Following System of a Down's hiatus in May 2006, guitarist Daron Malakian announced his new project — Scars on Broadway — a band which would include System of a Down drummer John Dolmayan and himself. Malakian and Dolmayan experimented with different musicians, for a period of nine months in 2007 the band took form and forged its sound in intense rehearsals and recording sessions under Malakian's direction, at his home studio and Sunset Sound; with musicians Danny Shamoun on keyboards, Dominic Cifarelli on bass, and
Franky Perez on guitar and backing vocals. The band begin recording their debut album in September 2007. On what direction his album will take, Daron Malakian states: "It will probably be something very heavy mixed in with traditional Armenian and
thrash,
death,
doom,
black and dark metal influences. When, or even if, the music comes out, it will still be structured, just like System of a Down's music is." Malakian stated the sound will be influenced by
classic rock such as
David Bowie,
Brian Eno,
Yes,
Neil Young, and
Roxy Music, shifting his songwriting away from System of a Down's "frazzled metal" to more "song-based" work. "I don't feel we're the mosh-pit band," said Malakian. "That's just where I'm comfortable as a writer right now." On May 2, 2008, the album was announced. A week later, the band was signed to
Interscope Records. The band released "They Say" as their first airplay single on March 28. The music video for the track was released on June 27. A second single, "World Long Gone", was released on September 8, featured a music video directed by filmmaker
Joel Schumacher. ==Reception==