Saeein

"Saeein" (Urdu: سائیں, literal English translation: "Oh Lord") is a song by Pakistani sufi rock band Junoon. It is Junoon's eleventh single and the second from the 1996 studio album Inquilaab. The song is written by lead guitarist, Salman Ahmad and lyricist, Sabir Zafar. Due to the song's popularity, it also featured on the band's fourth studio album Azadi released in 1997. "Saeein" is one of Junoon's most popular songs, and has been covered numerous times, most notably by Indian singer Harshdeep Kaur.[1] The song marked Junoon's foray into what later became the sufi rock sound that the band is most popularly associated with. The song uses blending rock guitars and bluesy vocals with eastern elements like the use of tablas (traditional south Asian hand drums), raga-inspired melodies, traditional Pakistani folk music, and Eastern inspired poetry.

"Saeein"
Single by Junoon
from the album Inquilaab and Azadi
Released1997
Recorded1995
GenreSufi rock
Length5:34 (album version)
5:24 (music video)
LabelEMI Pakistan, Sadaf Stereo
Songwriter(s)Sabir Zafar, Salman Ahmad
Producer(s)John Alec, Salman Ahmad
Junoon singles chronology
"Ehtesaab"
(1996)
"Saeein"
(1997)
"Sayonee"
(1997)

"Saeein" was named at #3 in a list of Junoon's top 10 songs and at #9 among the top sufi rock songs list published by Gibson Guitar on their website.[2][3]

In addition, the short version of the song featured on the band's fourth studio album, Azadi, released in 1997. The song has also featured in several other albums by the band like Kashmakash (1995) and Dewaar: The Best of Junoon (2004).

Music video

Track listing

Saeein

All tracks are written by Junoon.

No.TitleLength
1."Saeein"5:34
2."Saeein Alaap"4:41
3."Saeein" (Video)5:24

Cover versions

  • 2008: Harshdeep Kaur (performed live at the singing competition Junoon - Kuch Kar Dikhaane Ka)
  • 2011: Usman Riaz (covered an instrumental version of the song on Junoon's 20th anniversary album)

Personnel

Junoon
Additional musicians
gollark: I don't think, in many cases, you could just swap out a file for a TCP stream or datagram not-stream and expect all the code dealing with it in an application to work fine.
gollark: Applications have to handle them differently, and the kernel does too.
gollark: There's a significant difference between "send datagram" and "push to a stream" and, i don't know, "wait for an inbound TCP connection".
gollark: Still, though, I don't think having all this stuff as read/writeable "files" when the semantics are different is good.
gollark: I basically just want to receive packets from ff02::aeae port 44718 on all interfaces and send them too, and I can't tell what operations that maps to.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.