BEHIND THE VIDEO:
Adil Omar, hip-hop’s
‘Paki Rambo’
Laaleen Khan
Artist: Adil Omar
Video: Paki Rambo
Genre: Hip-hop
Description: A cheeky take on Islamabad’s urban youth subculture. Vivid stylistic
techniques are employed in this sardonic, yet playful, rendition of kitschy bad-boy
behaviour. Contrasting social settings range from the Mercedes-lined driveway
of a typically affluent home, to farcical GTs (hangouts) involving recreational
substance abuse, persistent sexual harassment, and blood-streaked fistfights that
epitomize the ‘wannabe gangsta’ mentality of the city’s seedy underbelly.
Link: http://youtu.be/QjlYGzVk-6o
Excerpt:
“I bust quick in a sl**'s
thick orange foundation
I'm a foreign damnation at
your borderline waitin'
Horrified Satan with an angel
to punch
cuz all these cookie cutter
f****rs be fakin' the funk
Yeah, uh, so many babies
yappin'
talking bout a revolution
like they Tracy Chapman
B**chin' like a mother******,
making the game whack
Complaining how I'm fake and
how I'm taking my race back
or forward - depends on how
you look at it
Rude boy status, so bad, but
damn I'm good at it
I should've been king, cuz I
open your minds
my revelation brings truth,
deliver hope for the blind
I make a terrorist tear a
wrist, prepare for his funeral
and I'm way beyond your
government's or parent's approval
The most hated, but I know
there's no greater
Power junkie on a binge and
damn I'm so faded.”
Adil’s take on the video:
1. To what extent was this music video your vision (the look and feel of
it; the narrative; its
stylistic techniques)?
“I'd say this was something I wanted to have fun with and I had a
similar vision, but I'd give Aisha Linnea the majority of the credit for that.
She has insane ideas. Shahbaz is a genius behind the camera and with editing. A
lot of it was inspired by (the upcoming film) 'Gol Chakkar,' which also features ‘Paki Rambo’ on its
soundtrack. We also wanted to bring in a lot of the absurd aspects of modern
Pakistani culture from the whole Jinnah Super (Islamabad’s main marketplace) and
Pindi thing (snooty attitude towards Rawalpindi http://laaleen.blogspot.com/2010/06/rawalpindi-islamabads-ugly-step-sister.html
), to the whole 'phadda' (verbal/physical
fight) culture and our youth's obsession with wrestling, to reckless elite kids
having fun with no boundaries, and taking the p*** out of mainstream videos and
pop culture by replacing alcohol with Pakola (local soft drink), kids snorting
Tulsi (supari) instead of cocaine, me dressed as a Jinnah Super version of
Charlie Sheen, mixed with a lot of random absurd imagery which doesn't really
fit anywhere but it's art, it shouldn't have any limits and doesn't need an
explanation.”
2. Describe the persona you’re adopting in the video; would you say this characterization reflects a side of your own
personality or is it entirely fictitious?
“I'd say this is more honest to my image and personality than any of the
other videos I've done (‘Off the Handle’ http://youtu.be/T4tMvuWW3_g ). Sure,
I've had fun in the past too but that's mainly cool serious rapper stuff like
trying to act hard and be the biggest bad*** you can. In reality, though, I'm
not a street thug nor do I claim to be. My music might be hardcore but I'm
still just a goofy kid with a sense of humour who wants to have fun with it,
I'm not really trying to prove anything. Sure, there are fictitious elements in
it, I don't endorse violence at all, it's just entertainment, but overall its
me. It's also my tribute to the sort of Hip-Hop I grew up listening to and fell
in love with—Cypress Hill, House of Pain, Beastie Boys, Funkdoobiest—where you
could still be a bad*** and hardcore without taking yourself too seriously. The
irony is, even though I completely let go of my hardcore King-Kong rapper ego
on this one, it still made me look like more of a bad*** than my last few
videos did. On a side note, I don't actually participate in underground
fighting tournaments, nor do I spray Pakola in the faces of unsuspecting
girls.”
3. Does the video have a lot do with the song or is just one of many interpretations?
“It’s just one of many interpretations. I couldn't explain it but you as
a viewer could try. You might be right, you might be wrong.”
4. How would you like viewers to interpret and respond to it?
“As entertainment, plain and simple. I don't want anybody to look too
deep into it and I don't want people to ask me how it represents Pakistan. It's
a video we did, it's all in fun and it's as simple as that. My western fans get
it, but the reception in Pakistan has been so mixed.”
