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instep
profile
Stringing success… for the long haul
Instep finds out where the Strings are at and what's happening
with
the most hotly anticipated album of the year.
By
Muniba Kamal
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No
it's not called Dhoop. The next Strings album is tantalizingly called
Koi Aanay Wala Hai. It's an apt name for the most anticipated album
of the year.
Strings, as one music aficionado put it recently now fall into the
category of "classic". This Strings fan is well into his
50s. With their melody, lyrics by Anwar Maqsood and a signature style
that they have never veered from, Strings have become a listening
habit in Pakistan. And they've penetrated so deep into our consciousness
that they're not going anywhere.
If Ali Azmat is about radical experimentation and newcomer Atif is
all about hype, Strings are all about consistency and a mellow attitude
that they have made uniquely their own. They are not about 'Garaj
Baras' and are definitely not scratching their heads and wondering
'Hum Kis Gali Jaa Rahe Hain'? Faisal Kapadia and Bilal Maqsood are
self assured, co-pilots of the enterprise that is the Strings and
they're cruising along hitting all the right notes and that too all
over the sub-continent!
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Faisal
Kapadia and Bilal Maqsood have long been the most chilled out guys
in the music industry. They occupy their own world. Both are happily
married to the women they fell in love with years ago and have children;
Bilal, three and Faisal, two. And they have never been into making
statements. They don't take up political causes. They will do a 'Beirut'
but they won't tom-tom the fact all over the place. They do what they
do and they do it well, but they do it very quietly, so at the end
of it, all you hear is the music.
Faisal and Bilal are voyeurs. They observe the milieu and resolutely
figure out a way of doing their thing their way. Sitting with them
in Bilal's gorgeous home within the Maqsood family compound in Defence
Karachi, the vibe is easy to pick up on. There is a sense of calm
to both of them. They share an easy energy, as mellow as the music
they make. They are both excited about their new album, which is being
mastered at Yashraj Studios in India, in the heart of Bollywood itself
and yet the sound is distinctly Strings. |
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'Koi
Aanay Wala Hai', the song starts off from where the excellent 'Aakhri
Alvida' left off. This album sees a reinvention of the Strings. There
are breaks between rhythm and melodic bridges that reach to a crescendo
and then goes around for another spin. It's a definite departure from
Duur and Dhaani. The music is more rocking, the sound is definitely
edgier, but it doesn't sound like a whole new band. Faisal and Bilal
know the Strings signature well and they stick to it.
"I look at us as a brand like Nike," says Bilal. "Strings
are a brand and there is a philosophy behind it. We know what we have
to do."
Like what?
Faisal easily takes over from Bilal and launches into the story of
the shooting of the 'Aakhri Alvida' video. "We were shooting
on the sets of the film and you remember the scene with guns on display?"
he asks unassumingly. Who would forget the 'Aakhri Alvida' video?
It was a breakthrough lesson in how Pakistani musicians can use Bollywood
for their own advantage. |
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"Well
originally Sanjay Gupta, the director, wanted us to play with the
guns, load them and stuff," continues Faisal in that husky baritone.
"I was very excited by the idea, but Bilal stopped me saying,
'Do we really want to send out the message to our fans that the Strings
are into guns?' I thought about it and decided he was right. Guns
are not what Strings are about at all."
Bilal smiles. There is an easy awareness between them. And music producer
Rohail Hyatt who has known them for ages says that they are very easy.
Part of their charm he attributes to the "nice boys next door
syndrome, which is how they are." Yet he sees them as two separate
entities. "They are very different people," he tells Instep.
"Which is why when you ask me about them as a unit, I can't answer
because I look at them as two very different individuals." According
to Rohail, Bilal is the creative mind, while Faisal has the capacity
to be very real and the skill to deliver. And the success of the Strings,
Rohail attributes to their difference. "They compliment each
other very well." |
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He
echoes how Faisal and Bilal describe their relationship. "When
one is slipping, the other brings him back on track."
Faisal and Bilal are their own professional comfort zone. And it doesn't
come easy. Yet here are two guys who dreamt a dream together and formed
Strings way back in the day and came out with the albums Strings in
1990 and Strings 2 in 1992. 'Sar Kiye Ye Pahar' from their second
album became to Strings then what 'Aadat' was for Jal and Atif Aslam
at the turn of this century. However, Pakistan wasn't then what it
is now and being a musician seemed to be a fool's dream. Faisal and
Bilal were respectively in love with the women who would be their
wives and they finished their education and worked, got married, had
children and became 'normal' people. But the call of music was too
strong and they came back with Duur and the rest, as they say, is
history. |
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New media is capable of catapulting stars to the stratosphere. The
plethora of music channels in Pakistan, the launch of new newspapers
and magazines and the emergence of awards shows have ensured that
the music industry is more prolific than ever before and the Strings
love it.
"We loved it when Instep Today was launched," says Faisal
recounting how excited they were that entertainment news was being
covered daily in Pakistan. "That is the way it is in India."
India is a barometer for both of them. It is the land the Strings
went to and found fame tenfold the size in Pakistan. They are regulars
on the Indian concert circuit and having made inroads into Bollywood,
they regularly perform with Bollywood stars. And we at Instep found
it rather infuriating when they did a string of concerts with Saif
Ali Khan and the Indian band Parikrama and didn't keep us updated
at all. Readers would have been so interested in that.
