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Balochi music
Balochi music




balochi music

Not the language but it's the music that unites The global, rearview-rattling beats hijack the song turning Kana Yaari into a Balochi-dancehall blend that can pulse out any car window on a sunny day, from Seaview to South Beach. Kana Yaari pushes regional representation, but Xulfi and Associate Music Producers and Arrangers Abdullah Siddiqui, Arsalan Hasan and Sherry Khattak don’t stop there. Local spirit shines through the colour and textural references that feel true to Dera Muraad Jamal and Lyari, the artists’ homes. The song speaks of betrayal, but visually it resonates joy.Īnd it works because the audience can relate.Īll three performers have incredible personal style (helped by Samiya Ansari), that is unmistakable, un-self-consciously Pakistani. In his video, the artists wander through an interior space, dismantling brightly-coloured walls as if dropping their own invisible boundaries. Video Director Jamal Rahman shifts the song’s moody message – complementing it with a hopeful outcome by the last chord. Creating a world for them becomes a team effort. The mix of characters in Kana Yaari makes an interesting point about Coke Studio: it’s a meeting place of opposites. Kana Yaari features Kaifi, folk singer Abdul Wahab Bugti who adds Balochi spirit and the magnetic Eva B who always understands the assignment anchoring Kaifi’s style. This is the Coke Studio tune we knew was coming, with futuristic sounds with cultural integrity. Singer-songwriter Kaifi Khalil talks about betrayal in a beautifully crafted track a song about relationships that just didn’t last.

balochi music

After a memorable start with Abida Parveen and Naseebo Lal's Tu Jhoom, Coke Studio releases the second song from season 14, Kana Yaari, featuring Eva B, Kaifi Khalil and Abdul Wahab Bugti, stated a press release.






Balochi music