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Forever young, Asha’s voice helped define a major cultural shift in post-Independence India, the rise of a more confident, worldly, and self-aware portrayal of women in Indian cinema. While her sister Lata Mangeshkar often represented an idealised, and almost unreal, femininity, Asha’s singing was more down-to-earth, lively, full of emotion, and open about expressing desire.
Also Read: Asha Bhosle tributes pour in for singing legend LIVE
Perhaps the best live concert singer the country has produced, Asha’s greatness lies in her refusal to be easily categorised. She could shift in a single phrase from classical restraint to raw sensuality, or from playful irony to devastating melancholy. From O.P. Nayyar’s gently inviting Aaiye Meherbaan (Howrah Bridge, 1958), to R.D. Burman’s psychedelic, counter-culture anthem Dum Maro Dum (Hare Ram Hare Krishna, 1971), and A.R. Rahman’s lively Rangeela Re (Rangeela, 1995), Asha’s rebellious joie de vivre remained irrepressible for generations.
In parallel, the Padma Vibhushan collaborated with Ustad Ali Akbar Khan and lent her intellectually agile voice to Ravi’s Tora Man Darpan Kehlaye (Kaajal, 1965), Burman’s Piya Bawri (Khoobsurat, 1980), and Khayyam’s Dil Cheez Kya Hai (Umrao Jaan, 1981) — the pinnacle of her classical and dramatic range.

Veteran singer Asha Bhosle during an interview to The Hindu, in New Delhi. Asha Bhosle, the playback singer who recorded songs in over ten Indian languages, began singing at the age of 10.

In this image on October 27, 2004, The siblings of Pt. Dinanath Mangeshkar, (left to right) Usha Mangeshkar, Lata Mangeshkar, Hridaynath Mangeshkar, Asha Bhosle and Meena Khadikar gather together to celebrate the 68th Birthday of Pt. Hridaynath Mangeshkar, in Mumbai.

President Pratibha Patil presenting Padma Vibhushan Award to veteran singer Asha Bhosle at Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi on May 5, 2008.

Bharat Ratna Lata Mangeshkar felicitates her sister Asha Bhosle along with Usha Mangeshkar, in Mumbai in 2013.

Legendary singer Lata Mangeshkar receives Lifetime Achievement award from singer Asha Bhosle and music composer A.R. Rahman during the Global Indian Music Academy Awards function in Mumbai.

Cricketer Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar and veteran singer Asha Bhosle, who both received Padma Vibhushan Awards from President Pratibha Patil, at the Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi on May 5, 2008.
Singer Asha bhosle and Usha Mangeshkar during the Moti Tichi Savali book launch held at Ravindra Natya Mandir in Prabhadevi on September 28, 2009.

Lata Mangeshkar sits alongside her sister Asha Bhosle during the Pandit Hridaynath Mangeshkar Awards in Mumbai on March 31, 2013.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi receives the first Lata Deenanath Mangeshkar Award from singers Asha Bhosle, Usha Mangeshkar, Meena Khadikar, and musician Adinath Mangeshkar, during a ceremony, in Mumbai, on April 24, 2022.

RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat attends the book launch of Asha Bhosle in Mumbai on June 28, 2024.
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Born Asha Mangeshkar into the illustrious musical family of Dinanath Mangeshkar in Sangli, she started singing at age 10 with a Marathi number. After a decade of struggle, she became the voice of children in Nanhe Munne Bachche Teri Muthi Main Kya Hai (Boot Polish, 1954). Her breakthrough came with Uden Jab Jab Zulfein Teri and Maang Ke Saath Tumhara. These foot-tapping numbers, composed by Nayyar for B.R. Chopra’s Naya Daur (1957), showcased Asha’s breezy and rhythmically sharp voice. Her style contrasted perfectly with Rafi’s robust approach, ushering Asha in as a new sensation in playback singing.
Capable of shifting registers and emotional colours with startling ease, she never imposed a single “Asha sound”. Instead, she studied the actress, the character, the era, and the director’s vision, then delivered a voice that felt owned by that performer. She made Zeenat Aman sound unapologetically sensual, Rekha poetic, and Urmila Matondkar and Kajol effervescent.

She grew up in the shadow of her elder sister Lata yet forged an utterly distinct artistic identity. A teenage marriage to Ganpatrao Bhosle that ended in separation, the need to support herself and her children through singing, and the industry’s initial tendency to typecast the younger Mangeshkar sister, Asha’s early life was a struggle. But she never lost faith in the name that her legendary father gave her. She had to do something that her illustrious didi would not try. Though she hailed from a classical tradition, she had an interest in Western music since childhood. She liked the fusion of Spanish, American, and Indian tunes and composers like Nayyar and Pancham, who played an important role in helping her find her niche, realised that she could bring the elements of Hindustani classical music into western compositions with ease. Her ability to glide from one note to another, best exemplified in Jaaiye Aap Kahan Jayenge (Mere Sanam, 1965), impressed them.

