“But it's funny that this little song that I had such tiny moment with in that RV has become this thing that people can't imagine their lives without. “It makes me feel proud that what we do still holds up, and that people still connect with it,” says Daron. Last year it notched up 1 billion YouTube views – the first metal song to pass that figure (unless you count Linkin Park’s In The End). Its 600 million-plus Spotify plays are greater than any single Metallica song and bigger than the two most popular Slipknot songs combined. Today, Chop Suey! stands as System Of Down’s most famous song, and a 21st century metal landmark. It’s more popular than any other metal song Let’s make them believe we actually did it.’” “ ‘Self-righteous suicide’, ‘Aerials in the sky’, Jet Pilot.’ I was, like, ‘Wow, that’s cool they think that. “Our fans were starting to say, ‘Hey, these guys are prophets, they’re saying things that hadn’t happened yet,’” says Daron. In their fevered imaginations, System Of A Down had predicted what was coming. In the wake of the Al Qaeda attacks, the internet’s tinfoil-hat brigade zeroed in on the line ‘self-righteous suicide’. And it certainly didn’t stop the song reaching No.12 on the Billboard Rock And Metal charts. I think it made the song more popular.”Įxcept Chop Suey! was never officially banned. System of a Down - 'Chop Suey' As with his similarly striking video for Papa Roachs 'Last Resort,' director Marcos Siega allowed the audiences live reactions to tell the story of 'Chop Suey,' rather than zeroing in on a heady concept. It’s almost like you’re not part of the cool group if you’re not banned once or twice. “So many great rock bands have been banned. “In music, that's a badge of honour,” says Daron. The song was banned by radio in the wake of 9/11… or was it?Ĭhop Suey! featured on a list of “lyrically questionable” songs sent by US media giant Clear Channel to its 1100 radio stations following the attacks on the Twin Towers, due to its reference to suicide and the line “I cry when angels deserve to die.” All the effort I put into it… I really wouldn't do anything like that now.” “It took a long time to do, all that body paint. “I just wanted to do something that looked cool – there was no message behind it,” he says. In the Chop Suey! video, Daron is sporting a set of strikingly ornate tattoos on his torso. When we were doing that video, Shavo said, ‘I think we should make it at that seedy ass hotel.’" It's now one of rock's biggest videos ever.ĭaron’s tattoos in the video? They’re not real We used to go with our parents and we’d see all the hookers across the street. “There was a supermarket across the street where all the Armenians used to go to. “In the early 80s, the whole of Sunset Strip was full of prostitution, and that hotel was full of prostitutes,” says Daron. The song’s memorable video was filmed in the courtyard of the Oak Tree Inn in Hollywood, near the neighbourhood where Daron and bassist Shavo Odadjian grew up. The video was filmed in the courtyard of a hotel that Daron and Serj remembered from childhood “It was something they used to say: ‘We’ll make chop suey out of him!’ It meant, ‘We’re gonna kill him.’ It tied in with the whole death thing.” It’s partly a play on words – ‘suicide’ chopped in half – and partly a nod to the old black and white gangster movies Daron watched as a kid. He had a ready-made replacement title: Chop Suey!. We were, like, ‘It’s our first single from the album, do we want to give the radio a reason not to play it?’” Received wisdom is that that the label strong-armed the band into changing the song’s original title Suicide for fear that radio wouldn’t go near the song. Want more rock and metal news? Subscribe to Loudwire's newsletter and download the Loudwire app for the latest.The band weren’t pressured into changing the title from Suicide to Chop Suey! It said the band was 'riding on the coat tails of the valuable reputation' of the company's brand, adding it was 'not presently able to estimate the financial value of this claim, but considers that it will be substantial.'Įasy Life's second album, Maybe in Another Life, emerged this month via Island Records. The document stated: 'By wrongly creating a link with the claimant, the defendant benefits from an association with that positive view and vast brand recognition, regardless of whether the link was intended to be provocative or humorous.' The company also said the band had produced T-shirts bearing their name in the firm's branded style and their website infringed its trademark with its similarity to easyJet branding. In its claim lodged with the High Court, easyGroup said the band had promoted their Life's a beach tour, in 20, with a poster showing a plane in the style of easyJet's orange livery but substituting the airline's name with its own. Easy Life adds that they "don't really know what else to say" but "will keep updated."
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