
System of a Down Warsaw Concert — Jul 18, 2026 at Stadion Narodowy
System of a Down is confirmed to perform in Warsaw on Sat, July 18, 2026 at Stadion Narodowy. This is System of a Down's only currently scheduled Warsaw date on the 2026 tour, so seats tend to move quickly — especially floor and lower-bowl sections. Live Ticketmaster availability is shown below and refreshes daily.
System of a Down Warsaw Concert Details
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System of a Down
System of a Down Warsaw Ticket Prices
Live pricing from Ticketmaster for the System of a Down Warsaw show. Resale prices on secondary markets may be higher.
About the Venue — Stadion Narodowy
The System of a Down Warsaw show takes place at Stadion Narodowy (1 Aleja Poniatowskiego ). Plan to arrive 45 to 60 minutes before doors — lines and bag checks can stretch for big tour stops like this. Rideshare is typically the easiest way to arrive and leave on a show night. For paid parking, venue lots and nearby garages tend to fill 60 to 90 minutes before showtime.
System of a Down in Warsaw— Concert & City Guide
The Armenian-American metal titans bring two nights to Warsaw's Stadion Narodowy in July 2026, with tickets from EUR126. The retractable-roof national stadium sits across the Vistula from the Old Town, walkable over the river or a quick tram ride. Polish crowds are famously loud for heavy bands, and System of a Down's politically charged set, built on 'B.Y.O.B.' and 'Aerials', feeds off that intensity. Two dates here mean there's room to grab the night that suits you.
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About System of a Down
System of a Down formed in Glendale, California in 1994 out of the same Armenian-American suburban scene that produced a generation of musicians, comedians, and artists tied to the diaspora that settled in greater Los Angeles after the 1915 Armenian Genocide. Serj Tankian and Daron Malakian had been writing together in a previous project called Soil; when that band ended in 1995 they pulled in bassist Shavo Odadjian — a friend from Rose and Alex Pilibos Armenian School — and drummer Andy Khachaturian, who was replaced by John Dolmayan in 1997 in the lineup that has now held for nearly thirty years. The band signed to Rick Rubin's American Recordings on the strength of demo work and a relentless Los Angeles club run, and the self-titled 1998 debut introduced what would become the signature System sound: Malakian's serrated, Middle Eastern-inflected guitar riffs, Odadjian and Dolmayan's lurching rhythm section, and Tankian's operatic, polyglot vocal — capable in the same song of growled scat, bel canto melody, and pointed political wordplay. Armenian heritage is not a stylistic affectation in the catalogue but a structural element: the Phrygian and Hijaz scales that run through Malakian's lead lines, the diasporic ear for cadence in Tankian's phrasing, and a willingness to fold Soviet- and Anatolian-era melodic vocabulary into stadium-scale heavy music are what make the band sound unlike any other act of the 2001-era nu-metal cycle. Toxicity in September 2001 made the band one of the biggest rock acts on the planet; the record's release week coincided almost exactly with the September 11 attacks, and the song Chop Suey! was placed on Clear Channel's notorious 'songs of questionable lyrical content' list in the aftermath. Steal This Album in 2002, then the back-to-back Mezmerize and Hypnotize in May and November 2005, completed the original studio run and made SOAD the only act other than the Beatles to land two No. 1 Billboard albums inside a single calendar year. The lyrical politics of the catalogue — opposition to American foreign policy, the prison-industrial complex, drug policy, and most centrally the formal recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the United States and Turkey — became inseparable from the band's identity, most directly on Holy Mountains, P.L.U.C.K., and the explicitly Armenia-funding 2020 singles. In late 2006 the band announced an indefinite hiatus from new music, and although Tankian, Malakian, Odadjian, and Dolmayan have all pursued solo and side projects since (Scars on Broadway, Achozen, Tankian's solo records and orchestral work), the four have repeatedly returned to the stage together — most consequentially with the 2020 Protect the Land and Genocidal Humanoidz singles released to raise funds for Armenia and Artsakh during the second Nagorno-Karabakh war.