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On a cold Monday night, as freezing winds
from the Arabian Sea blew across a cluttered football field
in Lyari, it seemed that all hell had broken loose in the
People''s National Stadium. No tournament was underway, and
the mighty floodlights were unlit, lest all of Lyari got plunged
into darkness to feed them, but the place was abuzz with activity.
The reason the sleeping stadium (also serving as a hostel
for the Rangers) had been brought back to life was to shoot
a new video for Pakistan''s rock and roll granddaddies, Junoon.
This was the group''s presentation for the World Cup caboodle,
Maza zindagi ka, which just coincidentally happens to be their
sponsor''s tag line for Pakistan.
Considering
the cola conglomerate''s falling fortunes in the Muslim realms
due to its alleged ties to Israel, what better way to work
their ways into the warm hearts of Pakistanis then to use
one of the country''s most popular groups as a cheerleading
squad for the adored (when they''re not playing like day ladies)
cricket team.
Crowds
of curious onlookers, busloads of supporters from various
schools, a gaggle of dancers, cast, crew, extras and plenty
of lackeys - all this and the band even managed to shoot a
little video. If ever Junoon was manifest on earth, this was
it.
One''s
thoughts immediately drifted towards Jazba-i-Junoon, the up
and at ''em pride-fest that the band wrote for the ''96 Cup.
But rather than cheer-lead for the lads in green (Strings,
Najam Sheraz and everybody else and their mammoo as Salman
Ahmad put it, are doing that, as well as the fact that the
official sponsors of the team happen to be an equally massive
rival cola cartel), Junoon has decided to dedicate this one
to the fans, the real people behind Pakistan''s cricketing
passion. Musically, the tune is definitely above average,
and is what one expected from the band after six months''
dormancy. This is the same group of minds that, once upon
a time, gave us such defining moments in Pakistani rock lore
as Talaash, Ehtasaab and Khudi. It seems the creative juices
are still there, but since Ishq, Junoon hasn''t manifested
themselves of late (Garaj baras being a major exception).
Not since Dharti kay khuda (the last great Junoon song) has
the band produced anything to make listeners stop, shake it
off and take notice.
But
getting back to the video, it will be the required burst of
energy needed to make them viable contenders in this country
again. Directed by Jaleel Akhter with wife Marina Khan in
tow, along with Arjumand Raheem handling the choreography,
we witnessed the genesis of this production in various stages.
There were the roaring fans. There were the dancers representing
the various regions of Pakistan who boogied down during an
special pitch invasion as the band played on in the middle
of the pitch. Shehryar Ahmad, brother of Salman and band manager
said there were around 1,200 students providing support to
the group. There were even the colourful locals taunting the
now Kojak-inspired Ali Azmat. It will surely be something
to look forward to when this project comes to fruition on
the 15th of February.
Post-shoot,
we discussed with Salman Ahmad just what the biggest band
of the country has been up to in its tenure away from the
limelight. First off, there were the undeniable break-up rumours
fuelled by the band''s inactivity in Pakistan. Salman refuted
the claims of the naysayers and revealed that the band was
very much together, alive and kicking, if in a state of change;
a chrysalis that might manifest itself with the birth of a
new Junoon for a new age.
"It
has been 12 years now (since the band formed). People grow.
Since the last 12 to 18 months, we felt we needed to grow
more. We''ve got so much love from Pakistan. We''ve even been
acknowledged by our peers, with people saying, ''here''s a
band that were pioneers in developing a sound.'' About 12
months ago I felt I was in a rut. We hit a ceiling, and now,
if we don''t do something to change our sound, to grow as
musicians, then what''s the point in being in a band? We agreed
to pursue music outside of Pakistan and spent eight months
in America playing in colleges," revealed Salman.
Apart
from staving off creative stagnation, the guitarist felt that
the band could make inroads in changing the perceptions of
common Americans as far as Muslims were concerned.
"The
American community is in fear of Islam. ''Who are these Muslims?''
they ask. There is a lot of scrutiny taking place, so when
they see a Pakistani rock band, it blows their mind because
rock music is in the DNA of the American teenager. That''s
what we want to explore. In Pakistan, we''ve given ourselves
the freedom to express ourselves individually as well. I''m
doing a solo project for Hiv/Aids, which could be musical
or could be in a visual format. You don''t have to break up
as a band, but you should have the freedom to do things on
your own," Salman explained.
He
mentions that the mediocre results of Ishq were due partly
because of the band''s label pressuring them to sustain the
sound they had created on Azaadi and maintained on Parvaaz.
"There''s a lot more diversity and dynamics to Junoon,
which wasn''t there on Ishq."
The
band is also planning to disseminate their English language
single No more (already freely available to inquisitive netizens)
locally. While the concept might have been noble and the video,
shot on a Manhattan rooftop post-Sept 11, was supposed to
be in line with the worldwide show of grief for those grisly
events, one felt that already, many telethons and tributes
have gone out to the ''heroes'' of 9/11. Hadn''t the world
mourned enough for America? 9/11s are faced day in and day
out by countless thousands the world over, be it in the battered
wastes of Khost, the rubble strewn streets of Gaza or the
bloody vale of Kashmir. Didn''t scores of innocent civilians
suffer similar September 11s throughout history courtesy the
US war machine and its vassals? Hiroshima. Vietnam. The death
squads of Salvador. The list goes on. Why, then, did a politically
conscious Pakistani band with a voice opt to instead join
the 9/11 bandwagon? Why wasn''t there a No more for the innocents
of Uruzgan in Afghanistan?
"You
probably haven''t seen our VH 1 documentary. That covered
the whole aspect of it. In that documentary, I went to schools
and colleges in Pakistan and interviewed girls asking them,
''What do you think of America?'' I addressed the Afghanistan
issue in that film as well in a very clear way. This isn''t
about us trying to merge with the American Establishment.
We are a band that is multi-cultural and multi-religious.
We can''t be completely Islamic because we have a bass player
who''s Catholic and who grew up in New York! In everything
I try to do, you have to take everyone along with you. No
more was pointed to a western audience. They are comfortably
numb. The idea of a Pakistani rock band blows their mind.
We''re bursting that bubble," Salman claims.
Looking
back on their arguably storied career, we asked if Salman
still considered his band to be at the forefront of cutting
edge Pakistani music.
"Without
trying to be arrogant, Junoon right now signifies a force
that is carrying the message that there needs to be harmony
in this world. That''s been the philosophy right through.
I think we''re a socially relevant force today. The new album
will really articulate what I''m trying to say."
This
eagerly awaited new album should hit stores by June, though
knowing the notorious unpredictability of the band (remember
the wait for Parvaaz?) anything can happen. Salman did, however,
allude to the fact that this time round the album will have
a much "darker" sound.
But
for now, the band faces a smooth reentry back into Pakistani
aerospace, with Maza zindagi ka the required element to place
them in the proverbial camera''s eye.
"I''m
passionate about cricket. It''s the fans'' passion that fuels
this game. I''m a fan and this is a song from a fan,"
Salman Ahmed concludes in his finest rock man groove.
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