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Fans flock to mourn iconic Indian singer Zubeen Garg

September 23, 2025
Zubeen Garg was cremated in Guwahati city on Tuesday with state honours
Zubeen Garg was cremated in Guwahati city on Tuesday with state honours

GUWAHATI – Indian singer-composer Zubeen Garg has been cremated with state honours and a 21-gun salute in Guwahati city in India's north-eastern state of Assam.

Hundreds of thousands of people gathered to mourn the death of the 52-year-old singer who drowned on 19 September in Singapore, where he had gone to perform at a live concert.

Garg's cremation was held after a second autopsy on the body was conducted to rule out any foul play in his death, Assam's Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said.

At the cremation ground, the crowd sang lines from one of his most popular songs – Mayabini. Garg was a cultural icon in Assam, singing in more than 40 languages and dialects in a career spanning 33 years.

His hit Hindi song Ya Ali from the 2006 film Gangster made him nationally famous.

Assam declared three days of mourning after his death, with prominent politicians and musicians joining fans from across the region who travelled to Guwahati to pay their last respects to the singer.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi earlier mourned Garg on X, saying he would be remembered for his "rich contribution to music".

Garg's career took off when he was just 19 and still in college. His first music album, Anamika, released in 1992, became an instant chartbuster.

His rise to stardom coincided with a period of violence linked to separatist groups in Assam. His lively melodies about love, hope and despair – embellished with catchy riffs – brought a breath of fresh air to an otherwise tense social milieu.

By 2000, when Garg made his acting and directorial debut with an Assamese movie Tumi Mor Matho Mor, his popularity had touched new heights.

His face was regularly splashed on big billboards and his songs could be heard in markets and buses, and at college events and social gatherings.

He was a fashion icon among Assam's youth and built a larger-than-life persona with his sartorial choices, which included trendy sunglasses and ripped jeans.

Garg was also the most sought-after artist during Bihu – a cultural festival celebrated in Assam in mid-April every year. Throughout the month, he would travel around the state singing in live concerts, which were attended by thousands of people.

Large sections of Garg's fans identify him as an "emotion" – a pop culture figure akin to no one.

He could sing a rock song with the same ease as regional folk music and spiritual sub-genres such as Borgeet, Bihu and Zikir. This versatility broadened his fan base across generations and communities.

Beyond music, Garg was also known for his activism, even though he never associated himself with a political party.

He regularly condemned violence by separatist groups in the region, despite receiving threats.

In 2019, he played a significant role in mobilising people against a controversial new citizenship law that offered citizenship to non-Muslim religious minorities from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan.

In 2024, Garg joined Guwahati residents protesting against the Himanta Biswa Sarma-led government for cutting trees to build a new flyover.

Garg's admirers saw him as someone who never thought twice before ruffling feathers.

"He feared nobody. He spoke his heart out. And he was extremely generous. Can you think of any other celebrity like that?" asked Bimugdha Goswami, a fan who was part of a large gathering in Guwahati on Monday.

In 2020, during the Covid pandemic, Garg offered his apartment to the government for use as an isolation centre.

Over decades, people from towns and villages across Assam have testified to receiving financial help from Garg for medical treatment, school admissions, college admissions, marriages, funerals and more.

In an interview to a regional TV channel in 2018, Garg spoke about how his fan clubs across cities and districts in Assam had made these activities possible.

The same clubs are now managing crowds and organising tributes as they bid him farewell. – BBC


September 23, 2025
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