"Look," smiles Faisal. "When we first went to India
and performed with Bollywood stars for the first time, we told you
about it. It was exciting for us, but now we keep on going there and
we keep on performing with them. We can't call up newspapers and say,
now we're performing with Saif, and next week Akshay Kumar will be
singing with us or that John Abraham is coming in our video. It's
become regular now."
Both Faisal and Bilal strongly believe that too much hype can kill
and artists. "When you keep reading about someone everyday, see
them in interviews on every channel and see there videos all over
the place, it kills it. You don't like it when anyone is shoved down
your throat," they both agree.
There it is again, the subtlety that has become a trademark of the
Strings. It's in their music, it's in the way they talk and it's in
the way the way they view the scene and how they choose to play their
game. From videos to concerts to music and interviews, it's done with
a dignity and grace that's hard to find in the rat race that the burgeoning
music scene in Pakistan has become.
And nowhere does this remarkable trait of theirs shine through as
clearly as when they give interviews to Indian papers. The quotes
attributed to the Strings are fantastic like one they gave to The
Hindu in October 2007. "While listening to film music, you visualise
the particular actor in the song. In independent albums though, the
listener pictures himself in the situation. The listener relates to
the singer even more," they were quoted as saying. Or the one
that they gave to Rediff when they first went to India where they
advised any band who couldn't make it big in India to come to Pakistan
which has more of a band culture. They tell it like it is and take
a stand for what they believe in. They have taken the Strings signature
to India and have refused to compromise on it even if they have been
made an offer by the likes of Karan Johar and Madhur Bhandarkar.
An offer came from Karan for them to sing for a film, but they refused
that.
"We're open to collaborations, but we're not interested in being
playback singers."
And when Madhur Bhandarkar asked them to compose the soundtrack for
his upcoming film Fashion, they turned him down preferring to work
on their new album Koi Aanay Wala Hai.
"We don't want to be Laxmikant-Pyarelal."
Bilal Maqsood and Faisal Kapadia realize that they are the upholders
of the entity that is Strings and they treat it as sacrosanct. They
worked with Sanjay Gupta because he understood what they wanted to
do and was willing to let them do that for the film. They speak very
highly of John Abraham who will appear in their first video for their
upcoming album because he gets them. They think highly of Sanjay Dutt
because they get along with him. Faisal and Bilal are not starstruck,
which is why they deal with Bollywood on their own terms. A lot of
music industry insiders attribute their success to Anwar Maqsood's
Indian connections, (Bilal's poet father has many fans in India) but
as Rohail puts it, while connections do help, it is what you deliver
at the end that makes or breaks an artist.
Recently, it was pure pleasure to see the Strings perform at Coke
Studio, Rohail's upcoming project that pits our biggest pop stars
alongside classical and folk musicians. Right before the show, Faisal
and Bilal were speaking with Rohail about how to introduce the lewa
musicians who were going to accompany them on 'Sar Kiye Yeh Pahar'.
They had heard of lewa dancers and wanted to know if lewa musicians
was the correct term. Eventually they pointed to Abdul Lateef and
his gang of men and said, "So here's 'Sar Kiye Ye Pahar', lewa
style," right before Bilal launched into the most haunting reworking
of the first ever Strings classic.
Ustad Hussain Buksh Gullu, the most seasoned classical musician roped
into Coke Studio was paired with the Strings. He accompanied them
on Duur. At rehearsals where they met for the first time, Faisal sang
the opening strains of Duur to him and then said 'Please enter wherever
you have the space to and take it wherever you have to." And
Ustad Gullu worked his magic, taking Duur to places you couldn't imagine
like only a vocalist trained in Eastern classical can. When he stopped,
Faisal jumped in front of him waving his hands upwards as if to say,
"Carry on sir, it's sounding wonderful." Ustad Gullu smiled
and complied.
There is a tameez to dealing with classical musicians, who are a part
of an old tradition that does not work well in today's go getting,
cut-throat world. Yet, reaching out to them makes popular music richer.
Strings realized this a while ago, which is when they teamed up with
Hari Haran for the duet 'Bolo Bolo' in India and they manage to work
well with classical musicians which is not an easy feat for the proverbial
'popstar'.
Another reason why their performance to an intimate audience at Coke
Studio remains memorable is because one hardly gets to see them perform
anymore. It seems rather unfair that their Indian fans get to see
what their Pakistani fans remain deprived of.
"We've gone on to another level playing at stadiums for thousands
of people with great sound and great production values," says
Bilal. "After doing that, we can't play for a two hundred people,
with either bad sound or fake it on stage."
"We feel ridiculous doing it," agrees Faisal.
It is a tragedy for our music industry that while musicians move ahead,
the industry doesn't move with them. The Strings tried to change that
when they went to the city government with the idea to do concerts
all over the city. This plan resulted in the Hamara Karachi Festival
in 2006, which became a hit, but while the Strings performed, they
felt that the purpose wasn't fulfilled. The city government took the
project in an entirely new direction and so many things happened that
the festival lost all focus. The Strings wanted to give public concerts
in open spaces where people could just come and listen and they still
carry that plan which they hope will materialize one day.
"All colleges need to hold concerts," they say, pointing
out that the bulk of their concerts in India are at student festivals.
"A college has a concentration of people who listen to pop music
and if colleges across the country hold concerts regularly, then we
can have a great concert circuit," they believe.
Meanwhile offers keep rolling in from across the border and the sky
is the limit for them in India, but Faisal Kapadia and Bilal Maqsood
are holding back. It is more important to be Strings than to be big
in Bollywood, which is precisely why they'll manage to do both. It's
better that the destination be Duur for two musicians who hold the
journey above all else. |
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