>> BANGLADESH-ROOTED ROCKER FOLLOWS CREATIVE SPARK
Stafford musician 'Nero' channels his father with Bangladeshi-rooted rock
Date published: 7/16/2009
BY BOBBY McMAHON
FOR THE FREE LANCE-STAR
When Faisal Hasan walked into work at Merrill Lynch one morning last December, he could tell that something was wrong. As it turned out, layoffs were coming at noon, and everyone around him was panicked.
But Hasan saw the layoffs as a blessing in disguise, and spent his last morning at the financial giant sharing his plans with his closest colleagues.
"They all looked at me," Hasan recalled, "and said--pardon my language--'What the [expletive] are you doing here? Go away and do exactly that. I've never seen you so alive as you are right now.'"
He was alive, Hasan said, because he was taking the opportunity to devote himself to making music, a dream he had since he was a boy. Onstage, the Stafford County resident becomes "Nero," and will perform his personal, hyper-rhythmic style of rock this Sunday afternoon at Jammin' Java in Vienna.
While he independently released the album "Nine" in 2007, Nero became much more serious about his music after the layoffs. He's cranked up his output of songs, writing more in just a few months than ever before, and now sees performing as more than just something he loves to do.
"I'm trying to do this with more rigor," Nero said. "Each show for me is like, 'What if this is the only time I have onstage--the only thing I ever have to communicate?'"
What Nero communicates are personal, introspective lyrics on top of a hypnotic blend of Eastern rhythms (a Bangledeshi-American, he uses instruments like the tabla drum in his recordings), pulsating electronic drumbeats and solid guitar licks. This sound echoes the eclecticism of Talking Heads and Peter Gabriel--Nero lists both as influences and freely admits trying to capture the feel of their music.
"I'm trying my best to be like them, but in the process, I've created something that's different," Nero said. "It's like a catalog. You listen to whatever it is that you like, and you safely tuck it away in the back of your head."
| What: Stafford County resident Nero performs a local matinee, with opener Chris Ingham.
Where: Jammin' Java, 227 Maple Ave. East, Vienna
When: Sunday, 2:30 p.m.
Cost: $10
Info: 703/255-1566
Web: jamminjava.com
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Date published: 7/16/2009
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