System Of A Down
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erreerre
Alca//122
6 participants
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Re: System Of A Down
Euh ouais...
C'est un super post ça.
Y a un nouvel album qui va sortir bientot non ?
C'est un super post ça.
Y a un nouvel album qui va sortir bientot non ?
erreerre- René D4
-
Nombre de messages : 590
Age : 40
Localisation : Roti de porc
Date d'inscription : 12/04/2005
Re: System Of A Down
Non, deux.
Un double album différé.
Le premier, Mesmerize, va sortir très bientôt. Le second, Hypnotize, est prévu pour l'automne.
Toutes infos disponibles sur systemofadown.com ou dans la presse spécialisée.
Je vous conseille le site, magnifiquement réalisé par Vartan Malakian.
Un double album différé.
Le premier, Mesmerize, va sortir très bientôt. Le second, Hypnotize, est prévu pour l'automne.
Toutes infos disponibles sur systemofadown.com ou dans la presse spécialisée.
Je vous conseille le site, magnifiquement réalisé par Vartan Malakian.
Re: System Of A Down
SOAD will be at the "Festimad 2005" here in Madrid next month.
www.festimad.es
I´ll get some pics for you, because you wont come to Spain, will you?
www.festimad.es
I´ll get some pics for you, because you wont come to Spain, will you?
Re: System Of A Down
Maybe if you have tickets for me and if I can sleep at you's, I'll get some plane tickets of my own to come and see both of SOAD and you, would that work ?
cool? herk!! :pukel:
le plus cool?
faux!!
on ne peut plus faux!
ils sont parfaits, perfectionnistes, et super engagés, mais pas cool!
d'ailleurs on en a rien a foutre, et eux aussi, c sur, qu'ils soient cool...
cool, en francais, c'est "sympa, et en anglais, c'est "fashion"...
faux!!
on ne peut plus faux!
ils sont parfaits, perfectionnistes, et super engagés, mais pas cool!
d'ailleurs on en a rien a foutre, et eux aussi, c sur, qu'ils soient cool...
cool, en francais, c'est "sympa, et en anglais, c'est "fashion"...
Re: System Of A Down
Trouvez l'horreur (oups, je veux dire : l'erreur)
.
.
.
.
Yaisse... ils ont tous des cheveux sauf un.
Re: System Of A Down
Oups! Je croyais avoir réussi à focaliser le focus sur le chiot
mais j'ai l'impression qu'on me voit encore.
Tiens, pour la circonstance :
Re: System Of A Down
Ah tiens t'as un nouveau chien ?
erreerre- René D4
-
Nombre de messages : 590
Age : 40
Localisation : Roti de porc
Date d'inscription : 12/04/2005
Re: System Of A Down
ah? mais il ne faut pas le prendre comme ca, en tous cas, c'est pas comme ca que je disais ca: c'est juste ce que je pense, sans arrière pensée, d'ailleurs, pour les arrières pensées, il faut avoir un cerveau, non?
Re: System Of A Down
Rideautruc
erreerre- René D4
-
Nombre de messages : 590
Age : 40
Localisation : Roti de porc
Date d'inscription : 12/04/2005
Re: System Of A Down
Très intéressante interview de Daron Malakian dans le dernier numéro du magazine Hard'N'Heavy !!!
Re: System Of A Down
Très bonne intrview de Serj dans le dernier H'N'H.
Et sur le site Get Connected, j'ai trouvé ça...
When System of a Down's second album Toxicity was released in 2001, it became an instant classic. The youth of America connected so well to the group’s aggressive socio-political lyrics and heavily robust and brash music that they went out and bought six million copies of the album, making System of a Down an international phenomenon.
Not only did the band help cultivate a mini revolution of mainstream rebellion among the Gen Y population, System of a Down carried the free-speech m.o. like an Olympic torch. With their albums, they brought attention to drug addiction, the state of the nation and the Armenian genocide, the latter of which they’ve based an annual benefit concert. If you go to the band’s Web site, you’ll find a dedicated section of links to causes that they support.
Now, after a lengthy wait and during a strongly divided political climate, System of a Down is ready to release a double album set. Drummer John Dolmayan tells us why.
Get Connected: You’re giving fans six months to get comfortable with Mezmerize before Hypnotize is released. Can you talk a little bit about how the two albums are related?
John Dolmayan: They were all recorded at basically the same time. We didn’t really intend on having two albums in the beginning. It’s just that the music kept coming and great songs kept being written, and we didn’t have the ability to choose which ones would only be on [one] album.
GC: So it was more a matter of too much good stuff?
Exactly.
GC: How did you wind up deciding which material would go on each?
I kind of left that up to [guitarist/producer] Daron Malakian since he wrote most of the songs. I felt that he would be able to pick them best.
GC: What was recording the new album like? Was there any pressure after the massive success of your last full-length release?
It was a good experience. It was a lengthy experience, which is something we weren’t really used to, but it was, overall, a learning experience. It was a lot of fun.
