Talal Qureshi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Talal Qureshi
طلال قریشی
Birth nameTalal Yousuf Qureshi
BornRiyadh, Saudi Arabia
OriginPakistan
GenresElectronic music, Pop music, Hip hop music, Ambient music
Occupation(s)Electronic musician, music producer, Record producer Singer-Songwriter
InstrumentsMulti-instrumentalist
Years active2005–present
Labelsunsigned
Associated actsFaris Shafi, Adil Omar, Rehma, ACHA, Naseebo Lal, SNKM, Diplo, Major Lazer, Erik Hassle,

Talal Qureshi is a Pakistani record producer, singer, songwriter and DJ. The Pakistani musician crafts melodies and songs that are wholly singular, reminiscent of nothing you've heard before.

Life and career[]

Talal Qureshi was born on 2 April 1988 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Qureshi came across the video game MTV Music Generator on PlayStation which pushed him to start writing music at the age of 13. Later his family moved to Karachi, Pakistan. He released his first single "Phase Shift" in 2007. In 2012, he released his debut EP "Equator".[1]

In 2013, He released his second EP x1988[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

2014[]

In 2014 Qureshi released the single "Too Much To Handle" and his remix of Mooroo's "Tasveer".

2015 – 2018[]

In 2015, Qureshi formed SNKM with Adil Omar and the duo released "Nighat & Paras", played at SXSW and various cities in the US and then collaborated and performed with Diplo and Elliphant for their first ever Pakistan show in 2016.[11][12][13]

SNKM debuted at Mad Decent Block Party 2016 alongside Diplo, Kesha, Marshmello and others and continued to play shows through until 2018 with Major Lazer, Skrillex and others.[14][15]

2018[]

In 2018, Qureshi released the single "AAG" with Punjabi folk singer Naseebo Lal and also co-produced 3 tracks off of Adil Omar's debut album Transcendence which included "Discovery", a collaboration with Rancid front man Tim Armstrong.([16][17][18]

Qureshi has also appeared on BBC live sessions, featuring Faris Shafi

2019[]

In 2019 Qureshi, released "Mad Calls" with California based singer "Rehma"


2020[]

In 2020, Qureshi released his single featuring the versatile Noorani showcases her knack for crafting a turn of phrase, and Summer is full of them. “We are more than blunders” sticks out, and the shrug with which she sings “wouldn’t even mind if we don’t survive” is perfect. And although there are the occasional clunky lines – “spite inlaid with contrasting insecurities” – Noorani manages to beat these syllables into the shape of the melody, and so even these somehow work. Qureshi’s production is, as usual, stellar, melding alternative pop and RnB to great effect. Bouncy synths, groovy percussion, and pitch-shifted vocals result in a weird but mesmerizing summer jam [19]


In 2020, Qureshi released two EP's "Acha Vol.1 and Vol.2"


In 2020, Qureshi released LSD featuring Shamsher Rana - A bassline that seems to sing, synth textures that reverse soon after they're played, morphed vocals, sudden downpours of melodic runs and arpeggios, brass-hooks and a driving beat – Islamabad producers Talal Qureshi and Shamsher Rana pick a joy-radiating sonic palette and dial its effects to eleven with the composition on their collaborative track 'LSD'. [20]


2021 - Present[]

Talal released the first single off his debut album, track called "PAISA" featuring R&B, Pop Singer Songwriter - Hasan Raheem. Released alongside a playful music video created by Arham Ikram and RohanYV, the vibrant track boasts a spirited trap-inspired beat, genre-bending chords which lays the foundation for Raheem’s slick multi-lingual delivery.[21]

Discography[]

EP's[]

  • Equator (2012)
  • x1988 (2013)
  • Castle Of Hybrid Senses (2019)
  • ACHA Vol.1 (2020)
  • ACHA Vol.2 (2020)

Singles[]

  • 2021: PAISA feat. Hasan Raheem
  • 2020: Constant Summer feat. Natasha Noorani
  • 2018: Talal Qureshi feat. Naseebo Lal – Aag
  • 2017: After Party (feat. REHMA)
  • 2017: Coconut Paradise

References[]

  1. ^ Rayan Khan (27 January 2012). "Talal Qureshi: Making waves". The Express Tribune. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  2. ^ Maheen Sabeeh (26 October 2013). "Talal Qureshi: Boogie Woogie bugle boy". The Express Tribune. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  3. ^ Basim Usmani (29 October 2013). "Meet Islamabad's Only Trap Star, Talal Qureshi". Thump. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  4. ^ Alexis Stephen (29 January 2014). "Talal Qureshi Slouches Toward Islamabad". MTV Iggy. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  5. ^ http://www.themusicninja.com/electronica-talal-qureshi-x1988/
  6. ^ https://www.thenews.com.pk/magazine/instep-today/107183-SXSW-2016-Artists-from-Pakistan-shine
  7. ^ http://www.hillydilly.com/2014/05/talal-qureshi-tough-love/
  8. ^ http://www.h-y-f-n.com/blog/snkmnyc
  9. ^ http://www.mangobaaz.com/diplo-most-exciting-event-islamabad/
  10. ^ http://artisticmanifesto.com/2015/11/09/get-lost-in-talal-qureshis-girls-of-jupiter/
  11. ^ http://tribune.com.pk/story/1055778/islamabad-raises-hands-for-dj-diplo/
  12. ^ http://tribune.com.pk/story/1075655/from-paki-rambo-to-margalla-king/
  13. ^ http://www.thenews.com.pk/magazine/instep-today/107183-SXSW-2016-Artists-from-Pakistan-shine
  14. ^ http://tribune.com.pk/story/1160745/adil-omar-talal-qureshi-perform-diplo-kesha-mad-decent-block-party/
  15. ^ http://tribune.com.pk/story/1169041/heres-went-diplos-mad-decent-block-party-feat-adil-omar-talal-qureshi/
  16. ^ https://www.redbull.com/mea-en/talal-qureshi-sets-fire-with-his-new-track-aag
  17. ^ https://www.thenews.com.pk/magazine/instep-today/355959-talal-qureshi-announces-new-album-dedicated-to-late-mother/
  18. ^ https://beehy.pe/best-of-2018/pakistan/
  19. ^ https://mosiki.co/taaza/constant-summer/
  20. ^ https://www.thewildcity.com/news/18266-releases-of-the-week-talal-qureshi-shamsher-rana-oceantied-treble-puns-more
  21. ^ https://colorsxstudios.com/music/talal-qureshi-hasan-raheem-paisa/
Retrieved from ""