What follows is a series of small erm, discourses on a
number of topics that interested me but weren't deemed suitable for further
elaboration because, let's face it, I'm the laziest fella this side of the
Indus. They don't have a common thread running through them and have been
hastily jotted down as I unpack my bags after heading back to my little shed in
the jungle.
The 'Usual'
Most of the things that I've grown to enjoy immensely in
Lahore were actually my own discoveries ; bookshops, places to eat, places to
see etc that I had stumbled onto in my many exploratory forays. One
place however, bears the distinction of not only being pointed out to me by a
friend but actually, persuasively prodded towards, and I can safely say that
never was I prodded towards a more favorable destination. One of the small, no
not small; sizeable pleasures that one can hope to achieve in a long residence
at one place is acquiring a place where, slightly modifying the theme from
Cheers, 'not everybody but at least somebody knows your name'. That
place for me is the Lahore Chatkhara in Mini-Market, Gulberg.
The fact that after my initial visit, I could be found there
at least three or four times every month bred a little familiarity. This was
reinforced by the fact that I'd always be carrying a pile of books and would
inadvertently be waiting for someone, something which sort of singled me out
from the rest of their patrons. The bond was completed by the fact that the
first time I tasted what I had been ordered by my friend to taste - a plate of
Samosa Chaat and a bottle of Coke - I was so taken that I immediately ordered
another serving and gave the waitress a pretty phenomenal tip. The happy result
is that now, whenever I go there, I am nodded-at by said recipient of my
tipping largesse, led towards my 'usual table', allowed to wait uninterrupted
for my 'usual friends' and need only to inform them to bring me 'the usual'. It
may not be the Anglers' Rest of the Mr. Mulliner stories or the eponymous bar
from Cheers, but trust me, there's great pleasure in being a 'usual'.
The Unbearable Nusrat-ness Of Being
I came late to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. Wait, let me rephrase
that, I was a huge Nusrat fan the first 20 odd years of my life but when I
'rediscovered' Qawwali some four odd years ago, somehow Nusrat remained on the
fringes of my radar. One of the reasons was that I had been warned off him by
the "purists" - back when I was silly enough to pay any attention to them, another was that
every time I listened to him, my mind would always (unfavorably) compare him to
his father, which I realise now was unfair. However, when I gradually
rediscovered Nusrat, I was immediately entranced by his skill, his emotionality
and (unlike what the purists had blabbered on about) his immense 'ehteraam' for
the Classical idiom. Of course I had to pick and choose from literally
thousands of his recordings, but at least I was a Nusrat fan.
Mark the sequel though. It's been more than a decade since
Nusrat passed away. Qawwali has seen a decline and then a slight resurgence but
the influence of Nusrat has remained. Not only has it remained but it has grown
so overpowering that I've noticed a (to me at least) very disturbing trend in
modern Qawwali, namely the Unbearable Nusratness Of Being.
The overwhelming majority of Qawwals have realized that
Nusrat sells. As a result, everyone has become what can best be described as
rather sub-standard Nusrat clones. In doing so, the Qawwals have all but
completely abandoned their own hereditary style, their trademark items and
their unique performance styles. The entire Fareedi clan for example - which
boasted such modern stalwarts as Agha Rasheed Ahmed and Abdul Raheem Fareedi -
has decided to convert to Nusratism en masse. Gone are the trademark emotive,
classical bandishes. Instead, we have cheap synthesisers, alarming vocal
histrionics and wholesale borrowings from Nusrat's repertoire.
Another example is one of the rising stars of the current
Qawwali scene, Asif Ali Santoo Khan Qawwal, whose father and grandfather were
supremely talented Ustaads of Qawwali, but who has completely moulded his style
on Nusats, with the result that more often than not, his performances veer
towards jumbledness and confusion rather than clarity. Even the ‘Dehli-wala’
gharanas of Qawwali, both in India and Pakistan, have also eschewed their usual
emotive, nuanced and more measured style for a more ballistic and over-the-top
style that somehow sounds odd to the ears. The overall result being that where
once the Punjabi ‘ang’ of Qawwali was a many-textured style with different
performers binging their own uniqueness to the fore, nowadays Qawwali in the
Punjab is totally Nusrated.
