With the release of his first solo album, Elect The Dead, System Of A Down
frontman Serj Tankian contemplates a return to nature.
To get to Serj Tankian's house, you have to take a long, winding, and
occasionally very narrow road that snakes through the verdant hills of
Calabasas, California. It's a beautiful and peaceful place, with bushy threes
and rolling canyons as far as the eye can see, and it seems a world away from
the toxic sprawl of nearby Los Angeles. But like so many once-remote areas of
Southern California, Tankian's secluded neighborhood is beginning to feel the
fetid breath of encroaching development on the back of its neck. Nearly three
years ago, when Revolver came up here to interview him about System of a Down's
sister albums, Mesmerize and Hypnotize, the area seemed to be home to the more
horses than humans; this time, as our car makes its way past one new building
site after another, it's apparent that Tankian will soon have more company up
here than he'd probably prefer.
"Well, what can you do?" he shrugs, sipping iced tea on the couch of his
sparsely furnished but comfortable living room. "I mean, it's the same problem
everywhere," the Beirut-born, Hollywood-raised singer says, speaking in the
calm, slightly accented voice that makes him sound half like a college
philosophy professor and half like the brainy, wiseass kid who sites in the back
of the classroom. "We have an accelerated decrease in natural resources on the
planet and an accelerated increase in population. Now, you tell me how that's
gonna be sustainable!"
To Tankian, the profound paradox is emblematic of the impending end of
civilization as we know it -- a process he suspects may well play out before
most of us are even aware that it's happening. It's a topic that's been hanging
heavy in his mind since November 2005, when System of a Down won the "Best
Alternative Band" statue at the MTV Europe Music Awards, and Tankian -- who
hadn't thought to prepare an acceptance speech -- simply blurted out,
"Civilization is fucking finished. Let's figure out a way of carrying on
together in peace from now on."
"Then I sat down," he sys, chuckling at the memory of his impromptu outburst.
"And I thought, What the fuck did I just say? And why did I say it?"
Having finally given voice to a topic that had obviously been rattling around in
his subconscious for awhile, Tankian began actively exploring the concept (and
ramifications) of civilization's end through his songwriting. The theme runs
through most of Elect The Dead (Serjical Strike/Reprise), the System's singer's
first real solo album -- his 2003 release, Serart, was a collaboration with
multi-instrumentalist Arto Tuncboyaciyan -- most obviously on songs like "Feed
Us", "Honking Antelope", and the record's first single, "Empty Walls". That the
album also contains several righteous, System-ic rants against the political and
economic status quo ("The Unthinking Majority", "Money", "Praise the Lord and
Pass the Ammunition") won't shock anyone, given Tankian's long history of
committed activism. But the fact that Elect The Dead truly sounds so much like a
System of a Down record is indeed a surprise -- a welcome one for System fans
who were severely bummed out by last summer's announcement that the band would
go on "indefinite hiatus" following their headlining appearance on Ozzfest 2006.
"Hiatus" notwithstanding, Tankian clearly has no intention of taking time off in
the near future. After playing most of the instruments on Elect The Dead --
System's John Dolmayan and Bryan "Brain" Mantia of Primus/Guns 'N Roses fame
split the drum duties -- and producing the record himself, he's currently
assembling a band to promote the album. "I can't tell you the lineup, because we
haven't actually practiced yet," he says. "Larry LaLonde from Primus is
definitely one of the guitarist, though." Expect to see Tankian on the road in
late 2007 and much of the next year -- or at least as long as civilization holds
up.
Revolver: Given your work with Serart and your 2002 book of poetry, Cool
Gardens, I was expecting that a Serj Tankian solo album would be more of an 'art
for art's sake' type of thing. But it really is a straight-up rock record, isn't
it?
Tankian: Yeah, it surprised me too, to be honest! [Laughs] Because when I wrote
everything, I wrote it on piano and acoustic guitar, and I didn't know I was
going to arrange it as a rock record. But I felt that the songs wanted the
dynamic instruments; it was like, "Yeah, we're gonna need drums and guitars
here." And with drums and guitars, you've got a rock record. But now I'm getting
more into scoring, strings and acoustic arrangements, and I'm planning that my
next record will be an orchestral, symphonic record, with all acoustic
instruments. The last song on the record, "Elect The Dead", that's more in the
vibe of where I'm going.
Revolver: So, you're already thinking ahead to the next Serj record, instead
of the next System record?
