There were days when as teens we'd be lugging heavy schoolbags around, trying to complete mountain loads of homework before our exams. At that stage, many of us would, at the back of our minds, be nurturing a tiny little dream of, one day, watching ourselves on TV or listening to our voices on the radio.
Some would try to achieve this dream through stage performances at school or maybe ‘performing’ in front of a mirror at home. While many would later be forced to let go of their dreams for ‘well-paid opportunities’, others would stick to what they believed they were cut out to for, or in some cases even juggle both.
Some talented boys and girls we recently caught up with were struggling, aspiring musicians till Nescafe Basement – now running in its fourth season – fell into their laps. Their videos running on TV, their pictures in newspapers and magazines, their interviews on radio made these musicians no less than stars. Facebook friend requests, marriage proposals, fan page ‘likes’, it was all happening all of a sudden.
In a six-part series examining the lives of these young musicians, we explore what brought them here — and what's next.
Usman Sheikh
Sheikh returned to Pakistan after graduating from the UK around four years ago. He spent his early years in Saudi Arabia.
“Since coming here, I’ve only been into music. I had founded a band called Aag with my older brother, which was kind of a summer project for me; it has been around longer than Basement. We were doing very well, but couldn’t give much time as we were both studying. When I came back in 2012, we released a lot of singles before Basement happened.”
Sheikh says retaining members is tricky; three of his band members moved on, quit music, grew beards. “I don’t think these things have anything to do with each other; this is in life and that is you in relation to your creator, both unrelated things. Why relate them?”
He grew up listening to the weirdest music, he says. “I grew up singing boy bands like Take That, N’Sync and Boyzone. Apart from this, I listened to all sorts of music people would assign to alternative lifestyles. Justin Timberlake did a lot of different stuff. Then I moved on to heavier music, punk pop in 2001: Blink 182, Green Day, Sum 41. That’s what took me to heavier side of music such as Metallica, Anthrax, Megadeth, Slayer, which is still one of my most favourite bands. They have been virtuosos; so many iterations to them.”
Local music featured in his life more during the childhood. He considers guitarist Faraz Anwar a big part of Pakistani music; people don’t realise he’s been around since the 90s.
With his brother into the visual aspect of music, the duo have been directing music videos, done some commercial work and run a fully functioning recording facility/production house. “I have always thought of expanding in the same field, but never changing. Like expanding to movies. We have directed three of our videos ourselves that were shown all over TV back then and did very well. We did a lot of interviews, gigs, and then went on a hiatus from the band in 2013, the same year Basement happened for me.”