snub convention, greatness
follows.
�I think we're ahead of the game,� says
guitarist/songwriter Daron Malakian. �I just feel like this band
will be more respected ten years from now when people finally figure
out what we�re really doing.�
Malakian, singer Serj Tankian, bassist Shavo
Odadjian and drummer John Dolmayan, bonded quickly as friends but
also shared Armenian ancestry and mutual disdain for perceived
limitations. Their disparate tastes � Jaco Pastorious, Slayer, The
Beatles, Faith No More, traditional Armenian folk music � assured
from the onset that this would be a band less ordinary.
Malakian says,�We started this band to show
people, �Look, not everything has been done before.��
Tankian says, �Humans have been on the earth
for millions of years, yet we don�t believe man began thinking until
he started building walls. And what good have these walls ever done
us?�
System�s 1998 self-titled debut, produced by
bearded board whiz Rick Rubin (Slayer, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Public
Enemy), was an achievement in pastiche overdrive, a dark carnival of
moods punctuated by breakneck tempo shifts and progressive
structures. That year, radios rung to the visceral fury of �Sugar�
and the spooky tension of �Spiders,� each a fiery baptism for
listeners weaned on predictability and rote rhyme
schemes.
Serj favors abstract, existential poetry,
peppered with politics and personal religion. He says, �No one
ultimately knows what they�re saying anyway. Are we really making
art? Art doesn�t belong to us. It doesn�t belong to people, it
belongs to the universe. It comes FROM the universe. It comes
THROUGH us. When I write something, I think I know what I�m saying,
but I never pretend to know the full meaning of the words.�
The singer�s quaking wails were the perfect
compliment to Daron�s schizoid noodling, Shavo�s inventive lines and
John�s potent jazz-cum-thrash rumble. Their first salvo found an
instant cult and was heralded as a revolutionary diamond in the
homogenous crush of Nü Metal�a label that clearly didn�t (and still
doesn�t) fit this foursome.
John says, �I don�t think we sound like anybody
else. I consider us System of a Down.�
Shavo says, �You can compare us to whoever you
want. I don�t care. Comparisons and labels have no effect on this
band. Fact is fact: We are who we are and they are who they are.�
Two years of hard touring followed (OzzFest et
al) before the band re-immersed themselves in the studio in late
2000. With Rubin again at the helm, they set about crafting a
sprawling blitzkrieg of sounds, one that invited an even wider array
of influence and experimentation to the table. Melodies expanded.
Riffage went mad. Structure and timing were eviscerated. Deeper
lyrical levels were mined and the resulting gems were strewn onto
thrashing anthems and careening frenzies of fuzz.
Rubin says, �They really set out to reinvent
themselves, to be bigger and better than they were last time. I
think they're very proud of their first album and all the touring
they did. They wanted to grow from those experiences and expand.
They really wanted to write lots and lots of songs and reach in all
different directions.�
In August of 2001, System of a Down emerged
with their second album, �Toxicity.� As critics scoured their
thesauri for ample superlatives, radio and MTV heavily rotated the
first single, a harmony-drenched slab of whiplash rock called �Chop
Suey.� With the cult of System exploding nationwide, the foursome
took to the road where manic throngs of Systemites old and new
awaited.
In May of 2002, with the title track from
Toxicity in heavy rotation and a third single, �Aerials� fast
gaining steam, System accepted the coveted headlining slot on the
annual OzzFest circus. The thinking man�s metal troupe aim to give
Ozzy�s mobile headbangathon an intellectual facelift.
Shavo says, �It�s time for the bands these kids
are listening to to deliver something deeper than just �let�s
party.��
Now one year after the triumph of �Toxicity,�
System of a Down find themselves in an elite class of rock acts
who�ve managed commercial hugeness with dignity in spades and nary a
compromise on their resume. They�ve engendered a sound transcendent
of trends or labels, a propulsive hybrid destined to flourish in any
radio climate from here to forever. What sonic twists await us only
they know, but we can rest assured knowing that their next offering,
like those that have proceeded, will be born from a primal need to
evade classification and emote loudly.
Daron says, �Everyone who knows me knows my
music comes before anything. It comes before me. If someone said,
"your music will live forever but you won't wake up tomorrow
morning, I'd be like, 'Okay.' That's very fair to me.�
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