Musicians poured their hearts out at Lahore Music Meet, but few came to see it
For music lovers, a festival such as the Lahore Music Meet 2017 (LMM) designed on the pattern of the literature festivals that have been taking place in the country since 2010, is definitely a breath of fresh air. There were panel discussions and live performances at the meet. Entry was free, and for any music lover this should be more than enough. As an initiative it’s commendable and the credit goes to organiser Natasha Noorani and her team.
However, while the number of people attending the literature festivals has always been quite high, it came as a surprise that the two days of the LMM last week saw a very low turnout. It should have been one of those festivals where you bump into quite a few acquaintances and friends. And, yet, here we were at Lahore’s beautiful Al Hamra Arts Council with only a handful of people in the middle of the day — on a weekend. The halls were mostly half-filled, and the public preferred to listen to live music rather than hear musicians talk. Worst of all, no celebrity musician could be seen milling around outside in the lawn area where those attending could go up to them and strike up a little conversation.
In fact, as soon as the sessions were over, the artists were literally dragged back behind the stage by the organisers as if they would be mobbed. Even the media was not allowed backstage and there were some attendants who felt insulted by the way they were physically kept back from approaching any artist on stage for a little talk after the sessions. Even TV celebs Anoushay Ashraf and Dino Ali were not seen, although they had a session.
Patari’s Tabeer project singers — Lyari Underground members, Abid Brohi and Nazar Gill — were the only ones seen outside openly talking to people, while the rest disappeared into the vacuum (read: backstage).
Maybe it was the security situation after a series of bomb blasts in the country that had dampened the atmosphere a bit. The Lahore Literature Festival (LLF) had already been truncated two weeks ago after being shifted to a private venue. At the LMM, too, there was an intense vetting process at the gates and music buffs needed to show their CNICs to enter the venue. For the first time you saw a queue being formed to get into Al Hamra.