GC: What are you inspired by?
Art [is] one of them, music [is] another, life [is] the third.
There isn’t one particular thing, but a combination of all things in life that inspires me.
GC: With a few records behind the band now, does System of a Down feel comfortable enough to experiment and move away from what fans would expect?
We’ve always kind of stuck to that way of thinking. It’s not like we thought the first album was going to be a huge commercial success; we were just doing what we felt we should do to get our musical opinion out there. We never thought we’d be as successful as we are. It was kind of a shock. You can’t really plan for this kind of success. You just try not to plan for it, if that makes sense.
GC: What bands are you excited about right now?
There are a couple of bands that I listen to right now that I’m enjoying. One is Apex Theory, the second is The Killers, the third is Franz Ferdinand, the fourth is Mars Volta and then Muse. They have a Radiohead kind of vocal pattern. I like to think of them as what Radiohead would’ve been had they kept on making great albums.
GC: What are your favorite hangouts?
[Hamburger joint] Tommy’s would probably be it. I [go there] when I’m in Los Angeles. Since I live in Las Vegas, it’s not always that easy.
GC: You just headlined your annual Souls Benefit Concert a few days ago in Los Angeles. What’s the show about?
This was the third Souls Benefit. It’s important to us to make it known that the Armenian genocide took place and also bring awareness to other genocides that are taking place now. It just seems like humanity never learns from its mistakes, and I think the only way you’re going to learn from your mistakes is if it’s pounded into your head on a constant basis that you make mistakes. Once you forget, you can always make the same mistakes over and over again.
Mezmerize goes on sale May 17th
Et sur le site Get Connected, j'ai trouvé ça...
When System of a Down's second album Toxicity was released in 2001, it became an instant classic. The youth of America connected so well to the group’s aggressive socio-political lyrics and heavily robust and brash music that they went out and bought six million copies of the album, making System of a Down an international phenomenon.
Not only did the band help cultivate a mini revolution of mainstream rebellion among the Gen Y population, System of a Down carried the free-speech m.o. like an Olympic torch. With their albums, they brought attention to drug addiction, the state of the nation and the Armenian genocide, the latter of which they’ve based an annual benefit concert. If you go to the band’s Web site, you’ll find a dedicated section of links to causes that they support.
Now, after a lengthy wait and during a strongly divided political climate, System of a Down is ready to release a double album set. Drummer John Dolmayan tells us why.
Get Connected: You’re giving fans six months to get comfortable with Mezmerize before Hypnotize is released. Can you talk a little bit about how the two albums are related?
John Dolmayan: They were all recorded at basically the same time. We didn’t really intend on having two albums in the beginning. It’s just that the music kept coming and great songs kept being written, and we didn’t have the ability to choose which ones would only be on [one] album.
GC: So it was more a matter of too much good stuff?
Exactly.
GC: How did you wind up deciding which material would go on each?
I kind of left that up to [guitarist/producer] Daron Malakian since he wrote most of the songs. I felt that he would be able to pick them best.
GC: What was recording the new album like? Was there any pressure after the massive success of your last full-length release?
It was a good experience. It was a lengthy experience, which is something we weren’t really used to, but it was, overall, a learning experience. It was a lot of fun.
GC: What are you inspired by?
Art [is] one of them, music [is] another, life [is] the third.
There isn’t one particular thing, but a combination of all things in life that inspires me.
GC: With a few records behind the band now, does System of a Down feel comfortable enough to experiment and move away from what fans would expect?
We’ve always kind of stuck to that way of thinking. It’s not like we thought the first album was going to be a huge commercial success; we were just doing what we felt we should do to get our musical opinion out there. We never thought we’d be as successful as we are. It was kind of a shock. You can’t really plan for this kind of success. You just try not to plan for it, if that makes sense.
GC: What bands are you excited about right now?
There are a couple of bands that I listen to right now that I’m enjoying. One is Apex Theory, the second is The Killers, the third is Franz Ferdinand, the fourth is Mars Volta and then Muse. They have a Radiohead kind of vocal pattern. I like to think of them as what Radiohead would’ve been had they kept on making great albums.
GC: What are your favorite hangouts?
[Hamburger joint] Tommy’s would probably be it. I [go there] when I’m in Los Angeles. Since I live in Las Vegas, it’s not always that easy.
GC: You just headlined your annual Souls Benefit Concert a few days ago in Los Angeles. What’s the show about?
This was the third Souls Benefit. It’s important to us to make it known that the Armenian genocide took place and also bring awareness to other genocides that are taking place now. It just seems like humanity never learns from its mistakes, and I think the only way you’re going to learn from your mistakes is if it’s pounded into your head on a constant basis that you make mistakes. Once you forget, you can always make the same mistakes over and over again.
Mezmerize goes on sale May 17th
Re: System Of A Down
Déjà vu y a trois ans, un peu
erreerre- René D4
-
Nombre de messages : 590
Age : 40
Localisation : Roti de porc
Date d'inscription : 12/04/2005
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