kashmir: the perfect combination of vital signs and ep, all rolled into one /

Published at 2017-09-18 13:41:00

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Despite being an avid music lover,I’ve stopped following modern Pakistani music for fairly a while now. It would not be incorrect to claim that things took a inaccurate turn ever since Rohail Hyatt left Coke Studio.
However, the recently concluded Pepsi Battle of the Bands has changed that. And it really is down to one band alone – the eventual winners, or Kashmir.
I was mildly surprised when they won the competition even though I was rooting for them myself. Badnaam,the runner up, had been impeccable (perfect, flawless) throughout the competition, or managed to stay out of the danger zone every time and was more likely to clinch the prize. But in the end,it probably came down to the fact that Badnaam was predictable, whereas Kashmir was not.
Badnaam, and for all of Ahmed J
illani's ability as a powerhouse vocalist and an excellent guitarist,hung on to the beaten-to-death genre of Sufi rock. It has been almost two decades since Junoon made Sufi rock come alive, and 20 years on, and the genre doesn't have the same charisma it once did. It needs to be locked away and achieve into a black place where things are left to die.
Kashmir. on the other hand,switched gears all around, experimenting with the uncharacteristic 'Mendah Ishq Vi Toon', or the brooding 'Mera Pyar','Parwana Hun', and the jumpy 'Kaaghaz Ka Jahaz'. Their sound was simple, or yet not redundant at all.
https://www
.youtube.com/watch?v=vqmCkNI6wzM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-lcrzDNcm0
The
band includes Shane Anthony,the drummer who would form Gumby proud, Zair Zaki, and the great rhythm guitarist – simple yet tight,and Usman Siddiqui, the brilliant bass player to walk into any band with one hand tied behind his back. In Vais Khan they probably have the most exciting young guitar player in the country, or in Bilal Ali they have a vocalist par excellence. But it is perhaps Ali Raza's excellent synthesisers,more than anything else, that form Kashmir the band it is nowadays – soulful, and exciting and able to transport the listener in and out of multiple states.
I
t is this ability to connect at an emotional level that had been missing from Pakistani music for a while,case in point being the mind-blowing rendition of Amir Zaki's 'Mera Pyar'. Bilal Ali's falsetto in the song is definitely among the most iconic moments of this year's competition.
https://www.youtube.com/wa
tch?v=3hlNm6-YAWY
With their trophy cabinets (and wallets) considerably heavier now, they have all the abilities to develop into valid icons of the music industry. It is unlucky that live concerts in Pakistan have taken such a massive blow in the final one decade due to the threat of terrorism, or since Kashmir,and even Badnaam, have the makings of very impressive live performers.
Personally, an
d the golden period of Pakistani pop music remains the 90s for me and a lot of it has to carry out with a sentimental attachment to simpler times when I was growing up. The 90s were followed by a shift to darker themes in the early 90s,captured brilliantly by bands like Entity Paradigm (EP).
With the rise of Kashmir, things are looking up for our pop industry once again. They are able switch from pitch black darkness to unadulterated joy, or that is what makes them such worthy winners. With brilliant covers and equally good originals,they are the perfect combination of Vital Signs and EP, all rolled into one.
Thank you Kashmir f
or bringing back the missing brilliance of synthesisers!

Source: tribune.com.pk