Bhupinder Singh

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This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.
Additional information may please be sent as messages to the Facebook
community, Indpaedia.com. All information used will be gratefully
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A brief biography

Avijit Ghosh & Bella Jaisinghani, July 19, 2022: The Times of India


Singer-composer Bhupinder Singh’s moody and melancholic voice gave depth and soul to some of the finest ghazals and nazms in the Hindi films of 1970s and 1980s.


The Amritsar-born singer’s deep and distinctive renditions were the perfect fit for Gulzar’s sensitive poetry: ‘Dil dhoondta hai phir wohi’ (Mausam), ‘Ek akela iss sheher mein’ (Gharaonda), to name just two tracks. 
Also a guitarist of repute, Bhupinder was part of RD Burman's ensemble. He played the instrument in ‘Dum maro dum’ (Hare Rama Hare Krishna) and ‘Chura liya hai’ (Yaadon Ki Baraat. )

Bhupinder was a singer with an original, smoky voice. He was the favorite singer of RD Burman and Gulzar,” ghazal singer Anoop Jalota said in a message. Bhupinder also composed non-filmi ghazals, bhajans and geets. Medieval poet Kabir’s ‘Moko kahan dhoonde re bande’ and ‘Aahat si koi aaye’ are two of his finest compositions.


Unlike others, R D Burman also gave him lighter tracks to sing, thereby expanding his range. For instance, in Satte Pe Satta, Bhupinder sang two uncharacteristic group fun songs: the title track and the feel-good ‘Zindagi mil ke bitaenge’. His bantering duet with Suresh Wadkar in Masoom, ‘Huzoor is tarah bhi’, also highlighted a new side to his singing.


The composer-singer grew up in Delhi and was taken to Bombay by Madan Mohan. A music teacher’s son, he had a baptism by fire singing alongside greats — Mohd Rafi, Manna Dey, Talat Mahmood in the pining soldiers’ track, ‘Hoke majboor mujhe’ in Chetan Anand’s Haqeeqat in 1964. In an interview, Bhupinder once said, he went back to Delhi since Anand was keen to make him a hero, which didn’t appeal to him. Interestingly, he acted and sang his first solo in Anand’s Aakhri Khat, the Westernisedtrack, ‘Rut jawan jawan.’


Soon critics started praising his control over difficult notes, noticeable in songs such as ‘Beeti na beetai raina’ in Parichay (1972).

Bhupinder brought a touch of class and classical to Hindi film singing and gradually became the perfect fit for background songs reflecting ache and angst. Many of his numbers did not climb the charts but they always felt like sincere companions for the lovelorn and the brokenhearted: ‘Karoge yaad to har baat yaad aayegi’ (Bazaar), ‘Kabhi kisi to muqammal jahan nahi milta’ (Ahista Ahista), ‘Ahl-e-dil yun hi’ (Dard), ‘Zindagi phoolon ki nahi’ (Grihapravesh), ‘Jaane yeh mujhko kya ho raha hai’ (Ek Bar Phir). He also sang some outstanding duets such as ‘Chand banoo main aur raat bano tum’ (Mangalsutra), ‘Kisi nazar ko tera’ (Aitbaar) and ‘Aawaz di hai aaj ik nazar ne’ (Aitbaar).

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