She emerged on the scene when Lata, Shamshad Begum, and Geeta Dutt were the top three. Her ambition and will to experiment, combined with circumstances, proved that she bridged the gap in no time. Howrah Bridge also had Geeta Dutt’s Mera Naam Chin Chin Choo, but Aiye Meharbaan lasted longer in the collective memory of the young at heart. Her breath control in Raat Akeli Hai (Jewel Thief, 1967) won her the nod of the demanding S.D. Burman. Earlier, the composer’s misunderstanding with Lata gave Asha the opportunity to sing songs like Kali Ghata Chhayi (Sujata, 1959), and she proved that, given an opportunity, she was no less sweet than her iconic sister.

There was a time when she became the voice of the vamp and the other woman with songs like O Haseena Zulfon Wali (Teesri Manzil, 1966), Piya Tu Ab To Aaja (Caravan, 1971), and Ye Mera Dil (Don, 1978). It allowed her to explore the hitherto forbidden spaces for a playback singer. She employed her incredulous breath control as an expressive tool, and in cabaret and seductive numbers, controlled inhalations and micro-pauses became part of the performance.
However, every time she seemed stuck to an image, Asha smashed it. “I have only one image, and that is of a versatile singer,” she once told this journalist. In the early 80s, when her Jawani Janeman (Namak Halal) for Bappi Lahiri was ruling the pubs, she surprised with her mastery of Urdu tradition with Umrao Jaan. It was not just playback; it was acting through song, giving Umrao her unforgettable inner voice. Director Muzaffar Ali said she asked for the novel before rendering Khayyam’s compositions. “She breathed melody like it was some sort of amrit (elixir).”

If Umrao Jaan was an example of her mastery in the low register, she showed that she is no less in high octaves when Gulzar came up with Mera Kuchh Saaman Tumhare Paas Pada Hai in Ijaazat. The song, in fact, the album defines her, playful yet profound. It is said that Asha came up with the tune when Pancham found the verse unusual for a song. After a flurry of Filmfares, Umraon Jaan and Ijaazat won her National Awards. The period marked her journey into ghazals through collaborations with Ghulam Ali, Jagjit Singh, and Hariharan. It was around the same time that she started a long collaboration with Ilaiyaraaja. Starting with Sadma, she saw his unusual rhythm patterns as a challenge, and their magic in Shenbagamae Shenbagame (Enga Ooru Paattukkaaran, 1987) has withstood the test of time. She has a rich repertoire of songs in Marathi, Bangla, Malayalam, and Gujarati.

Those who knew her well would vouch that there was no pretence about Asha. Her strength lay in grasping new things quickly and her ability to offer alternatives to the composer. A free bird would always come up with ‘isko aise kartein hain… Aap suniye toh.’ She was very informal, someone who eschewed unnecessary drama or false humility, and that reflected in her singing. Musicologist Raju Bharatan once told this journalist that it took her a number of years to reach the top, but the important thing was that she did.
She endured personal tragedies – the separation from her first husband, the loss of Pancham, and the suicide of her daughter Varsha – with a stoic dignity that mirrored the resilience and occasional lament in her singing, such as in Chain Se Humko Kabhie Aapne Jeene Na Diya (Pran Jaye Par Vachan Na Jaye, 1974).

Asha Bhosle at a show with Suresh Wadkar in Mumbai in 2012. She gave live performances till 2024. File | Photo Credit: PTI
Be it Le Gayi Le Gayi (Dil To Pagal Hai, 1997), Lagaan’s Radha Kaise Naa Jale, Kambakht Ishq, or Prem Mein Tohre (Begum Jaan, 2017), the Dadasaheb Phalke winner’s voice withstood the waves of change as she continued to create chartbusters for the reigning divas well into the new millennium, and her live performances continued till 2024 when she performed to Tauba Tauba at a concert in Dubai.

Collaborations with indie pop bands like Colonial Cousins and international artists such as the Kronos Quartet, Boy George, and Gorillaz (perhaps her last recorded song) proved that her musical curiosity never dimmed.
Beyond the studio, she was an entrepreneur. Fond of cooking, her restaurant chain, Asha’s, features her signature dishes. As a television personality, she brought her refreshing honesty to reality shows and proved to be a graceful actress in Mai (2013).
Asha’s voice felt like a friend, a co-conspirator, or a mirror — someone who had been through the messiness of life and still chose to sing, dance, and seduce with full-throated joy. No wonder the industry still repurposes Monica, O My Darling in the background for its Dhurandhar to fly. As Shahryar, the poet-lyricist of Umrao Jaan, would say, “Is anjuman main aapko aana hai bar bar…” Asha never fades.
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