• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Sport
  • Cricket
  • Odisha
Asha Bhonsle & Her Pancham: When Music Stitched Two Broken Souls For A Melodious Restart

Asha Bhonsle & Her Pancham: When Music Stitched Two Broken Souls For A Melodious Restart

2 months ago
Kejriwal’s Claims Of IB Threats Backfire; Call Traced Back To AAP Leader

Kejriwal’s Claims Of IB Threats Backfire; Call Traced Back To AAP Leader

14 minutes ago
Odisha Vigilance Arrests Cooperative Official For Embezzling Rs 33.80L Govt Funds

Odisha Vigilance Arrests Cooperative Official For Embezzling Rs 33.80L Govt Funds

22 minutes ago
Zilla Parishad Employee Suspended Over Spy Camera In Women’s Washroom In Odisha

Zilla Parishad Employee Suspended Over Spy Camera In Women’s Washroom In Odisha

38 minutes ago
CUET Delay Puts ‘Vishwa Guru’ Tag In Crosshairs As Rahul, Kejriwal Blast PM Modi

CUET Delay Puts ‘Vishwa Guru’ Tag In Crosshairs As Rahul, Kejriwal Blast PM Modi

53 minutes ago
Not Accident; Engineering Student Run Over By SUV In Bhubaneswar Over Love Triangle, 6 Arrested

Not Accident; Engineering Student Run Over By SUV In Bhubaneswar Over Love Triangle, 6 Arrested

1 hour ago
Nine Nabbed For Links With ISI, Dawood; Had Planned Strikes On Sensitive Locations

Nine Nabbed For Links With ISI, Dawood; Had Planned Strikes On Sensitive Locations

1 hour ago
Permanent Hormuz Transit Fees To Hit Consumers, Temporary Tolls Negotiable: Qatar

Permanent Hormuz Transit Fees To Hit Consumers, Temporary Tolls Negotiable: Qatar

2 hours ago
Indian Man Paid Traffickers To Assault Minor In US; Sentenced To 10 Years

Indian Man Paid Traffickers To Assault Minor In US; Sentenced To 10 Years

2 hours ago
Astrologer’s Advice Or Rahul Gandhi’s Availability? Reason For June 3 Pick For Shivakumar’s Swearing-In

Astrologer’s Advice Or Rahul Gandhi’s Availability? Reason For June 3 Pick For Shivakumar’s Swearing-In

2 hours ago
Fake Cockroach Janta Party App Spreading Malware, Cyber Security Firm Warns

Fake Cockroach Janta Party App Spreading Malware, Cyber Security Firm Warns

2 hours ago
Odisha Gymnastics Apologises After Dead President’s Name On Letterhead Sparks Row

Odisha Gymnastics Apologises After Dead President’s Name On Letterhead Sparks Row

3 hours ago
India Preparing For Operation Sindoor 2.0: Army Chief

India Preparing For Operation Sindoor 2.0: Army Chief

4 hours ago
  • Home
  • About us
  • Career
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Usage
Saturday, May 30, 2026
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
No Result
View All Result
Home India

Asha Bhonsle & Her Pancham: When Music Stitched Two Broken Souls For A Melodious Restart

by OB Bureau
April 12, 2026
in India
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Asha Bhonsle & Her Pancham: When Music Stitched Two Broken Souls For A Melodious Restart
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Bhubaneswar: Music was the language of their love. Asha Bhonsle and RD Burman hit the right cord, not just in music but in life too! Right because both had failed in their previous marriages. While Asha—who passed away on Sunday at 92—was struggling with three children alone, Burman, fondly known as Pancham, had his own share of emotional struggles. But a perfect musical bond stitched them together.

When Asha Bhosle first met a young, bespectacled Burman in the 1950s, it was not love at first sight, but recognition at first sound. He admired her voice; she noticed his restless genius. Between them, music became the language of something that would take years to find its name.,

ADVERTISEMENT

The first note: a meeting in passing

Their story began in 1956, when Asha was already an established playback singer and Pancham was still finding his footing as the son of the legendary SD Burman. Their early encounters were fleeting, almost incidental. He once approached her for an autograph, a shy admirer of a voice he had heard on the radio.

