âWe have a song about a tapeworm,â beams System Of A Down guitarist Daron Malakian, introducing the wild polka of âNeedlesâ. âToday, I’m going to name the tapeworm âOasisâ,â he continues, before inciting 50,000 pumped-up fans in a bellowing chant of âPUUUULL OASIS OUT OF YOUR ASSâ. Itâs a decades-long feud after Noel Gallagher famously told US radio in the early â00s of his relief after first hearing SOAD, thinking: âIâm actually alive to hear the shittiest band of all time.â Ouch.
When Noel made those comments at the height of âToxicityâ, none could have predicted the trajectory of these Armenian-American political metal weirdos. Disbanding in 2006 after reaching arena level after five acclaimed albums, before returning to endless festival rounds in 2010, we now find ourselves here. With only a couple of new songs and a well-known struggle to make a follow-up album, itâs largely down to TikTok and viral footage of the circle pit mania they inspire that they find themselves selling out stadiums across Europe in 2026 â that same phenomenon that now has Deftones and KoRn back at the top of bills.
Themselves an arena-filling, festival-headlining rock beast, Queens Of The Stone Age acting as opener only heightens the sense of occasion. Youâll rarely catch them on a stage with the sun still beating down, but they seize that moment by coming out to Starlight Vocal Bandâs feel-good classic âAfternoon Delightâ over footage of Josh Homme and coâs faces warping like a bad acid trip.
They intersperse the hard-raging bangers like âSick, Sick, Sickâ, âMy God Is The Sunâ and âLittle Sisterâ with some of their more desert-wandering esoteric numbers like âRegular Johnâ, âThe Fun Machine Took a Shit and Diedâ and âRun, Pig, Runâ, which seems a smart move. It showcases a lesser-sung side of QOTSA while complementing the weirder edges of SOAD and ultimately controls the temperature to keep folk from killing each other. Then, the crowds spiral for the brutal one-two-three punch closing of âGo With The Flowâ, âNo One Knowsâ and âA Song For The Deadâ as an on-fire Homme calls upon London to âmake yourself a night you’ll never remember.” We oblige.
Queens Of The Stone Age live at London’s Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Credit: Alex MortonâWe are System Of A Down from Los Angeles, California via Armenia, and this is the System Of A Down style of rockânâroll,â offers Malakian. From the soulful lament of fallen warriors on opener âSoldier Sideâ and the mass furious questioning of âWhy do they always send the poor?â on âB.Y.O.B.â atop visuals calling out our modern passive approach to âHUMAN SUFFERING, NOW IN 4K!â, itâs clear from the opening that this ainât gonna be your standard stadium fare.
Whether barking back frontman Serj Tankianâs lines about âabolishing mandatory minimum sentencesâ in turning the US into one giant prison, or âDeer Danceâ calling out police brutality (âPushing little children with their fully-automatics, they like to push the weak aroundâ), the audience came to mosh to a message â and there arenât a lot of bands offering that right now. âPardon us for being angry,â Malakian apologises, âbut the world is kinda fucked.â
Tankian, Malakian and bassist Shavo Odadjian play like theyâre all competing to be frontman, with drummer John Dolmayan the stone-faced wall at the back. Spirits are high in the band, with even a tender âI love you manâ from the guitarist to the singer. We may not need a new album with enough nights like this. Give us that absolutely crazy reaction to âChop Sueyâ, the fevered dance of âBounceâ and the spine-chilling respite of âSpidersâ over and over.
System Of A Down live at London’s Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Credit: Clemente RuizTonight is similar to Oasis only in that every single person in this place is going totally ape-shit from start to finish, but System Of A Down ultimately defy and redefine what stadium rock is and can be. The circle pits donât relent throughout, but we know what weâve been waiting for. âI’m sure you’ve seen this part of the show before on Instagram or bullshitgram,â says Malakian before another viral-worthy series of human whirlpools kick off for âToxicityâ into closer âSugarâ. âDo you feel the moment?â he yells. Thatâs what itâs about. And that you were lucky enough to be alive to see SOAD smash a stadium. Shove that up your ass.
Queens Of The Stone Age played:
âRegular Johnâ
âThe Lost Art of Keeping a Secretâ
âDo It Againâ
âSick, Sick, Sickâ
âThe Fun Machine Took a Shit and Diedâ
âPaper Macheteâ
âMy God Is the Sunâ
âRun, Pig, Runâ
âLittle Sisterâ
âGo With The Flowâ
âNo One Knowsâ
âA Song for the Deadâ
System Of A Down played:
âSoldier Side – Introâ
âB.Y.O.B.â
âSuite-Peeâ
âChic ‘N’ Stuâ
âPrison Songâ
âAerialsâ
âI-E-A-I-A-I-Oâ
âInnervisionâ
âDartsâ
âGenocidal Humanoidzâ
âNeedlesâ
âDeer Danceâ
âRadio/Videoâ
âDreamingâ
âHypnotizeâ
âATWAâ
âBounceâ
âSuggestionsâ
âPsychoâ
âChop Suey!â
âLonely Dayâ
âLost in Hollywoodâ
âStreamlineâ
âSpidersâ
âForestâ
âDAMâ
âWar?â
âRouletteâ
âToxicityâ
âSugarâ
The post System Of A Down live in London review: A QOTSA-featuring, Oasis-baiting, circle pit party appeared first on NME.