Blabbermouth reports that Seven Hours After Violet, the genre-bending, alternative metal collective led by System of a Down’s bassist Shavo Odadjian, has just made their festival debut at this year’s Mayhem festival on October 12, at the Glen Helen Amphitheatre in San Bernardino, California. Watch the fan footage of “Sunrise”, “Paradise” and “Cry” below:
Seven Hours After Violet’s self-titled debut album was released on October 11, via Sumerian Records and 1336 Records. The band’s lineup consists of Odadjian on bass, vocalist Taylor Barber of Left to Suffer, guitarist Michael Montoya of Winds of Plague, guitarist/backing vocalist Alejandro Aranda of American Idol and drummer Josh Johnson, also of Winds of Plague. The band made their live debut on Monday, October 7, at the SiriusXM Garage in Los Angeles, California.
Odadjian recently discussed with RIFF Magazine how Seven Hours After Violet came to be: “It was funny. My number’s 22, so that’s why I have the [cannabis] brand 22Red. So on February 22nd, 2022, we threw a party and the day of the party, I did a live radio show on KROQ here in Los Angeles. And that evening, we were throwing the party for 22Red, but I did that show before and I invited the host to the party. He asked me if he could bring a friend. I said, ‘Sure.’ He brought his friend. It was Morgoth Beatz who ended up being the producer and now my rhythm guitar player in the band and co-songwriter in some of them songs and stuff. So he and I decided we can write music that day together. So we exchanged numbers and we got together like a month later, wrote a song, and then we did another one a week later. And then it just became this thing where it was gonna be like one song we were going to sell to another artist, ’cause that’s what he does; he writes a lot of music and he passes it on. But it became this thing. And he mentioned, he’s, like, ‘Man, why don’t you do a Shavo record? Like something with all of the songs that you wrote instead of just one or two songs. These are coming out great.’ And at that point, I wasn’t really thinking about doing my own record like that, ’cause I’ve done so many other projects. And another thing is I’ve never done heavy music outside of System. It’s been heavy, but never the same genre. I’ve always tried to stay against the grain, and I’ve done EDM, I’ve done hip-hop, I’ve done rock-metal shit, but I haven’t really just focused on that, which actually is my forte. I close my eyes and it just happens, which is how we did this.”
He continued: “So I was at his studio. I have my own studio. I gave him the key. I said, ‘Come through. We’re gonna start working on this record.’ And a year and a half later, we have a full record, plus another half a record for album two. We have a full band. I started my own label and I signed it to Sumerian, who has worldwide distribution to Virgin, which is amazing for me. That’s what I kind of wanted with the control. I’ve been doing this for 30 years, so I kind of knew how I wanted it, and I’m building it. And that’s how it started. And that’s where we’re at right now. It started off as a passion project [and it] became my thing.”
Considering how the songwriting process for System of a Down was different from how he approached his previous projects, Odadjian said “Yeah, usually I’ll write at home and then I’ll bring it to the band. Or my other projects, I’ve just written at home and then brought it to the rest of the guys. This one, I would just have him play a beat that he made, or even just a 4/4, or even a loop or something, and then I just kind of… I mean, I just started strumming and the music just came out of me. So we just recorded everything I did. And whenever something was amazing, we knew it. I was, like, ‘Okay, make that a thing.’ So we highlighted that moment. And then afterwards I wrote a part that goes with that, and then kind of arranged it, wrote it all in the studio. So artistically it was really refreshing. There was no boundaries, no law, no rules. I just did it. It just came out so organically. Everything about it has been organic and not planned. And that’s what the beauty of Seven Hours After Violet.”
On the topic of how he came up with the name of Seven Hours After Violet, Odadjian said “He [Morgoth Beatz] wanted to call it SHAV or SHAVO, so people know it’s me, and I wrote 95 percent of it. But still, I always like a unit, I like a band. I think it’s cooler. And plus he helped me a lot. These guys, they came in and did their part, and it just works perfectly. So I like the collaboration. I’ve never had the ego, where it’s, like, ‘me, me, me.’ I’ve never done that. I’ve never said that. So I like it. It’s us. And it became a band. And Seven Hours After Violet, the acronym, is S.H.A.V. So that’s cool. So they got what they wanted and I got what I wanted. I got a band, the cool name mysterious, but it also has a meaning, but I’m never gonna explain the meaning. It’s kind of one of those things. There’s many meanings you can think of what ‘Violet’ is — it could be a female, it could be a thing, the color, an event, it could be anything, and it’s kind of cool. So there is some deep meaning to it and maybe one day we’ll explain it, but at the moment, I like it where we are.”
Odadjian also went into detail about the lineup: “My singer, Taylor Barber, he comes from the world of deathcore and the growling. His voice is an instrument, and he’s a wonder. He’s like the new wonder of the world that no one knows yet that’s there. He does have a following and he comes from another band called Left to Suffer, which is a grindcore band. But he sings like a canary as well. His range is so huge. He’s the perfect member. He’s the perfect singer that came in and can do all the parts. And then also we got Alejandro Aranda, who, he is just this musical genius who came in. He was the last member, and I didn’t even know I needed that member, but, now it’s, like, of course I needed him. Of course he fit perfectly. He does side vocals. He sings along with Taylor perfectly. So it’s like a two-vocal band now, two-vocalist band. And we got Josh Johnson on the drums, and he’s amazing. He hails from a band called Winds of Plague; he used to play with them. So he’s talented as hell. So, yeah, I’m honored and lucky to have these guys around me and for us to be able to do this music together.”
Photo Credit: Raymond Flotat