Tankian: Well, yeah. I've written a lot of songs -- I've got 400 or 500
unreleased songs, from classical pieces to electronic pieces. I could do a whole
record of fucked up, obscenity, Frank Zappa-type of pieces, like the song
"Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition"; I have a whole record at least of
that kind of stuff. I have a lot of electronic music; I've been writing crazy
jazz tracks with sampled horns -- some of it for films, some of it for licensing
to videogames. But to me, this record, Elect The Dead, is the strongest record
I've ever written in my life. I had the same energy as on the first System
record; I'd wake up and the songs wouldn't leave me alone. They were haunting me
every moment, totally dominating my live, in a very positive way.
Revolver: There has been some speculation that you made this record as a
reaction to System guitarist Daron Malakian's taking some of the led vocals on
Mesmerize and Hypnotize. Is there any truth to that rumor?
Tankian: Not really... I welcomed Daron's vocals on Mesmerize/Hypnotize. I've
been wanting to do a solo record for a long time, even before the last two
records were made. In fact, I told the guys, "Hey guys, after the next two
records, I'm gonna take time to do a solo record." It wasn't a surprise, really;
I've been wanting to do this for awhile. The beautiful thing about a partnership
with a band is that many people can do many things; this beautiful energy of
music and art coming from the universe through us can be distributed and
interacted. The tough thing about it is that you can't get everything that you
want to do through that project, and you can't control it. Even Daron, who
brought in a lot of material for Mesmerize/Hypnotize, I'm sure he had a lot more
he would’ve liked to bring in. I had a lot of material that I wanted to bring in
that I couldn't bring in; Shavo [Odadjian, System's bassist] did, as well.
I was talking to a journalist recently who said, "Maybe, in retrospect, you
ended up making a record that you wanted System to make." And that's possibly
true. But to be honest with you, if I sang on a rock song the way that I sing,
and the way that I write, there's going to be a certain similarity with System.
If there were no drums and guitars, you'd say, "Oh, it's the guy from System,
but it sounds different." So it's the rock thing -- if I didn't make this record
rock, you wouldn't make the comparison. On this record, there's definitely a new
intimacy to my lyrics that I didn't have as much with System. Because, you know,
when you're working in a partnership, you're representing more than yourself --
you're representing the band. But when you're doing a solo record, you're not
representing anyone but yourself.
Revolver: When you originally told the guys that you were going to make a
solo record, were they cool with the idea?
Tankian: Yeah. I think everyone's always been cool with the idea of everyone
doing their own thing. We've never been the kind of band where nobody should do
anything outside of the band, where it's threatening or anything like that. I've
never been like that, and neither have any of the guys. I've always encouraged
them to do more stuff; I've always thought the more they do outside of the band,
the more richness the band will have because of those experiences. And if you're
not trying to make the same music over and over again -- which we never were --
then you're going to appreciate and need those extra, outside experiences. I
think part of what we did with this 'indefinite hiatus' is give each other
breathing room to do those things. It's hard to do a major project between
records of a major band. Serart was a project I could do that way, because it
was seven days in the studio, a collaboration, a more world/electronic record; I
didn't tour for it, I didn't even play a show for it, so it was easy to do that
between records. But if you want to launch your won primary, strong record,
you're going to need time for that.
Revolver: Was that the main reason behind the "indefinite hiatus"?
Tankian: Well, you know, I think we all needed the space to do our own things.
And I think if we hadn't taken a hiatus, the label would be breathing down our
necks and wanting us to start the next record. There were a lot of
considerations going into it. We've never been a corporate band, so we don't
want to go with those kinds of corporate schedules. Plus, we've been a band for
11 years, and we've put out five records. That's longer than the Beatles, longer
than the Doors. [Laughs] Most classic-rock bands weren't together for that long,
though they often put out two records a year in those days. If today's marketing
structure was different, I'd prefer that, to be honest. Jazz guys used to put
out four records a year! I think it's sad that we have to saturate a market with
marketing to try and sell a record so many times, instead of having more art
coming from these artists. You look at Zappa or Miles Davis, these people who
had so much music to give, or someone like John Frusciante, and all these
records he's been putting out. It would be great to be in a situation where
that's the norm, instead of the way it is now.
Revolver: The end of civilization is a theme that seems to run through most
of the album.. Can you talk a bit about what that means to you?
