Junoon 1992 ^new^
Junoon (1992) is not merely the best Pakistani rock debut album; it is a cultural artifact of supreme importance. It captures the precise moment when a repressed generation exhaled, picked up an electric guitar, and decided to sing in its own voice. The album’s genius lies in its refusal to choose between Rumi and Robert Plant, between the tabla and the tom-tom. It argues, through its very grooves, that identity is not a fortress to be defended but a junoon —a beautiful, mad, obsessive search. Twenty-five years later, as new bands in Lahore and Karachi struggle with the same questions of authenticity and modernity, they are still walking the path that Salman Ahmad, Ali Azmat, and Brian O’Connell carved out of the silence of 1992. The search—the talaash —continues.