Ali
Azmat
alman
calls him Chota, the original mimic, for his unusual Lahore meets Australia
meets Texas accent. He worked in a bank for a week, has acted in TV serials,
writes poetry and music, but his deepest unfulfilled ambition is to play
guitar, he
makes do with the air guitar! Unbelievably, Ali has had no training in
singing. The
guy who said he would teach him guitar just handed him the mike!
On evolution as a singer:
There are so many different kinds of music you listen to
that you end up taking with you. You venture out this way or that way and
there
always will be ways. You do things that you haven't done before. You just
go up
there and do it, and try to reach that level. More than anything, you don't
worry
about doing this garari (you know, the a-a-a-a-a!); you just emote. It's
all emotions.
It's like acting. Every song is like a script and you just read that script
accordingly and that is the more important thing. In "Sayonee", I don't
think I'm
singing perfectly. I'm always like, I should have done that note, taken
it there.
You look at your work critically, but the emotion is there. That's what
reaches
the people more.
A song you'd like everyone to know:
Any song from Dave Mathews. The music is
so so positive. It's happy and sad at the same time. Musically it's so
much there.
Lyrics, composition, voice, guitars, drum, bass.
On singing a capella in any place in
the world: The bathroom. Great
echo! I go
to afriend's place, it has a staircase that has the greatest echo in the
world and I
go there and try to sing as loud as I can. It's great.
A song that symbolises you:
I said my head is a closet/ I am stuck inside/ Can't
see the light/ I and my head is in a nice house in the sky/ Got central
heating/
And I'm around/We've been standing here for a long long time/I find sometimes
it's easy to be myself/And sometimes easy to be somebody else. It's one
of my
favourite songs. I think it explains a lot of things.
Teenage idol:
Pearl Jam, Freddie Mercury, Steven Tyler, A-ha, Robert Plant.
Guitarists:
Jimmy Page, Joe Satriani.
On Pakistan:
The thing I both love and hate about Pakistan is the people. The
reason I am there is that I love the simplicity of the people, the kind
of people
who live there. At the same time, I am a very non-conformist person and
I hate
that the people their fake values and their lousy traditions.
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