Ali Azmat Butt | |||||||||
Native Name Lang: | Urdu, Punjabi | ||||||||
Birth Date: | 20 April 1970 | ||||||||
Birth Place: | Havelian, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan | ||||||||
Nationality: | Pakistani | ||||||||
Relations: | Mustafa Zahid (cousin) | ||||||||
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Ali Azmat Pacha (born 20 April 1970) is a Pakistani singer-songwriter, musician and actor. He is best known as the lead singer for the influential Sufi rock band Junoon and for his subsequent solo career later followed by a career as an actor as well.
In 2001, with Junoon, he became part of the first Pakistani band ever to perform at the United Nations General Assembly.[1] [2]
Ali Azmat Pacha was born in Havelian, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, into a family of ethnic Kashmiri descent, where his grandfather was posted as station master of Havelian railway station. He grew up in Garhi Shahu, Lahore and speaks Punjabi as his native language.[2] [3] His father Nazir Ahmed Butt was a middle-class businessman who died in 2013.[4]
Azmat went to Sydney, Australia, for his higher studies but soon returned to Pakistan before completing university.
His first band Jupiters was known for performing covers at small gigs in Lahore.
Ali Azmat started out his career with Jupiters in 1986, based in his hometown of Lahore. Jupiters were known for doing covers of American pop and rock songs at small gigs.[5] While with them, Azmat wrote his legendary hit song "Dosti". He later sang and recorded "Dosti" with Junoon, after which the song gained national fame.
Azmat left Jupiters in 1990 to join Junoon.[6] He released his first album Junoon with the band. The album was produced by band's founder and lead-guitarist Salman Ahmad. Azmat's vocals featured on all the songs except for "Khwaab", "Jiyain" and "Jogiya". After launch of the band's second album Talaash, both Ali Azmat and Junoon rose to fame.[7]
The band's 1995 album, Inquilaab, was a major hit and its only single, "Jazba-e-Junoon", was a super hit and topped chart, it became the band's signature song and national song of 1996 Cricket World Cup and the Pakistan national cricket team. Azmat gained further success after release of the Sufi rock hit single "Sayonee" from their fourth album Azadi (1997).
In 1996, Junoon, launched a compilation album called Kashmakash, the first compilation album in Pakistan. The album contain two new song Ehtesaab and Meri Awaz Suno. The song Ehtesaab "Ehtesaab" caused a major controversy, the state of Pakistan banned the song Ehtesaab as it shows the corruption of the politicians.
In 1997 Junoon released their 4th studio album called Azadi, which got the band international fame.
In 1999 Junoon released their 5th studio album called Parvaaz. The album Parvaaz consist of many sufi songs.
IN 2001 Junoon released their 6th studio album called Ishq (Internationally known as Andaz).
In 2005 Junoon released their 7th studio album called Dewaar. Dewaar is the last studio album produced by the band.
On 25 December 2016, Junoon made a comeback after 13 years when they performed at a reunion concert in Karachi arranged by Sooper.[8]
After breaking up of Junoon, Azmat released his first solo album Social Circus (2005), whose single "Na Re Na" received positive reviews and became a major hit in country. Azmat released further four albums Klashinkfolk (the Urdu term for the AK-47; used to reference it's developer, Mikhail Kalashnikov) in 2008, Josh-e-Junoon (2010) whose title track "Josh-e-Junoon" became the anthem for the Pakistan cricket team during the 2011 Cricket World Cup, Bum Phatta (2011) and Chalta Main Jaun (2011).
Azmat stepped into Bollywood in 2003, when his single "Garaj Baras" from Junoon's album Azadi was used for the movie Paap.
In 2012, Azmat recorded two songs "Yeh Jism Hai Toh Kya" and "Maula" for Bollywood erotic thriller Jism 2.[9]
He launched his acting career in the 1990s with Talaash, a telefilm featuring the group Junoon, and later in cinema with notable roles in box-office hits such as Waar (2013) and The Legend of Maula Jatt (2022).
Having married at the age of 41 due to family pressure, he's the father of two daughters.[10]
Ali Azmat is close to Islamist defence analyst Zaid Hamid and hosted his TV show Iqbal Ka Pakistan in 2008–2009, where both discussed the philosophy of Allama Iqbal and a supposed Zionist conspiracy against the Islamic world.[11]
Year | Song(s) | Album(s) | |
---|---|---|---|
2003 | "Garaj Baras" | Paap | |
2005 | Social Circus | ||
2008 | Klashinfolk | ||
2008 | "Garaj Baras", "Mein Challa" | Coke Studio Season 1 | |
2010 | Josh-E-Junoon | ||
2011 | Bum Phatta | ||
2011 | Chalta Mein Jaaon | ||
2012 | "Maula", "Yeh Jism Hai Toh Kya" | Jism 2 | |
2012 | Josh | ||
2013 | Waar | ||
2013 | "Babu Bhai" | Coke Studio Season 6 | |
2015 | "Rangeela" | Coke Studio Season 7 | |
2015 | "Main To Yahin Hoon Lekin" | ||
2016 | "Man Kunto Maula" | Coke Studio Season 9 | |
2018 | "Dil Hai Pakistani" | Coke Studio Season 11 |
1993 | Talaash | Ali | PTV | Telefilm[12] |
1996 | Pal do Pal | Dr. Khush Bakht | Drama[13] |
2013 | Waar | Ejaz Khan | |
2022 | The Legend of Maula Jatt | Gogi |
Junoon won the Best International Group award at the Channel V Awards in New Delhi in 1998, beating The Prodigy, Sting and Def Leppard. The band's first international release, Azadi, went triple platinum in India alone. "Sayonee" was at the top of the MTV India and Channel V charts for over two months. Junoon won the Award for Best Rock Band at the Indus Music Awards in 2004. Indus Music Awards and from ARY Asian/Bollywood Awards. Junoon has also been awarded several awards for their contribution towards peace and South East culture by BBC, UNESCO, and South Asian Journalists Association. Junoon was nominated for Best Musical Group at the Lux Style Awards several years in a row.