Xulfi during the filming of ‘Hum Zalmi’ -Photo: Areeb Imtiaz
One of the defining moments of musician and producer Zulfiqar ‘Xulfi’ Jabbar Khan’s life came when he slipped and fell in college, resulting in a slipped disk and a bulge in his back that had him bedridden for months. It was the year 2000 and he was 19-years-old. “I’m telling you this because this is the basis of who I am,” he says. Until that moment, life had been going pretty well for him — consistently studious and as head of the music society at FAST-NU (National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences) and finally meeting like-minded people who shared his passion for the arts, he felt he was on track to fulfilling his dreams.
Unable to really move or do anything, the one thing he asked for was to have his computer moved close to him. There was some music software on it. If he couldn’t get up and physically play an instrument, he was going to do so on the computer.
“In those two months of being bedridden, I created a whole instrumental album,” he relates. “It was called ‘The Lifeless Journey’ and I called myself Silence. Because silence was all that I could experience.” He’s grateful for even that experience now: it was the first step that nudged him into music recording and production.
It was in Fast-NU where he met and formed Paradigm with Fawad Khan, Hassaan Khalid, Sajjad Khan and Waqar Khan. According to Xulfi, he first met Fawad when the latter came to audition to perform at a college welcome party. The song that he sang was One by U2. It was also Fawad that came up with the name Paradigm for their band. Once they started performing outside their campus, they got noticed by another band, Entity. Or rather Ahmed Ali Butt, who was their vocalist and frontman.
Zulfiqar Jabbar Khan, popularly known as Xulfi, is used to being in the limelight as a lead guitarist. Ironically what he enjoys more is being behind the scenes as one of the most prolific and original music producers in the country. He opens up to Icon about band break-ups and make-ups, the turning points in his life and his hidden love of drums
“I’ve seen you guys perform,” Butt said to Xulfi, “Does this guy [Fawad] want to act?” “That’s how Fawad and Ahmed met and Jutt and Bond happened,” says Xulfi. “And in a way [the roots of] EP happened. At one point, Ahmed Ali Butt said ‘Let’s make a song together.’ We sat together and made Humein Aazma.”
Sometime in 2002, Xulfi saw an ad calling for auditions for the first ever Pepsi Battle of the Bands (BOTB). Without telling any of his bandmates, he cut the Humein Aazma track as well as The Lifeless Journey and sent it in. He wasn’t really expecting a call back, but he got one two days later, from Rohail Hyatt himself. There was a catch: both songs had been accepted and he would have to choose which one to go to with — Humein Aazma or his own solo track. He chose his band’s.
“My life changed after that,” he relates. “That’s when we decided to get together and join the bands — Entity and Paradigm — into EP.
“Aaroh won the battle, but we got a contract to record our album. We went to Mekaal Hasan to produce it. And there I got into the second phase of my passion for music production. A lot of the times when we were recording the music, we were engineering the sounds as well. I was noticing how different instruments are miked, effects on the vocals etc. The journey of [my foray into] music production had started.”
After he graduated, he asked his parents to let him consider a career in music for one year, to see if he could make it. The first thing he did was set up a very basic studio in his mother’s clinic that was attached to the main house. “It was a chhota tareen [the tiniest] studio, but the first album that I recorded was Jal’s Aadat,” he says. “It was at a time when Atif and Gohar had separated and Atif was recording his album in Islamabad. So, we had to come up with an album as quickly as possible, as Jal.
“We didn’t have studio speakers, we miked some things in the bedroom. Mixed some of the music using headphones. There were so many things that could’ve stopped us, but we had to do it.
“I didn’t stop after that. The studio kept getting bigger. Jal was a new band at the time. I found my true calling as a producer into figuring out how to unlock the potential of a young artist. I was young as well but this is what I was used to doing [as head of the music society in FAST-NU]. So, in a way, Nescafe Basement was an idea I’ve been living with for a long time.”
Indeed, Nescafe Basement, which first went on air in 2012, as a programme was solely focused on introducing and nurturing new talent from across Pakistan. Four seasons old, Basement has remained consistent in its mission to introduce “new blood, new sounds, new energy” into the Pakistani pop-rock music scene.
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