Artist's albums
Legendary Jagjit Singh
2023 · album
Murli Manohar Gopala
2023 · single
Jhuki Jhuki Si Nazar (From "Arth")
2023 · single
Gaiye Ganpati Jagvandan (LoFi)
2023 · single
Paani Mein Meen Pyasi (LoFi)
2023 · single
He Ram He Ram (Relaxing Lofi) - Single
2023 · single
Hey Ram (Reprise) - Single
2023 · single
Ghazal-E-Lofi, Vol. 1
2023 · album
Varde Varde Varde (Lofi) - Single
2023 · single
Hey Krishna Gopal Hari (Lofi)
2023 · single
Hare Krishna Hare Rama
2023 · single
Hey Gobind Hey Gopal - Lofi - Single
2023 · single
Kabhi Subha kabhi Sham
2023 · single
Mahakaya (Lofi)
2023 · single
Jai Radha Madhav (Lofi) - Single
2023 · single
He Ram He Ram (Lofi) - Single
2023 · single
Ghalib X Lofi
2022 · album
Jai Ganesh Deva Aarti (Lofi)
2022 · single
Hari Tum Haro
2022 · single
Tulsi Vivah - Bhakti Sangrah
2022 · EP
Satnam Wahe Guru - Single
2022 · single
Hoshwalon Ko Khabar Kya (Lofi Mix)
2022 · single
Hare Rama Hare Krishna Mantra
2022 · single
Raat Ke Baad Bhi Andhera Hai
2022 · single
Vaishnava Stuti
2022 · single
Hey Govind Hey Gopal (Live)
2021 · single
Shri Krishna
2021 · single
Similar artists
Hemant Kumar
Artist
Roop Kumar Rathod
Artist
Mohammed Rafi
Artist
Geeta Dutt
Artist
Suresh Wadkar
Artist
Talat Mahmood
Artist
R. D. Burman
Artist
Lucky Ali
Artist
Abhijeet
Artist
Mukesh
Artist
Anuradha Paudwal
Artist
Kumar Sanu
Artist
Manna Dey
Artist
Kailash Kher
Artist
Pankaj Udhas
Artist
Amitabh Bachchan
Artist
Asha Bhosle
Artist
Ghulam Ali
Artist
Falguni Pathak
Artist
Mehdi Hassan
Artist
Biography
Jagjit Singh was an Indian classical singer, composer, and musician known during his lifetime as "The Ghazal King." After Ravi Shankar, he is considered one of post-colonial India's most important and recognizable artists, and certainly its best-selling due to his soundtracks and scores for film and television, and his musical interpretation of the works of poets. Including scores, he recorded over 60 albums during his lifetime. He is known not only for his ghazals and singing in several languages, but also for Indian light classical music, including thumri and bhajan. He and his wife, ghazal singer Chitra Singh, came to prominence during the '70s and '80s and revived the style of traditional singing that had languished since the late '50s. Composing in the Bol-pradhan style (sung poetry and vocal improvisation over set musical arrangements), he used simple melodies and modes to accompany lyrics that were considered current and relevant to contemporary life. Singh, a Sikh, was born in the Punjab's Rajastan area. He began his musical studies at the Khalsa College Sr. Sec. School and pursued them at Khalsa College, Sriganganagar. He attained an arts degree and pursued post-graduate studies at Kurukshetra University in Haryana. He studied with Pandit Chhaganlal Sharma and Ustad Jamaal Khan. He began his professional singing and composing career for All India Radio in 1961. He moved to Mumbai in 1965 to try to establish himself as either a singer and/or composer in the massive Bollywood industry. It was hardly an auspicious beginning: he spent years writing and singing advertising jingles and eventually gained a slot doing playback singing in films. He met his future wife in 1967; they were married two years later. Though they performed as a duo, they were unable to record together until the middle of the '70s. Their debut album, The Unforgettables, was issued by HMV in 1977. Though they only sang together on two cuts, the single "Baat Niklegi" became their first hit; it was celebrated for its juxtaposition of modern arrangements and the classical ghazal form. Though the following ghazals issued a year later did well, they paled in comparison to 1979's double album Come Alive in a Live Concert with Jagjit and Chitra Singh and 1981's Live in Concert at Wembley. 1981's Saath Saath and 1982's Arth -- both composed by Singh -- elevated their reputation to that of living legends. They are listed among HMV's best-selling soundtrack recording artists of all time. Singh's other film scores included Premgeet, Tum Bin, Sarfarosh, Dushman, and Tarkeeb. In 1991, the Singhs' son Vivet was killed in a car accident. He was 21. Chitra retired from singing in the aftermath. Forced to go it alone, Singh collaborated with legendary ghazal singer Lata Mangeshkar on 1991's Sajda. It topped the charts instantly and eventually went on to become one of, if not the, best-selling non-soundtrack recording in HMV India's catalog. Singh recorded often, collaborating with poet/lyricist Gulzar. All of his albums during the '90s charted. He also began to work extensively in television during the '90s. He composed songs, serial music, and scores for Heena, Neem Ka Pead, and Hello Jhindagi, to name a few. He began teaching and mentored many Indian popular singers including Abhijeet Bhattacharya, Ashok Khosla, Ghanshyam Vaswani, Siza Roy, Talat Aziz, and Vinod Sehgal. During the era, Singh discovered and mentored the prolific Indian playback singer Kumar Sanu, and continued to perform, record, and compose songs and film scores. In 1998, he was given the Sahitya Academy Award, a literary honor for popularizing the work of poet Mirza Ghalib with his score and soundtrack for the television series of the same name. In 2003, he was given the Padma Bhushan, a high-level civilian award by the Indian government. He received a Teacher's Lifetime Achievement Award in 2006. In 2011, before a concert with Ghulam Ali, Singh suffered a brain hemorrhage. He passed away on September 23. He was posthumously awarded the Rajasthan Ratnain 2013, the highest civilian award by the state government of Rajasthan. Google celebrated him with a home page doodle that same year. The popularity of Singh's music has only spread since his death. His recordings and compilations have been reissued numerous times throughout Europe and Asia. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi