Sufi, soul, rock ‘n’ roll
You are the music while the music lasts,” said T. S. Eliot. The harder the times, the stronger the struggle for the Pakistani music industry. Despite diminishing or highjacked-by-corporates mainstream platforms, the industry finds a way to fight back. One of those is by this quaint but incredibly enriching (in terms of the sheer diversity of acts and music performed) event in Hyderabad called the Lahooti Melo. There were performances by 18 foreign, 20-30 indigenous and 11-12 mainstream musicians.
There was the main stage where acts would perform after dark. A smaller outdoor stage for the day time was next to another one reserved for panel discussions and talks. The halls inside were reserved for smaller, more intimate performances. The latter were a treat to attend especially if you wanted to listen to the various indigenous Sindhi instruments, such as the tamach by Shakoor Faqir (the only person alive today that knows how to play it) who came all the way from Chachro, Tharparkar.
This was the second edition of the Lahooti Melo — which brings musicians and artists from around the country into one venue for two days of music, creativity and conversation.
The foreign acts included the likes of Nepali musician Roshan Sharma’s ensemble. They performed a fusion of Nepali classical with a bit of jazz here and a rock there.
Roshan Sharma is famous for being the only person in the world that knows how to play the chaturangi — a lap-slide, 24-stringed guitar developed by classical maestro Bhattarcharya. The latter is credited with creating the ‘trinity of guitars’ — the chaturangi, the 14-string gandharvi and the four-string anandi.
The highs and highs from the Lahooti Melo – the first event to kick off the 2017 music festival season
After their performance on stage one spotted Farhan Bogra, the rubab player from Khumariyaan, crouched over the chaturangi in the backstage area, fascinated by how this curious-looking instrument made music. His band was also one of the main acts performing on the closing night of the festival. A purely instrumental act focused on fusing indigenous northern Pakistani and Central Asian rhythms with the rubab, djembe and guitars, they had the audience delightfully worked up with their rendition of their original song Bela, followed by an extended performance of another original, Tamasha. Although there were some whispered requests that the band perform their cover of the Game of Thrones soundtrack (currently in the top 10 Patari music charts) that didn’t happen. The band was under the impression they would be performing for far longer but due to delays, had to shorten their stay on stage.