Khaleej Times

Home-grown streaming app helps Pakistan’s musicians find voice

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karachi — For years, violence kept most of Pakistan’s aspiring young musicians from following their dreams, whether the threat of Taleban terror attacks or gang wars in the crowded southern port city of Karachi.

Now, as law enforcemen­t crackdowns slowly improve the security situation across the nation, some musicians are getting help from two-year old Pakistani start-up Patari, a music streaming and production company. Both the startup and the musicians’ efforts are helping to carve out a new creative space for young people in Pakistan, where those below 30 make up 60 per cent of a population of 200 million.

Karachi rap ensemble Lyari Undergroun­d was once afraid of putting its music on Facebook, deterred by episodes of bloody gang war in the precinct of the same name that many Pakistanis consider the most dangerous in their largest city.

But the same violence has inspired many of the group’s songs, taking cues from the music of US rapper Tupac Shakur, said its founder, who uses the name AnXiously.

“In a ghetto, rap exists naturally,” he added. “If there is no rap, then it is not a ghetto. Rap is a product of this reality and these surroundin­gs.”

Band members said when they first heard the music of Tupac, although half a world away, it reminded them of their own experience­s living with violence and poverty.

Lyari remains one of Karachi’s poorest areas and financial limitation­s often force its young people to forego creative pursuits. Launched in February 2015, Patari now boasts a library of 40,000 Pakistani songs and podcasts, and subscriber­s exceed half a million, said Chief Executive Khalid Bajwa.

Nearly 30 million of Pakistan’s people use the Internet, mainly on mobile telephones, says digital rights organisati­on Bytes for All.

Bajwa declined to discuss revenue, apart from saying the company was “self-sustaining”, mostly by producing events for establishe­d firms such as drinks company Pepsi, consumer goods giant Unilever and Pakistani clothing brand Khaadi.

The company’s latest initiative, Tabeer, or ‘Dream Come True’, pairs establishe­d artists with unknown musicians to produce six songs and music videos, completed on a budget of $15,000, and features on its app. Patari exploited the fact that Pakistan’s tiny pop music scene comprised a couple of “corporate branded shows” featuring the same artists every year, but excluded amateur musicians.

“We saw an inefficien­cy in the market, where you have all this talent, all this interest, but there is nothing bridging the two,” said Chief Operating Officer Ahmer Naqvi.

The first two videos, featuring Abid Brohi, a rapper from remote Sibbi in Balochista­n, and 13-yearold tea vendor Jahangir Saleem, have drawn more than a million views, matching Coke Studio, Pakistan’s premier music programme.

Another video features Nazar Gill, from Islamabad, who was one of the cleaning staff at an apartment building where Naqvi once lived. One day, Gill knocked on Naqvi’s door and asked to sing a song he had written. “I sang my song for him and he liked it,” recalled Gill, a member of the country’s tiny Christian minority that prides itself on its musical tradition. “He said, ‘Nazar, I will not let your voice go to waste.’”

Tabeer’s sole female artist, Malala Gul, grew to love music as a child, by listening to an aunt who sang songs in the Pashto language spoken across Pakistan’s northwest. Times were tough when she began singing five years ago, in a city roiled by Taleban-led terror.

“Conditions in Peshawar were very bad, but thank God the situation is much better now,” she said.

Gul stressed the importance of music, rebuffing those who call it unIslamic. “This is a big world, and some people will say one thing, others will say another, but anyone who understand­s and values music will go very far.” —

 ?? Reuters ?? Lyari UnderGroun­d rappers, Danger, Abood, Killa, Slipknot Denna, and AnXiously perform in Karachi. —
Reuters Lyari UnderGroun­d rappers, Danger, Abood, Killa, Slipknot Denna, and AnXiously perform in Karachi. —
 ?? Reuters ?? Malala Gul, a local singer, performs to record a song at a studio in Peshawar.—
Reuters Malala Gul, a local singer, performs to record a song at a studio in Peshawar.—

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