“I don’t like it when people call me QB,” I’m told when I meet Quratulain Balouch for this interview at a café in Lahore. I find this young artist with the powerhouse vocals, best known for being the voice behind the soundtrack of the super-hit television drama Humsafar, curled up on a couch in the corner with a thick book in her hands. She’s dressed comfortably, no make-up, spectacles balancing on her delicate nose and her hair in a massive pile on top of her head. She looks smaller and very petite in person. But when she speaks, her voice comes out strong and commands attention.
And that book she’s reading? “Twelve Rules for Life by Jordan Peterson,” she informs me. “I only read when I’m travelling. And I’m travelling right now… I’m away from home.”
Why doesn’t she like being called QB? “Because Qandeel Baloch was also referred to as QB,” she explains. “I don’t feel comfortable with people referring to me with those initials.” Quratulain found the backlash that the social media personality received online after her murder in 2016 very disturbing. “They were constantly taunting and making, like, certain jokes that I just couldn’t stand,” she said. “So, I started asking people to just call me by my first name. Qandeel Baloch was a reflection of the society. She was speaking her truth.”
If not QB, then what? I discover that Quratulain wasn’t always Quratulain. What’s her nickname at home? “Sherry,” she smiles. “Because my father first gave me the name Shaheera. When my sister was born two years later, he named her Noorulain and [re]named me Quratulain but Sherry stuck around. So, I’m Sherry with my family but I don’t like any of my friends calling me that because it’s a little personal.”
Powerhouse vocalist Quratulain Balouch opens up about what makes her prefer to stay out of the limelight, how she is her own worst critic and why she doesn’t like being called QB
But what does Shaheera even mean? “I don’t know!” she laughs. “Someone famous!” On the other hand, for anyone who’s curious, Quratulain means the ‘soothing coolness for the eye’, or idiomatically, ‘apple of the eye’.
Although she was born and bred in Pakistan, Quratulain relocated to the United States when she was around 17 or 18-years-old for a few years, returning to the motherland in 2011. “I was an avaaragard [wanderer] figuring out what I wanted to do with my life,” she laughs. “Nothing conventional for sure, but anything that reflected who I am. I was put through with great people while I was working with an NGO that did relief work in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Azad Kashmir.”
It was while working with that NGO that she met other prominent members in the music industry, such as Ali Noor, Ali Hamza, Mekaal Hasan etc. Once, while interacting with Ali Hamza, Ali Noor and their grandfather, she was asked to do a little impromptu performance. Up until this time, none of these people had ever heard her sing.