“Welcome to Lahooti Music Ashram,” beamed Saif Samejo to the audience gathered in the hall that is reserved in his home for music related activities and events called Lahooti Live Sessions. Samejo, a jovial person is the founder and lead vocalist of Pakistani Sufi / folk / rock band ‘The Sketches’.
After around 40 minutes, the American bluegrass band Kentucky Winders arrived and entered the hall where audience were waiting to listen to the Western music on the horizon of Sufism — Sindh.
The audience which included students, writers, poets, friends, newspaper editors, etc. were enthralled and excited when the Kentucky Winders touched the strings of the violin, banjo and guitar and the hall echoed with intoxicating songs like “Tennessee Mountain Fox Chase”, “Milwaukee Blues” which is about a homeless person riding trains around the country.
The US Consulate General Karachi chapter had invited the Kentucky Winders to Pakistan to perform in the concerts organised at different places of the country like the National Academy of Performing Art (NAPA), Karachi and at Lahooti Music Aashram, Jamshoro.
The Lahooti Music Ashram, situated in Jamshoro, was established to spread peace and harmony through music, poetry, songs by local and foreign singers who come here to perform.
The city of Jamshoro, located on the right bank of Indus River, approximately 18 km northwest of Hyderabad, is known for the academia and houses the Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, University of Sindh and Liaquat University of Medical and Health Sciences.
The Lahooti Music Ashram is dedicated to spreading peace and harmony through music
In this climate of academia, Lahooti Music Ashram is also working for the development of humanity; the only difference is that it is making use of music and musical instruments like guitars, tabla, sarangi, banjo, piano and harmonium, etc. Many national and international folk singers have performed and played here for the sake of promoting peaceful and social interaction.
“The objective behind establishing the Lahooti Music Ashram is to provide a platform to those musicians and the singers who have never come out of the poverty-stricken villages of Sindh due to lack of opportunities and it is to let them perform with respect and moral dignity,” says Samejo, initiator of the Ashram. “It is a bridge between different cultures like you have experienced here. However, technically there is no difference between Western and Eastern music: it is the same.”