Now I know this is an honest-to-goodness rant and that I am
obviously overreacting to what is the natural result of the presence of a
towering cultural figure who cast a very long shadow, but unless some of the
current performers discover their own distinctive voices and look towards their
own personal heritage for fresh ideas, Qawwali will degenerate into something
much less appealing and enlightening and satisfying than it’s supposed to be.
And worst of all, the purists will be proven right.
The Joy Of Text
When I go on holiday, I don’t necessarily ‘go on holiday’.
Let me explain. Others may use the holidays to catch a bit of much-needed
R&R, laze about, catch up on their sleep or generally idle. My holidays are
the exact opposite of that. Averaging only five to six hours of sleep per day,
I manage to cram in so many activities into the three or four days off I get
every month that I actually need a day-planner to help me get through all the
commitments. These include getting through the checklist in the previous post,
the requisite socializing, shopping, taking care of pending official paperwork
and downloading as much music and movies and TV shows to last me the month or
more before I next expect to be home.
Another object that is forced to share this increased
holiday workload is my long-suffering phone. Here in the jungle, the phone
serves as a combination torch and Angry Birds console and that’s it. No
cellphone signals and no Wi-Fi means it lives out the month a shadow of its true
self. But let me get in my car and get within cellphone coverage range on my
way home, and Abdul Ghafoor (my phone’s named Abdul Ghafoor) comes alive in the
most remarkable fashion. Over the course of the next three or four days, I
manage to make more phone calls, send more texts and do more phone-ly things
than most people tend to do in their entire lifetimes. My preferred modus
communicadi being the text message, which I’ve preferred over phone calls for as
long as I’ve had a cellphone.
The pure pleasure of carrying out conversations over SMS is
lost on people who take the ability to send and receive texts for granted.
But to a person who gets to receive terrible jokes and Doomsday warnings only
once a month, the true worth of the medium is evident. It’s hard to describe
the absolutely nonsensical bracing effects, after having spent a month or more
in complete radio silence, of a conversation like this :
Q. Musab bhai, aap ek kaam keejiye.
Me. Ji janab ?
Q. Aap Nijaam ke bal bal jaiyye.
Me.Ji behtar.
A month after arriving in my jungle hideout, I had managed
to procure a phone and establish some form of communication, two months later,
I improved that to include what can mercifully be called an internet connection
but the ability to send and receive texts had eluded me. Because of some oddly
convoluted logic, phones here can carry out any two of the three activities of
voice calls, text messaging and internet connectivity, but not all three. So in
opting for the ability to sit for hours waiting for the Google homepage to
load, I relinquished the ability to text. The result was that on my recently
concluded holiday, I took out my textual frustrations to such an extent that I
managed to crash the Messaging application, which is no mean feat on an Android
phone. This brought home the realization that steps needed to be taken, avenues
needed to be explored and measures needed to be implemented so that I could
spread out my textual largesse over the entire year instead of treating my phone
like a stock-ticker three days a month and letting it grow fat and lazy the
rest of the time.
As always, the simplest solution has proven the most
practical. Doing the required math, I decided that to phones were better than
one. One for calling and texting and the other solely for crawling the
internet. So now mine is the only room for miles with two oddly shaped
telephone antennae on its roof. Now all I have to worry about is how to get
enough electricity to charge two phones when there isn’t enough for even one.
But that, as they say, is a horse of a different colour.
Classical Music
Versus Lamb Chops
Here’s a question. You know the Festival Of Lights in Lahore
is part of your ‘culture’. Yet you live in Khuzdar, or you’re allergic to
lights. Would you then consider it your duty to do whatever you can to preserve
and support the Festival Of Lights simply because it’s part of your 'culture' ?
I got to dwelling on this question after reading a Facebook
post, a rather anguished post lamenting the treatment of Classical musicians in
Pakistan, especially the lack of respect paid them and the impending void they
will leave if not appreciated, supported and given their due ‘ehtiraam’. This
is sadly very true and the handful of senior classical musicians, with one or
two exceptions, are living out the last days of their lives in penury, mostly
neglected, with their huge talents and ability going to waste rather than being
transmitted to future generations. The loss to our cultural milieu will be
immeasurable when they’ve passed away. That much is clear.
