Asha Bhosle: A voice for all ages
The versatile singer made every era of music her own
Alok Tiwari
When someone lives to be 92, you kind of
anticipate their passing. Not immediately, not tomorrow, maybe not for another
decade if they are in good health. But it is something that can happen anytime.
Yet, when Asha Bhosle passed into history last Sunday, it felt strangely
remiss, like something that should not have happened. It even felt as if it
could not happen. For a lot of us, her voice was like seasons, that was always
around. From long before we were born.
Perhaps, it was her longevity, or longevity
of her career. She had been singing for nearly eight of her nine decades on
this earth. Perhaps, it was the fact that she continued singing almost till the
end. We could never call her a singer of yesteryears. Perhaps because she appeared
to be the last link to a musical age that seems well and truly over. With her passing
there is finality to that end. A handful of people from that era may still be around
but it is a token presence. Asha Bhosle’s name was among the biggest.
Funnily she was not thought of as such for much of that time. This was because of her relationship with another name that
was just as big—Lata Mangeshkar. No discussion on Asha’s career, contribution,
or repertoire could be complete without reference to Lata. Asha was far too
original to remain under the shadow of her more celebrated elder sibling. But
because of Lata’s presence, she had to work much harder to create an identity
for herself.
Their so-called rivalry has been discussed
often. That is fine. There will always be an element of competition when two
people are operating in the same space. But there is little evidence publicly
of any bitterness. The two spoke little about each other. When they did it was
always with fondness and respect. There is also little doubt, though, that throughout
their very long and illustrious careers, Lata remained an undisputed numero
uno. She was always lauded more, appreciated more, regarded more. And this was
a little unfair on Asha.
Lata lived up to that role to the hilt. She
carefully cultivated her image as an elder statesman. She was someone who
overcame adversity and made it big while remaining spotlessly clean in a dirty
industry. She was always the pious goddess. Clad in white, away from
controversies, above the fray of the industry, a kind of austere ascetic. Her
stature meant that she could take the pick of songs. This often left others,
including Asha, on the margins.
But if there was anyone who refused to be on
the margins, it was Asha. She imbued whatever came her way with a rebellious energy
that was exhilarating for her times. In many ways, Lata, despite being
supremely talented, was a bit of a unidimensional singer. She was like Ganga in
the plains—majestic, vast, serene, and sacred. It was the first voice in Indian
film music you could bring home, the demure bride, the dutiful sister, the
sacrificing mother. Asha, on the other hand, represented an unstoppable
mountain stream that turned and twisted, broke into a waterfall, gathered
itself and flowed again. It never stopped surprising you. You could bring this
voice home too, but it needed courage; it was of a challenging lover.
She lived her life like her music. Perhaps,
they both shaped each other. Asha went through the gamut of what life was
about. She never was, neither projected herself in the stereotype of a perfect
woman. Right from her elopement to her rocky marriages, she remained on a scary
emotional roller-coaster. The wounds, including seeing death of two of her
three children, would have destroyed a lesser person. They made Asha a more
complete artist, giving her craft both a depth and an edge. Her voice could be
coquettish, playful, and naughty, but also filled with devotion, pathos and
longing. She was never an unattainable ideal. She was what we are, with all our
hopes and desires, confusions and contemplations, follies and foibles.
Asha was an undeniable part of golden age
of Indian film music, but she was hardly confined to that. During her peak, she
could sing anything that was thrown at her, a versatility matched only by
Mohammed Rafi on the male side. She could do tuneful romantic songs just like
playful dance numbers. She could sing qawwalis with gusto and handle difficult
classical compositions. She could breeze through the cabaret songs set to
western tunes as easily as plaintive, philosophical ones. Asha’s range together
with Lata’s perfection ensured that sun never really set on the reign of the two
sisters. Everyone else had their ups and downs but for close to four decades,
these two probably sang four of every five film songs in female voice.
Asha lent herself to experimentation,
fusion, reinvention long after her contemporaries, including Lata herself, had
stopped being relevant. She was at home in the age of melody and continued to
waltz her way through the time when rhythm and beats reigned. She spoke on
equal terms with Ghulam Ali with whom she partnered for an album of ghazals.
When age of TV dawned, she took to remixing her old songs and making music
videos.
In interviews she spoke nostalgically about
the music of 50s and 60s. She sometimes bemoaned the lack of originality among
the new artists. But she never regretted the change, she embraced it. She saw
evolution where others saw decline. Unlike some who blamed falling music
standards and audience taste for their obscurity, Asha rarely disparaged the
new to glorify the old. She quietly became part of the new.
That is why age seemed to sit lightly on
her. Nature spared her the pain and indignity that often comes with living that
long. That is why, even at 92, her passing seems untimely.
This column appeared in Lokmat Times on April 16, 2026

True!
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