📢Breaking: SOAD’s New Album Includes Dog Barks, Existential Screams, and … Mustache ASMR?!

SOAD
You Won’t Believe What SOAD’s New Album Sounds Like – Spoiler: It’s Hair-Raising!

Legendary rock band System of a Down has officially confirmed their long-awaited new album, but there’s a twist: 5 out of 12 tracks are purely the sound of Daron Malakian’s mustache growing.

System of a Down Announces New Album – And Half of It is Just Mustache Sounds!

«We’ve always pushed boundaries, but this time we went further,» Malakian explained. The band used nano-microphones to capture the delicate symphony of hair follicles in action. Drummer John Dolmayan claims that trained ears can even distinguish individual hairs sprouting.

System of a Down Recorded an Album – But Half of It is Just Facial Hair Sounds!

The rest of the album? Equally bizarre – featuring a punk ballad about dumplings, a metal anthem for exhausted office workers, and a song made entirely of Serj’s dog barking.

The album, titled «Moustache Symphony : Vol. 1», will include the following tracks:

  1. Follicle Overture
  2. The Sound of Growing (Interlude)
  3. Bark ! Bark ! Bark ! (feat. Serj’s Dog)
  4. Mustache Nation
  5. Office Despair Anthem
  6. Five More Hairs (Interlude)
  7. Panic at the Bakery
  8. A Song About Nothing But It’s Very Loud
  9. Twelve Minutes of Existential Screaming
  10. Symphony of Stubble (Interlude)
  11. Pelmeni Revolution
  12. The Final Hair (Outro)

Fans are already hyped, while critics predict this will either be a masterpiece or total madness. The release date remains unknown, but the band promises it will happen «sometime in this millennium.»

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Chord F. Discord

Chord F. Discord, the Beethoven of Buffoonery, is a self-taught expert in music who once claimed he could “play the kazoo in four languages.”

Born in Crescendo, Indiana, Chord’s first brush with fame came when he accidentally entered a yodeling contest thinking it was a pie-eating competition—and won both categories.

Chord F. Discord: proving that laughter, much like a poorly tuned ukulele, is truly universal.

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