Showing posts with label Guwahati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guwahati. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Zubeen Garg lived like a king, died like an emperor

There are some voices you don’t just hear — you live inside them. Zubeen Garg was one of those. A singer, actor, poet, provocateur, dreamer — he belonged everywhere and nowhere, like the Brahmaputra itself: restless, untamed, carrying with it the music of a thousand shores.

When he sang Ya Ali, the country swayed. But long before Bollywood made him a national name, Assam had already claimed him as its restless son. His voice was the soundtrack to tea-garden evenings, rain-swept bus journeys, and lovers’ quarrels by the river. He didn’t just sing songs, he inhabited them, dragging us into the depths of heartbreak, rebellion and wild joy.

To call Zubeen simply a “singer” is to call monsoon simply “rain”. He could sing in dozens of languages, slip between bhajans and blues, croon to the stars or roar at the streets. One night you’d find him in a studio, barefoot, chasing the perfect raga; the next, at a rally, his voice turning into protest. Always unpredictable, always unapologetically Zubeen.

And then there was the man himself — mercurial, fiery, funny, infuriating, generous. He could make you weep with a line, then grin wickedly in the next breath. He sparred with politics, toyed with cinema, flirted with controversy — but he never abandoned music. It was his truest rebellion.

His sudden passing in Singapore feels almost like one of his songs — abrupt, startling, leaving you with an unfinished note that aches in the silence. Yet perhaps that is the only way someone like Zubeen could leave. He was never made for neat endings.

What remains now is his echo in roadside speakers blaring his anthems, in the hush of an Assamese kitchen where his ballads drift in with the evening tea, in the hearts of millions who grew up under the shelter of his sound.

For three decades, he was everywhere. His songs drifted from tea stalls across Assam and the NE, crackled on battered radios, thundered from cinema halls and lit up festivals. He belonged equally to the wedding band and the film set, to protest stages and to riverside picnics. One never “discovered” Zubeen Garg — he was simply there, like rain, like dusk, like the certainty of longing.

If Bollywood remembers him for Ya Ali, Assam remembers him differently: as the boy who turned folk into heartbeat, who carried Bihu into new decades without trimming its wild edges, who could switch from a devotional chant to a rock ballad without losing his centre. He sang in tongues most Indians will never hear in their lifetime — Karbi, Bodo, Tiwa, Adi — as though reminding us that every dialect carries its own music.

What startled audiences wasn’t just his versatility, but his refusal to be contained. Where others polished themselves into brands, Zubeen thrived on unpredictability. A concert by him could veer into an impromptu lecture, a joke, or a furious rant against politics. He seemed less performer, more medium — someone through whom music, in all its moods, passed unfiltered.

In Assam, people didn’t say, “He is a singer.” They said, “He is ours.” And that ownership came not from pride alone, but from intimacy. Zubeen could be found strumming a guitar at midnight in a friend’s living room, just as easily as headlining a festival abroad. He wrote poetry, acted in films, dabbled in direction. He raised funds for floods, argued with ministers, cracked jokes about himself, vanished when fame became too loud.

There was always a touch of mischief about him, as though he refused to take his own legend seriously. Yet beneath that playfulness lay a fierce loyalty — to his land, to its people, to the stubborn art of making music on one’s own terms.

On September 19, 2025, that voice fell silent in Singapore, in a sudden accident that feels too brutal, too abrupt to be real. He was only 52. Assam has declared three days of mourning, but the truth is, the mourning will last far longer. The loss is not just of a man, but of an entire soundscape.

At his cremation, people wept openly — young, old, men, women, children. Everyone sang his song Mayabini Ratir Bukut, as it became an anthem for millions of his grieving fans. Others stood mute, unable to believe that a voice so present could vanish. In Guwahati, Jorhat, Tezpur and across Assam played the song into the night, as though turning grief into a chorus.

How do you measure Zubeen Garg’s legacy? By the thousands of songs he recorded? By the instruments he mastered? By the bridges he built between folk, rock, and film music? Perhaps none of these. Perhaps it is better measured in the way an Assamese teenager today still turns to his songs to explain heartbreak, or the way a lonely migrant worker somewhere in India hums his tunes to remember home.

His story was not polished, nor free of contradictions. But maybe that is precisely why it mattered. In his ragged restlessness, in his refusal to be boxed in, Zubeen Garg became what artists are meant to be: mirrors, storms, companions.

The man is gone, but the echo remains — a river that keeps flowing, untamed, unstoppable. Listen closely — in the rivers, in the rains, in the humming of strangers on a bus — and you’ll find he is still here. Zubeen Garg was never just a singer. He was a weather system, a cultural monsoon, a man whose voice seemed stitched from the soil of Assam itself. He lived like a king, died like an emperor!

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Why Guwahati’s ‘senirams’ are the perfect defenders of Dighalipukhuri’s leafy landmarks

Calling all past and present senirams (aka Romeos) of Guwahati! The time has come for you to leave your legacy, not just as the city’s most committed romantics, but as the green guardians of Guwahati. 

Yes, it’s time to trade in your legendary wooing skills for a bit of tree-hugging heroism and we’re here for it. There’s a new damsel in distress—the 200-year-old trees that have lined the road around the historical Dighalipukhuri for generations. By the way, Dighalipukhuri once served as a naval yard for the mighty Ahoms—and it’s also where I first learned to swim back in my school days.  

So, grab your banners, dust off your dramatic gestures and get ready to save the ancient leafy witnesses to your heart-throbbing love sagas. Now, it’s your turn to step up and save these guardians of green from the axe of "progress."

The plan? The city wants to build a flyover and in the process, uproot these majestic old trees that have been around longer than even your most enduring crush. And who better to take a stand than you, the tireless loiterers who’ve strolled or zoomed past below the leafy canopy innumerable times for a fleeting glimpse of that one student from Handique Girls' College?

Picture it, dear senirams, a city without these trees. Where would you strike that nonchalant pose as your crush walks by? Where would you peer wistfully from under the shade of lush branches, as if lost in a universe of unspoken romance? Unthinkable, right?

And here’s where it gets juicier. Some of the very officials giving the thumbs-up to chop down these ancient giants were once Guwahati’s original senirams themselves. It’s almost tragicomic. The same high-ranking decision-makers who now sign off on tree-felling were, back in the day, much like you.

But don't worry! Years of loitering and longing have prepared you for this exact moment. If you can hold your ground while waiting for a glance from your crush, surely you can stand firm for a cause worth fighting for. Instead of hoping to catch a girl's eye, it’s time to catch the attention of the authorities—and make them think twice about turning this green haven into a concrete flyover.

And yes, let’s get real for a second. The Noonmati-Dighalipukhuri flyover project has reportedly kicked off without sufficient environmental checks or public input. Felling these old trees doesn’t just threaten Guwahati’s heritage and biodiversity, it turns up the urban heat dial just when the city needs its natural coolers the most. We all want progress, but not the kind that comes at the cost of our green spaces, our history and our quality of life.

Whether you're a romantic, a realist, or both, it’s time to stand up for our city’s natural treasures. After all, true love – whether for a person or our planet – is always worth fighting for. 

Disclaimer: This is a satirical piece meant for humour and awareness.

Image Credit: www.tridib91.blogspot.in/Tridib Sarma