SERJ TANKIAN | Vocals
SHAVO ODADJIAN | Bass DARON MALAKIAN | Guitar JOHN DOLMAYAN | Drums
Three years and eight months after the release of Toxicity, one of this
decade’s most corrosively powerful, relevant and down-right important albums,
System of a Down— guitarist/singer Daron Malakian, singer Serj Tankian, bass
player Shavo Odadjian and drummer John Dolmayan—unleashes Mezmerize /Hypnotize…
Well, actually, what they’re doing is unleashing half of it—the Mezmerize
half—with the understanding that attention spans aren’t what they used to be in
the Too-Much-Information Age.
You can count on System, one of rock’s most daring and innovative bands,
to do things in its own way, and with a level of commitment that’ll knock the
wind right out of you. “This band’s what Public Enemy once was and what Rage
Against the Machine never quite managed to be: the potent trifecta of
credibility, sincerity and real danger,” pronounced Esquire on naming them “Best
Agitators” in the magazine’s 2005 Esky Music Awards. If you were looking for the
ultimate one-sentence summation of this extraordinary band, that’s pretty good.
Malakian has his own take. “We’re really an honest band—that’s why people are
listening to us,” he asserts. “We’re not bullshitting ourselves and we’re not
bullshitting them.”
Tankian’s take is even more succinct. “Our music has always been urgent,
critical and questioning, and that still remains,” he says.
“We’re artists for the sake of art,” Tankian continues. “And our
expression is pure and natural in terms of where it comes from. I think that’s
always better with art because, once you have something in mind and you try to
achieve it, it becomes less pure in some ways. If you just let whatever
expression there is come out—it might be socially viable, it might be political,
romantic, humorous, a personal narrative, a philosophical thought, whatever it
is—if it’s pure and it just comes out and you leave it that way, I think it’s
more potent. I think it’s more real.”
Fate chose this group of Armenian Americans, two of whom were born in
Lebanon, one in Armenia and another in Hollywood, as unknowing prophets.
Toxicity, System’s second album, appeared on Sept. 4, 2001 and was at the top of
the charts on Sept. 12, while America and the world were paralyzed with grief,
shock and fear. Perhaps because the music of Toxicity was so uncompromising and
yet so full of humanity at its extremes, it provided a suitably harrowing
soundtrack for that unimaginable moment, striking a deep nerve. The album
generated four Top 10 singles, including the #1 “Aerials,” and went on to sell 6
million copies, establishing System not as some prefab mainstream commercial
entity but rather as an urgent voice in the uncharted wilderness that was
heard—and believed—by a great many human beings.
Just over a year later, the band offered up Steal This Album!, made up of
tracks that had been started during the Toxicity sessions but didn’t fit that
album’s dedicated confrontational vibe—tracks that put a greater emphasis on
melody and the two-part harmonies of Malakian and Tankian. With Steal!, System,
which up to that point had pitched nothing but fastballs (although some were of
the split-finger variety), showed that it had a command of all kinds of stuff,
and potent stuff at that. Thus, Mezmerize /Hypnotize is both the long-awaited
follow-up to Toxicity in big-picture terms and a natural progression from Steal
This Album! in a musical sense.
“People ask, ‘How are you gonna compete with Toxicity?’” Malakian points
out. “And the answer is: by not competing with it. By not being afraid to use
the new ideas that we have. Some bands are afraid of their fans: ‘They’re not
gonna like this and they’re not gonna like that.’ We don’t have that mindset.
We’ve gotta impress ourselves before we impress the fans—you gotta love yourself
first, you know? I’ve gotta feel like we have everything it takes to make a
record that’s better than anything we’ve done.”
“I look at everything we do as a continuation because it’s the same band
and the same four individuals,” says Dolmayan, “So Mezmerize /Hypnotize is still
System of a Down, but definitely there’s a huge growth. It’s more melodic but at
the same time more aggressive. Every album captures where you are at that
moment, but almost instantly you’re in a new place, as soon as it’s recorded, so
it’s just basically a window into where you’re going in the future. And how
people want to look at that and understand it is really up to each individual.”
Malakian not only produced the band’s magnum opus with Rick Rubin, as he
did with Toxicity and Steal This Album!, but also increased his already
considerable song, arrangement and vocal contributions, stepping forward both as
a lead vocalist and as one half of System’s distinctive harmonies. Malakian’s
increased foreground presence poses no problems for Tankian. “It’s not hard for
me because we’ve been working together for over 10 years,” Serj points out. “I
don’t necessarily encompass his words when I sing them—I approach them from my
perspective and what they make me feel.” This is the same sort of statement one
might expect to hear from Mick Jagger in describing his relationship with Keith
Richards, or Robert Plant on Jimmy Page.