Mark the sequel though. Classical music has, for most of its
history, been an art form appreciated by a comparatively small audience, almost
like Opera or Jazz. The small audience has been, for the most part, discerning,
passionate and appreciative. And they’ve had the means to support the art-form
that they appreciate. This has taken the form of court-patronage in the
previous centuries and although now considerably diminished, is still carried
on in the tradition of Mehfils and soirees etc. With these means, the
passionate followers of classical music have managed to get their fill of their
favorite type of music and contribute to the maintenance and sustenance of the
classical tradition.
Like Opera and Jazz however, Classical music is not entirely
ignored by the mainstream. In genres like Qawwali, Ghazal and Folk Music for
example, artists like Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Mehdi Hassan, Tufail Niazi et al
have been instrumental in introducing the lay-listener to a taste of
sub-continental classical music; a feat that has resulted in a wider
listenership and appreciation for this genre. Yet classical music has remained,
for better or worse, a rather exclusive art form, appreciated and nurtured by a
rather small group of fans (at least in Pakistan). This group is well-versed in
the intricacies, technicalities as well as the niceties associated with
classical music. It knows, for example, the etiquette of a ‘mehfil’ and the
‘ehtiraam’ accorded an Ustad, and in mehfils where this group is exclusively
present, such niceties are usually expected to be followed.
Any art form, however exclusive, cannot hope to remain both
insular and vibrant. In terms of Classical music, this problem is somewhat
rectified by including a sizeable number of lay-listeners in mehfils and the
repertoire is designed to include more popular ‘items’ along with the ‘thaith’
classical pieces. Another very common trend is inviting these musicians,
especially Qawwals, to functions such as weddings, parties etc where they
perform to a decidedly mixed crowd. Now, the point I was trying to elaborate in
the question of the start of this piece comes into play. How is the
lay-listener, with not more than a passing interest in what the musicians are
performing, supposed to react? Does he, despite the fact that whatever is being
performed is flying over his head or that his attention is constantly being
diverted by the rather delectable looking lamb-chop at the wedding buffet,
feign interest and try to treat the music and the musicians with something more
than cursory attention ? Or does he, following his heart (and stomach), head
straight to the group of his friends – with a small detour at the buffet table
of course – and start chattering like nobody’s business, not giving a hoot to
the group of people gesticulating and caterwauling on stage ?
As an enlargement of the above question, unless the
classical musicians have modified their repertoire to include more populist
pieces – a step which will more often than not have the effect of alienating
their core audience – why should the lay-listener pay attention to this group
of performers, despite the fact that Classical music forms an integral part of
our national culture. Because from the listener’s point of view, in the current
economic and political situation, paraphrasing Faiz – ‘Aur bhi gham hain
zamanay main culture kie siwa’. And again, perhaps his cultural touchstones
include something completely different from those of classical music fans.
Perhaps he digs Atif Aslam and the latest Bollywood music, perhaps he’s into
hip-hop or death-metal or Naseebo Lal. Why should he give a hoot to the fact
that Ustad Ghulam Hussain Shaggan is currently living in a two-room apartment
in a seedy part of Lahore or that Ustad Manzoor Ahmed Niazi is now the last
surviving member of a legendary generation of Qawwals or that a treasure trove
of Classical music recordings is slowly decomposing in the basement of the
Radio Pakistan building in Lahore?
This is a thorny issue, for both the listener and the
musicians. Should a more populist approach be tried by the musicians and
tolerated by the die-hard listeners or is adherence to the classical idiom,
coupled with increased patronage by the core group of listeners the way
forward? Because one thing is clear – at least to me- Classical Music,
classical Qawwali and all similar art-forms, will have rather limited appeal as
compared to more popular arts unless drastic changes in performance are made.
It will always be up to the small yet devoted group of listeners to archive,
promote, nurture and introduce this art form, like it has been in the past. I
don’t know who can shoulder the blame if these art-forms continue to decline,
but at least it isn’t the wedding guest noisily munching on his lamb-chop and
enjoying the company of his friends, oblivious to the fading echoes of what he
certainly doesn’t consider his ‘culture’.