I-E-A-I-A-I-O

I-E-A-I-A-I-O

Infobox Song
Name = I-E-A-I-A-I-O
Artist = System of a Down
Album = Steal This Album!
Released = November 26, 2002
Format = CD, Airplay
Recorded = 2002
Genre = Alternative metal,Nu metal
Length = 3:08
Label = American/Columbia
Writer = Serj Tankian, John Dolmayan, Shavo Odadjian, Daron Malakian
Producer = Rick Rubin, Daron Malakian
prev = "Mr. Jack"
next = "36"
track_no = 8
prev_no = 7
next_no = 9
"I-E-A-I-A-I-O" is a song by the band System of a Down from the Steal This Album! record.

General Information

During the Toxicity/STA recording sessions, the song made its first studio appearance. It was leaked onto the internet along with several other songs under the unofficial name "Toxicity II." The most notable difference between the demo and the final is that the song contains the other band members' vocals. The first make of the song was played during their Las Vegas show in 2000 and was named K.I.T.T., being based on the Knight Rider show.

The song is characterised by exceptionally fast-spoken verses, akin to Tongue-twisters, including, "A former cop, undercover, just got shot, now recovered" and "Fighting crime with a partner, Lois Lane, Jimmy Carter." The chorus is an abstract chanting of the title.

In addition, the song contains a brief excursion into a stylized version of the theme from the television show "Knight Rider".

This is also the first and only song that drummer John Dolmayan sings in. He sings the chorus of I-E-A-I-A-I-O along with Shavo, Serj, and Daron.Fact|date=April 2007 This is also the System song that John has a writing credit.

Interpretation

As with many System of a Down songs, there are supposed double meanings. For this song, some of the possible meanings are a journalist digging up dirt on a politician (Meeting John at Dale's Jr.), and the western world's obsession with gadgets and trinkets (plutonium wedding rings). I-E-A-I-A-I-O are the vowels inside the word I-D-E-A-L-I-Z-A-T-I-O-N.

Also, I-E-A-I-A-I-O is a portion of a mantra or "word of power" described by the English occultist Aleister Crowley, presumably in parody of numerologically significant syllables uttered in magical ritual that have no meaning without understanding the specific numerology tradition used in the ritual (in this case, Hebraic Gemetria, numerology of Hebrew letters). The I-E-A-I-A-I-O is parodical because it somewhat emulates the sounded choral portion of the traditional children's song, "Old MacDonald Had a Farm". It is said that Aleister Crowley would teach his students the incantation as a sacred and mystical mantra, then after they'd chanted it for a few minutes, begin singing "Old MacDonald Had a Farm" to see if they could keep their meditative concentration instead of laughing. Fact|date=February 2007

There are other explanations theorizing that the "One flag", "plutonium wedding-rings" and other strange descriptive shapes, and the sharp, loud tribal drumbeat all add to the conclusion that this song is about the fourth of July - "and we light up the sky" is another strong reference, which could mean the traditional fireworks displays. The lyrics "Why, On the fourth of July" appear in the originally recorded version of the song from the Toxicity recording sessions, but not in the Steal This Album version.The "One flag" and "plutonium wedding-rings" could also be describing the effect after a nuclear bombing, with one flag ruling over all others, radiation affecting all things, and of course this could explain the "As we light up the sky" part of the song.


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