Likewise, Tankian, who shared production chores on Toxicity, broadened
his own contributions in terms of writing music and arranging. In addition to
writing more than half of the lyrics for both Mezmerize and Hypnotize, he played
acoustic guitars, pianos and synths on the new album, as well as handling the
string arrangements, doing most of it in his well-appointed home studio. There’s
a great deal of back and forth between them in the creation of material, as
Malakian explains: “I might have a great chorus but I don’t think the verse is
that great, so I’ll ask Serj, ‘Can you make the verse better?’ And he does the
same thing with me on stuff that he writes.” Both artists, then, have stepped up
and branched out as their band matures, but their interaction is ongoing. So
many great rock & roll bands have been led by tandems, and System of a Down is
no exception.
System of a Down wrote some 30 tracks for Mezmerize/Hypnotize and
recorded them at Rubin's Laurel Canyon studio between June and November of 2004.
The new songs are more complex, more progressive, more unorthodox and more
experimental than ever, while retaining the idiosyncratic, ironic and
schizophrenic qualities that make System of a Down so distinctive. Among the
uncompromising songs contained on Mezmerize are “Cigaro,” “Violent Pornography,”
“Sad Statue,” “Radio/Video” and “Revenga.”
According to Malakian, the ramping up of melody and vocal interaction
between the two collaborators is “part of the band’s evolution.” His priorities
in developing the material for Mezmerize/Hypnotize involved “just being honest
as a writer—not being afraid to express different parts of my life and different
parts of what I see around me. Some people kind of censor themselves; I don’t
and this band doesn’t. It’s a crazy time in the world, and I just stay focused
on being inspired, not only by the crazy times but also by everyday life. It all
meshes together. You can look at these songs from the viewpoint of a normal Joe
or you can look at it in a broader way, because there’s a world going on around
this normal Joe.”
The new album’s character is encapsulated by the jaw-dropping first
single, “B.Y.O.B.,” with its myriad shifts in tempo, tone and viewpoint. The
track starts out with System’s signature teeth-baring ferocity, as Tankian howls
like an opera singer on steroids about a world gone mad while his cohorts
impersonate the RATATAT of an AK47. Then, just as abruptly, a second protagonist
comes into the frame, this one a carefree dude cruising eastward on the San
Bernardino Freeway en route to a party in the desert, the scene delivered via a
delectable minor-key pop hook. Thereafter, like some chemically amplified fever
dream, the settings keep shifting until they begin to overlap, and a
voice—Malakian’s—screams, “Blast off / It’s party time / And where the fuck are
you?,” setting up the bitter incantation, in yet a third distinct time
signature, that sends the song—and the listener—over the edge: “Why don’t
presidents fight the war? / Why do they always send the poor? / Why do they al!
ways send the poor?” The song is so epic that it seems much bigger than
its 4:17 length, and when it’s over, the listener is spent, enraged and
exhilarated, all at once. And that’s just the first track of an album that packs
a world of compressed fury into its 37 minutes. But it isn’t gratuitous fury.
“Originally, there was, in my own performance—on the first album, for
example—a lot more ferocity and rage and aggression in terms of how I expressed
myself,” Serj points out. “Whereas, now, it’s almost like a way of shaking
things up to raise my voice, to communicate on an intense-energy level—which I
would say is as powerful as anger and rage, yet more focused and productive.”
The album ends—this half of Mezmerize/Hypnotize does, at any rate—just as
thrillingly as it begins, with Malakian’s double-cheeseburger reflection on his
ugly, beautiful and bizarre hometown, comprising the Spandex-style rocker “Old
School Hollywood” (ironic, maybe, but bitchen for sure), inspired in part by his
surreal experience on the field at Dodger Stadium for the 2003 celebrity game,
segueing into “Lost in Hollywood,” a bittersweet journey back to “the streets
where I grew up,” which has to be the most beautiful and haunting song this band
has ever recorded. Admittedly, “bittersweet,” “beautiful” and “haunting” haven’t
been used a whole lot in describing System of a Down up to now, but this band is
endlessly surprising, and they refuse to be typecast. From moment to moment
within any given track, they might be perceived as art rock, hard rock, Floydian
prog-rock, psychedelia, politically charged hardcore, nu-metal, old metal or
even Gilbert & Sullivan from some paralle!
l universe, but in the end they’re System, period—unpredictable and
indescribable.
