"Protect the Land" is a somber, marching anthem of defiance, while "Genocidal Humanoidz" is a blistering return to their thrash-metal roots. These weren’t reunion cash-grabs; they were protest songs, raw and necessary. They proved the fire still burned—but also that the band would only reunite for a reason greater than commerce. The elephant in the room. Between 2006 and the 2020 singles, SOAD attempted to record a follow-up to Hypnotize . They reportedly wrote over 30 songs, but creative tensions—primarily between Tankian (who wanted conceptual, political material) and Malakian (who wanted more direct, personal songs)—ground the sessions to a halt. Those songs remain in the vault. Fans still dream. Conclusion: A Flawless, Frozen Legacy System of a Down’s discography is a rare thing: a perfect arc. Five albums (or four, if you count Mezmerize/Hypnotize as one double album) with no weak links. They never sold out, never softened, and never outlasted their welcome. Instead, they froze their legacy at its peak—a band that said what they needed to say, changed the sound of heavy music, and then fell silent on their own terms.

The album is raw, claustrophobic, and deeply strange. "Sugar" became an unlikely anthem with its iconic opening line— "The kombucha mushroom people / Sitting around all day" —while "Spiders" showed their haunting, atmospheric side. Lyrically, the seeds of their political outrage were planted, addressing censorship, war, and the Armenian Genocide. This wasn’t nu-metal; it was art-damage metal for the end of the century. Toxicity (2001) Key Tracks: "Chop Suey!", "Toxicity," "Aerials," "Deer Dance"

Toxicity is a masterpiece of tension and release. "Prison Song" opens with a furious indictment of the American prison-industrial complex, while the title track rides a hypnotic, Arabic-tinged riff into pure catharsis. "Aerials" closes the album with a sense of melancholy transcendence. It debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, sold over 12 million copies worldwide, and turned System of a Down into reluctant rock stars. Key Tracks: "Innervision," "I-E-A-I-A-I-O," "Roulette"

After a three-year silence, SOAD returned with a plan: two albums, released six months apart. Mezmerize was the hooky, accessible half—a pop-metal carnival. "B.Y.O.B." (Bring Your Own Bombs) attacked the Iraq War with a disco-funk riff and a screamed chorus of "Everybody’s going to the party / Have a real good time" —the darkest satire on the charts.

But the weight of the album lies in its closing sequence. "Holy Mountains" is a thunderous, grief-stricken elegy for the victims of the Armenian Genocide, building to a cathartic, choral scream. The album ends as it began (with the intro from Mezmerize ’s "Soldier Side"): the acoustic guitar returns for the full "Soldier Side," a devastating anti-war dirge about a dead soldier’s journey. Together, Mezmerize and Hypnotize function as a single, 70-minute rock opera about the Iraq War, trauma, and lost innocence. Protect the Land / Genocidal Humanoidz (2020) – Non-Album Singles Key Tracks: "Protect the Land," "Genocidal Humanoidz"

Daron Malakian took on a more prominent vocal role, creating a dynamic counterpoint to Tankian’s leads. "Question!" features a stunning, stop-start rhythm and orchestral swells, while "Radio/Video" is a nostalgic, klezmer-inflected romp. Mezmerize debuted at No. 1, proving that political metal could also be ridiculously fun. Key Tracks: "Hypnotize," "Lonely Day," "Soldier Side," "Holy Mountains"