5. You’ve been quoted as saying the title ‘Paki Rambo’ is inspired by a
line in (the British film) ‘Four Lions’
(http://youtu.be/u5-LkJzhQrQ).
Is ‘Paki’ the new
‘Nigga’ in hip-hop (i.e. urban usage of racist term which is only considered politically correct
when referring to oneself)?
“I wouldn't say that necessarily, but in a similar way, it is about
embracing an insult and turning it into something positive which not only
Pakistani kids, but also Indian and other South Asian kids can be proud of. I'm
not a blind nationalist but rather than letting ‘Paki’ hurt you, look at the
context and embrace it if you are one. It's about a certain attitude, and
that's what being a ‘Paki Rambo’ is, not giving a f***, being proud of what you
are and embracing your identity while maintaining a sense of humour. Words are
just words, the intentions behind them matter a lot more than the words
themselves.”
6. There are always people who don’t comprehend humour or sarcasm; do
you think most of your viewers (in Pakistan and overseas) ‘got’ the satiric
elements of the video?
“My overseas fans and viewers did. The response to this video has been
overwhelming overseas because they get it. Not only have the fans been in huge
support of it, people like Cypress Hill and House of Pain members themselves
have shown love. It's been shared on the social networks of B-Real and
Everlast, it's been played by B-Real on his live show to good responses, it's
been on various websites and blogs with plenty of love. Other people who have
also shown support overseas and locally include Riz Ahmed (actor from ‘Four Lions’ and ‘The Reluctant Fundamentalist’), Kelly Carlin (daughter of comedian
George Carlin), Bakhtawar Bhutto and Naked Tyrant Productions. The only
legitimate criticism was some of the violence in the fight scenes, and some of
the sexism in the song and video such as the t-shirts I was wearing, etc, but
the company of those shirts, ‘Two In The Shirt’ (abbreviated TITS) has launched
a campaign for breast cancer awareness and research which I've also been active
in promoting not only by wearing their clothing in my videos, but also through
my social networks. I'm not Bono. I'm not all about riding on causes for my own
self-promotion at all, but I would definitely endorse a quality
product that's also doing some good for humanity. The reception for the song
and video in Pakistan has been extremely mixed and divided. You either hate it
or love it. Half the people see it for what it is, the song and video both and
they love it. Then the other half are too bent up on what they think it represents,
not getting the humour in it, and not understanding what the song is all about,
but, hey, if you don't get it, then I don't want you in my fan base in the
first place. You're not my target audience. I'm not caught up with trying to be
some sort of celebrity at all, I hate that s***. I just want to make music for
myself and my target audience while providing quality entertainment. I don't
think Pakistan has even adapted to hardcore hip-hop yet, so accepting it is a
long shot, but I'll still try to open everybody's mind to it at least.”
Video credits:
DIRECTORS: Shahbaz
Shigri and Aisha Linnea.
VIDEO PRODUCER: Shahbaz
Shigri, Aisha Linnea and Adil Omar.
SONG PRODUCER: DJ Solo
of Soul Assassins.
EDITOR: Shahbaz
Shigri.
WRITER/LYRICS: Adil Omar.
VOCALIST/S: Adil Omar.
INSTRUMENTALS: DJ Solo of
Soul Assassins.
CAMEO PERFORMANCES: Talal Qureshi, Hasan Bruun Akhtar, Tariq Amin, Usman Mukhtar, Aboo Dean,
Ali Rehman, Aisha Linnea, Uzair Jaswal, Abbas Ali Khan, Salmaan aka Slo, Osama
Com Laude, Xpolymer Dar of Rap Engineers, Umair Khan and Ghazi of Metafitnosis
Gym and Adil’s dog, Diablo (Shoaib Akhtar and actor Riz Ahmed couldn’t make
cameos due to scheduling conflicts).
WARDROBE DESIGNERS: Aisha Linnea and Adil Omar.
MAKE-UP/EFFECTS/STYLISTS: Aisha Linnea for the girls at the dining table, Sabi Kay for the
wrestling champ's face-paint.
LOCATIONS: Bahria
Town, Bani Gala, Chak Shahzad and Jinnah Super.
TIMEFRAME: The shoot
was spread out over 1 week.
1 comment:
I was pretty surprised when I saw this on ET, hip hop/rap music gets sidelined a lot in Pakistani media. Just because it has a very brash attitude does not mean it cannot have anything informative to say or isn't a viable form of art. Sometimes the brashness itself reflects a lot. I personally do not enjoy hip hop so much, but I do appreciate these guys who come forward and aren't censoring their music just to appeal to the mainstream music.
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