“In terms of dichotomy and the dynamics of the songs, it just kind of
comes naturally through Daron’s songwriting and my songwriting,” says Tankian.
“We just go with it. To me, it’s always been interesting both musically and
lyrically to put two things next to each other that don’t have a previous
relationship and see what kind of relationship I can create out of them, because
I think that’s creating something new. If you can make it work, it’s fun.”
The band has no overriding concept, meaning each of their albums is—just
as Dolmayan says—essentially a representation of these particular individuals at
a particular moment in time. Simple, right? Right. And also incredibly
complex—as complex as human beings and the world they’re living in, a world
seemingly without absolutes or easy answers.
“I don’t really have a side—I’m not red or blue,” says Malakian. “And
since I did write a good part of the lyrics on this record, the songs tend to
take a middle ground rather than being one-sided about it. I think that’s why my
world and Serj’s come together so well lyrically, because he’s more politically
motivated and I’m not, but some of his stuff makes mine more serious, and some
of my stuff makes his stuff a little bit more human. As I was sequencing the
records, I realized that if I went to a shrink and he hypnotized me, I would be
singing some of these songs.”
“I don’t feel any particular responsibility in discussing social or
political things,” Tankian explains. “It’s something that’s in my heart. I’ve
always had a problem with injustice, whether it’s personal, national,
international or universal. It’s just always bothered me to the point where I
have to say or do something. I think action is worth a million words, though, as
far as that’s concerned. But ultimately, if there’s one thing I’d like to do
more than anything else, it’s to not take this life so seriously.”
There’s not a trace of arrogance in this band, despite the scope of its
success. In its place is a disarming humility. “I didn’t find music—music found
me,” Malakian says, clearly in awe of the part he feels destiny tapped him to
play. Odadjian is similarly grateful to be where he is in life. “Every day that
comes, I thank my Higher Power that I’m alive and doing what I do for a living,
because I love it,” he says. “It’s something I’ve dreamt of doing, and I’ve
worked my ass off to get where I’m at. I don’t take any of it for granted.”
They operate as a democracy, with each band member embracing his own
particular role while contributing to System’s unorthodox but remarkably
harmonious dynamic, which comprises intricate relationship vectors. Odadjian,
for example, handles System’s stage production and is involved with the band’s
videos as a director (Toxicity’s “Chop Suey” and “Aerials”) and editor
(“B.Y.O.B.”) “We have our arguments,” Dolmayan acknowledges, “but in the end, if
someone has a compelling argument, everyone else will listen, even if that
person’s in the minority. So it’s a true democracy in that everyone’s voice is
heard.” Dolmayan pauses for the punch line. “Some people talk more than others,”
he quips.
And speaking of relationships, System has a deep connection with its
audience. The band’s fans seem to receive the music precisely in the spirit in
which it’s offered, making it the rarest of situations—particularly in the
context of commercial art forms—and certainly the most rewarding. “The impact
that we’ve had on people, artistically, socially and politically, is pretty
amazing,” Tankian marvels. “It’s a huge compliment, and it’s a very special
thing. I think System of a Down in itself is very special in that sense.
“It’s about the audience finding you, rather than you finding the
audience,” Tankian offers. “A lot of bands are marketed by labels to certain
demographics. With us it was just the opposite from Day One. We toured pretty
heavily until we built up a certain amount of fans that bought our CDs and saw
our shows before we approached radio or video in any way. So that set us apart.
That’s the old-fashioned way, and it’s how bands should be broken. And that’s
why I think—luckily—we’ve had a good long career, and one that’s perpetually
increasing. We’re not an overnight-success kind of band.”
Remember, Mezmerize is only the first half of this serial double album,
so expect another sheaf of surprises when Hypnotize sees the light of day later
this year. “The end of Hypnotize will tie together Mezmerize,” Daron promises,
“but it’s really tough to explain until you hear it. Individually, in my
opinion, they both stand on their own, but until you hear the second one you
won’t know how the two records come together as one. We’re not leavin’ you dry.”
Don’t expect these guys to ever follow any script but their own—they make
it up as they go along, and yet it always turns out to be right on the nose.
“I think you do what you’re destined to do,” says Tankian, expressing
what could serve as his band’s credo. “If you follow your heart and you follow
your path, then you’ll always be safe with anything that you do, including art.”
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Hovakimyan Hovhannes.
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