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          Mumbai, Oct 10 (IANS) Indian ghazal king Jagjit Singh's way of   celebrating his 70th year was unique - he was aiming to complete 70 concerts by   the end of the year. The man who gave ghazals a new lease of life managed only   46 before breathing his last.Singh, who learnt music under Pandit   Chaganlal Sharma and then Ustad Jamaal Khan, rose to fame in the 1970s and 1980s   with his lilting voice and refreshing style of rendering ghazals and devotional   tracks. He was a Padma Bhushan awardee.
 
 
 |  Born to a Sikh couple in Rajasthan Feb 8, 1941, Singh went on to pursue a post   graduation in history from the Kurukshetra University in Haryana. He came to the   country's entertainment capital, Mumbai in 1965, in search of work as a   singer.
 It was a struggle. Singing at small musical gatherings, house   concerts and film parties in the hope of being noticed, became almost a daily   routine for him. But he didn't lose hope.
 
 In 1967, he met singer Chitra   and following a courtship of two years, they tied the knot. Together they came   up with several hit ghazal albums like "Ecstasies", "A Sound Affair", "Passions"   and "Beyond Time" and were considered a formidable husband-wife singer duo.
 
 They sang many successful duets until their only son, Vivek, died at the   age of 21 in 1990. Chitra stopped singing. However, Singh continued his tryst   with music - and for good.
 
 In 1987, Singh recorded the first purely   digital CD album by an Indian musician, "Beyond Time".
 
 He also sang for   Bollywood films like "Arth", "Saath Saath" and "Premgeet". He created a strong   footing in films with songs like "Hontho se chhoo lo tum" ("Prem Geet"), "Tumko   dekha toh yeh khayal aaya" ("Saath Saath"), "Jhuki jhuki si nazar" ("Arth"),   "Hoshwalon ko" ("Sarfarosh") and "Badi nazuk hai" ("Jogger's Park").
 
 Most   of his non-film albums - "Hope", "In Search", "Insight", "Mirage", "Visions",   "Kahkashan", "Love Is Blind", "Chirag", "Sajda", "Marasim", "Face To Face",   "Aaeena" and "Cry For Cry" - were successful too.
 
 His concerts were a   delight, especially when he broke into pleasant Punjabi numbers like "Saun da   mahina". His heavy voice used to turn joyful, leaving his listeners smiling ear   to ear.
 
 He had also collaborated with former Indian prime minister Atal   Bihari Vajpayee in two albums, "Nayi Disha" (1999) and "Samvedna" (2002). In his   later years, Singh became disinterested in Bollywood music due to the   moneymindedness of film producers.
 
 But he remained connected to causes   relating to the music industry. He was one of the frontrunners battling to get   an equal percentage of royalty for singers and lyricist from songs.
 
 What   he couldn't battle was his illness. After being hospitalised for brain   haemorrhage Sep 23, he died Monday morning. But the voice in tracks that won him   the tag of Indian ghazal king, will remain fresh for generations to come.
 
 
 
      
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