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concert
review
A celebration goes sour
LUMS Music Society's 10th anniversary concert turned into
a debacle as a faculty member threatened to pull the plug soon
after the night had begun
By Hani
Taha Salim
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While it may be an educational institution, LUMS
has been known to hold rather grand and highly enjoyable events.
Be it sports, a drama fest or a concert, the university has always
managed to keep its standard high… beyond the realms of academia
too. In keeping with this tradition of impeccable event management
skills and talent, one expected the LUMS Music Society's 10th Anniversary
Concert featuring the Aunty Disco Project, Noori, EP and Laal -
bands who have roots at the university - be a reunion of epic musical
proportions. All these bands garner great popularity and a huge
fan base, and the reunion night was expected to be an unforgettable
sight to behold. Unfortunately for all those involved, the night
did manage to create memories, but not those that one would cherish
but instead that would gladly make one want to perish…
To begin with, the concert began an excruciating three hours late
- uncharacteristic of any LUMS event - and one bore witness to the
lapse. Although the stage and lighting were highly impressive, the
staggering delay seemed to lay them to waste. A huge crowd had thronged
around the entrance to the concert area, swarming in some semblance
of a queue, while many others just floated around on the campus,
squatting on the lawns, some enjoying a last smoke, before the organisers
confiscated their beloved boxes at the gate. The musicians sat behind
the stage, patiently bearing each others extensive sound checks,
trying to pass the time in much the same manner as the audiences
outside.
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Many,
like Farhad Humayun of Overload, decided instead to make use of
the only food and drink stall set up inside the concert area, preparing
himself for the long night (and wait) ahead. By 10 pm the organisers
finally let in a few people, and they began seating themselves in
distinct disciplined rows. Such behaviour can only be witnessed
at institutions like LUMS where stringent rules manage to extort
the best civility buried deep within the recesses of the Pakistani
soul. No pushing, no shoving and certainly no harassing or public
displays of affections.
Finally the show began, after many ear piercing sound checks, in
the most dull unceremonious way possible with a long litany of paltry
songs and insipid compeering. There was no coherence in the song
selection: from an anemic and highly tedious 'Billo De Ghar' (Abrar
would be kicking himself had he heard this) to relatively bearable
covers of rock songs, the concert lacked the right kind of flow
and attitude that one expects from a grand show like this was intended
to be.
To one's horror, many singers were annoyingly out of tune. This
is not the impression that a Music Society wants to make when mapping
out its achievements. This night should have shaken up every audience
member from their vapid reverie and jolted them into attention.
It should have made everyone exclaim 'Damn! This is LUMS! And this
is what they're capable of!'
The saving grace however, and the only performance that deserved
its time on stage, was an excellent rendition of an extremely difficult
Pink Floyd song: 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond' by the alumni: Ammar
Rashid, Zain Moulvi, Saadi and Shibli Mansuri. Musical aficionados
from the university present that day can testify to the musical
prowess of these young men, their command on their instruments and
the brilliant lighting effects of a diamond illuminating through
its facets set the stage ablaze and made for a truly master class
performance. These are future stars one should watch out for. This
was the performance that magically transformed the languid atmosphere
to a stirring one. And the night finally truly began.
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In
a natural progression from this electrifying performance, were Aunty
Disco Project whose 'Teenage Wasteland' (The Who cover) and 'Sultanat'
compelled the crowd to sing and sway in unison. The audience stood
up, shouted out, laughed… when the crowd gets that excited,
they are truly feeling the music. The night had only begun, past
midnight, and everyone was set for a highly enjoyable time when
dramatically out of the blue, a dishelved and shaken Music Society
President, Shams Zaheer, stepped on stage requesting that the concert
must end immediately as per the wishes of a certain faculty member.
If not, the professor had 'threatened' to cut off the power supply.
No other explanation was given; just these two sentences.
For a moment everyone present thought this was a ridiculous cruel
joke. A vehement and forlorn plea reiterated by Shams, left jaws
hanging in disbelief. The crowd was stunned. The celebrities were
appalled and frozen in incredulity, as they all walked away murmuring
obscenities, debating causes and possibilities, quizzically pondering
over 'why?', while the rest prepared themselves for a huge media
circus.
That night many students unionized outside the concert area to demand
reimbursement, but the forlorn and torn expressions on the Music
Society members led them to instead cheer for them in realization
of the sheer hard work and subsequent heartbreak and courage that
they displayed.