Tankian: It's a concept that's been haunting me for a number of years. "History"
sounds so big, but it's only been 10,000 years in this life of millions of years
that man, scientifically, has been on this planet. Civilization as we know it
started when people went from being hunter-gatherers to settling down and
growing crops. At the time, settling down may have been a noble idea -- "If we
grow crops, we can feed more people" -- but the fact that we settled in one spot
changed the world. Protecting the resources became important, which led to the
growth of villages, city-states, borders, walls, flags, etc. But if you look
where our agricultural surplus goes now, it's not to the hungry; food is used as
power.
Revolver: You mean like denying a country grain shipments as part of an
embargo?
Tankian: Exactly. And that's the problem, that's where civilization went
wrong -- food because a source of power. And now, we are running out of
resources, we have an exploding population, and we have global warming and all
these other problems. It's like this giant wall with water gushing out through
all these holes, and we're putting little pins in each of the holes. We know
that the wall is going to come crashing down, but we can't do anything but put
pins in the holes, because we have no idea what to do when that wall comes down
-- we can't imagine life without the wall. Civilization is like a little city
that no one's been out of, and when that city stops working, we don't know what
to do, because we've never been out of that city. All our modern religions --
Judaism, Islam, Christianity, Buddhism -- were established within this city of
civilization, so none of them have the depth of perception of indigenous
cultures.
Revolver: As someone who's deeply interested in history, is there another
period of time in which you would like to have lived?
Tankian: Before history, in prehistory, in indigenous times. I've read a lot of
Native American history and a lot about the Maori and Aborigines, and the way
they thought of things was completely different from the way we think. It was
nature based; they would hunt and gather what they needed for themselves. I'm
not being completely naive in thinking there was no war or aggression; there
was. But primarily, people's intuition was intact from birth, and as they
developed that intuition -- whether through suffering or through experience --
they became more wise, in some ways, I think, they kind of knew why we were
here.
Revolver: So what happened? How did we lose touch with that?
Tankian: When civilization started, we gave power to our intellect, to the left
side of our brains instead of the right -- the creative, intuitive, more female
side, if you will. You had patriarchies starting, and modern religions, and
everything for the left mind; it was all about thinking everything instead of
intuiting everything. Now you have technological advances galore, yet you don't
know why it's raining; you have all this technology, yet you don't know why
you're having a hurricane! We've got all these left-brain smarts, but we don't
know why we're here -- we've lost it! We've forgotten. I say we've forgotten,
because we were human beings before civilization, and we knew. I'm not saying we
can go back, though; I'm a city boy, and if I had to forage and try and find the
right food to eat, I'd probably die tomorrow. [Laughs]
Revolver: If civilization really has reached the breaking point, where do we
go from here?
Tankian: We have to redefine everything. I don't pretend to know how the future
lies, but I think we have to reexamine why we're on this planet. We need to
reframe what we're here for, what we do with our lives on a daily basis, our
interactions with people, our interactions with spirituality and religion, our
interactions with nature. The biggest problem we have is a disconnect with
nature. Believing that everything is not one -- that is the biggest evil in the
world. Because if you believe that everything is one, then you don't want to hit
yourself on the head, you know? You're going to be opening doors, and letting
people ahead of you in traffic, and being nice to everyone, and not hurting a
fly; if everyone did that, then the world would be a nicer place to live in.
People say there is a separation between good and evil; I say there is a
separation between those who in their hearts believe that everything is one, and
those who don't.
Revolver: It can be difficult to think that way in a world that seems to be
getting more harsh and unforgiving by the minute. How do you deal with it?
Tankian: I'm always reminding myself to convert everything into a personal
situation. I'm sitting here with you, and I’m not just talking about my record;
I'm talking with a friend, someone I can learn from, someone who can open my
mind about something. If I go to a city to tour, I'm not just there to play a
show; I want to experience the culture, I want to hit a museum, whatever. I try
to grow with the opportunities I'm given.
It's important for me to not only understand everything with my mind, but also
to feel it with my heart. If we're talking about war between two countries, I
think about my country as a house, and how I would deal with this other country
-- this house next to me. Like, the way to make my house secure is definitely
not to have a lot of guns and walls; it's to make sure that Bill next door likes
me, and I like him. And if we're getting along, I k now he's not going to climb
into my yard and kill my dog. It's that simple -- but it's also national. I
think of things very much that way. I always think that if you let someone in
traffic, if you open a door for someone, it creates positive change. It's
awesome, it's free, and that's how we change the world, man!
Written by Dan Epstein for Revolver Magazine
December 2007 issue
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