Ahmed Ali Butt from EP stressed "the need for professionalism.
Every institute has its own policy and the organisers should have
worked extra on time scheduling." Ali Hamza, though, an alumni
and a celeb, was irate. He thundered down: "This is typical
of the LUMS Admin. Whenever it comes to the Music Society they have
always been unsupportive. I've been seeing this for the past so
many years." What is commendable though was that, while all
celebs left after this drama, Hamza stayed back to offer a shoulder
to his fellow society members.
Many students echoed Hamza's feelings and an intense tennis of blogging
ensued that night and the next day condemning the faculty and the
administration, claiming that the professor was being 'irrational'
and the administration 'incompetent'. The society members claimed
to have taken permission for crossing the time barrier. Apparently
the previous night's thunderstorm blew away the stage, re-erecting
it the next day took time and lead to subsequent delays.
As a witness to the students, celebs and the society members reactions,
and after a closer inspection of the circumstances, one comes to
a highly disappointing and disturbing conclusion.
The fact that LUMS is a university and must have stringent regulations
to moderate its student body, is laudable. All events held in the
university premises must adhere to some semblance of time and order
and it is commendable that punctuality, a rare trait in our country,
is enforced with vigour. However the complete and utter disregard
shown by the professor and the faculty at large, who has not yet
even responded to this situation either through email or to addressing
the student body in an open forum, is rather telling of how liberal
the country's premier education institution really is.
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Shams
Zaheer, the current President of the Music Society, he very told
Instep that: "This is reflective of how our society views musical
expressions and the country's premier institution's reaction to
its society's ten years worth of effort in music. In an economic
analysis, the comfort of one faculty member preceded the efforts
of months of hundreds of students. There was no consideration to
even listen to our side of the story." One could easily sense
the profound hurt and disbelief through his calm demeanor; disappointment
was etched on his face.
"This was mega event that was culminating and connecting ten
years of the LUMS Music Society through time and through different
batches, and its achievements and this is how it goes down in history."
One cannot help but feel appalled at the way this event has transpired.
The Pakistani music industry is one of the very few things we have
to feel proud about. It is an industry that has fought long and
hard for its establishment. Music is an art form that has struggled
to gain respect and acceptability through the years and when one
sees a university becoming independently capable of establishing
their own recording studio (like the Music Society of LUMS has),
one feels that the music industry has seriously made headway. Ruthlessly
choking off a concert that commemorates a student society's ten
year efforts in the direction and its ability to generate stars
like Amir Alvi (Munchkins), Ali Hamza (Noori), Salar Farooqi (Sahil),
Omar Khalid (Aunty Disco Project), Sharam Azhar and Taimur Rahman
(Laal), seems like an attempt to choke a process that has so commendably
begun at LUMS.
The fact that the society went over board with the time should not
be excused, but the correct way of handling the situation was to
let the concert proceed and call the society in the next day to
bear the ramifications. Creating a spectacle by pulling off the
plugs did irreparable harm to the university's image, tarnished
the Music Society's reputation amongst their musical gurus and worse,
possibly damaged the university's credibility with sponsors in the
future. Zong had sponsored the event and it is a big thing for a
music society to rope in a major telecommunications giant as a sponsor.
A business school like LUMS should know that not honouring sponsors
is lethal for future sponsorships. After looking at what happened
at the LUMS concert, Zong and indeed other corporations may decide
that sponsoring student college concerts is too unreliable and balk
from doing so in the future.
Musicians too need an attitude check for demanding to be paid in
lieu of these circumstances. To further add salt to the students'
wounds, when the Music Society asked the stars if they would be
willing to do a concert at a later date for the fans, they couldn't
get over their star egos to respond effectively but remained non
committal. Such an attitude is quite appalling. It reveals, that
as much as musicians harp about being in the industry for the love
of music, their primary motive is money. This was their grand opportunity
to side with the Music Society and lend their full support but they
did not rise to the occasion.
Moreover and most disappointingly, this is just symptomatic of the
general myopia and conservatism that exists in our society at large.
There has never been a genuine acceptance of creativity and artistes
continue to fight for their freedom of expression in all creative
fields. And if our urban elite respond to creativity in this sullen
way, then change will take a long time coming. It is not only the
Taliban that we need to fight, it is also our own mindset. |
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