“Asha, tumhara sur bahut achha hai, main tumhari awaaz par fida hoon,” he once told her, reported News 18.

But destiny, like a well-composed refrain, has a way of returning. A decade later, Teesri Manzil (1966) brought them together professionally, and Hindi film music was never the same again.
When music turned into magic

If their love story had a soundtrack, it would be a daring, genre-defying playlist. Together, they broke the grammar of Hindi film music—blending jazz, rock, cabaret, and Indian classical sensibilities into something entirely new.

Songs like “Piya Tu Ab To Aaja,” “Dum Maro Dum,” and “Chura Liya Hai Tumne” didn’t just become hits—they became moods, eras, identities.

He composed like a rebel; she sang like she had nothing to prove. In Asha’s voice, Pancham found freedom. In his music, she found reinvention.

Thank you for the music (not just from me but also the millions of hearts that beat to your madness). Happy birthday Pancham ❤️ pic.twitter.com/hqOWG45w7F

— ashabhosle (@ashabhosle) June 27, 2021


Love, delayed

By the time love arrived, life had already happened to both of them. Asha had endured a difficult early marriage and was raising three children alone. Burman, too, had seen his first marriage end.

Their relationship grew slowly—through rehearsals, recordings, long hours in studios, and an unspoken understanding of each other’s silences. Pancham pursued her persistently, drawn as much to her resilience as to her voice.

When they finally married in 1980, it wasn’t a whirlwind romance—it was a second chance, chosen with awareness, not impulse.

A partnership beyond perfection

Their marriage was not without fractures. They lived apart during phases, navigating the complexities of two strong, creative individuals. Yet, what remained untouched was respect—and the music. By the late 1980s, their relationship saw a shift as they began living separately, reportedly due to differences in lifestyle. But they continued to meet and share a space of respect and understanding.

In the 1980s, their collaborations matured into something quieter, deeper. Songs like “Mera Kuch Saamaan” from Ijaazat carried the weight of lived experiences—love that had seen joy, distance, and everything in between.

At home, they bonded over simple pleasures—like cooking—often competing playfully over who did it better. It was a relationship that thrived not on perfection, but on shared eccentricities.

The silence after the song

When Pancham passed away in 1994, the music stopped—but the bond did not. In one of the most poignant moments of her life, Asha chose not to enter his room after his death. She wanted to remember him alive, not gone.

It was perhaps the most telling note in their story: love that refused to accept an ending.

In the grand narrative of Indian music, many collaborations have created magic. But few have blurred the line between the personal and the professional as seamlessly as Asha Bhosle and R. D. Burman.

They didn’t just compose songs—they composed each other’s lives.

And long after the last note faded, their music continues to play—like a love story that refuses to end.

Share196Tweet123
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Odisha Deputy CM Hails PM Modi’s Women-Centric Approach Ahead Of Key Parliament Session

Next Post

Relief For 74 Class XII Odisha Students As HC Asks CBSE To Publish Cancelled Results

OB Bureau

OB Bureau

Related Posts

Kejriwal’s Claims Of IB Threats Backfire; Call Traced Back To AAP Leader

Kejriwal’s Claims Of IB Threats Backfire; Call Traced Back To AAP Leader

by OB Bureau
May 30, 2026

New Delhi/Vadodara: In a major embarrassment for the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and Arvind Kejriwal, allegations about threats by the...

CUET Delay Puts ‘Vishwa Guru’ Tag In Crosshairs As Rahul, Kejriwal Blast PM Modi

CUET Delay Puts ‘Vishwa Guru’ Tag In Crosshairs As Rahul, Kejriwal Blast PM Modi

by OB Bureau
May 30, 2026

New Delhi: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi launched a blistering attack on the Centre on Saturday after the National Testing Agency...

Nine Nabbed For Links With ISI, Dawood; Had Planned Strikes On Sensitive Locations

Nine Nabbed For Links With ISI, Dawood; Had Planned Strikes On Sensitive Locations

by OB Bureau
May 30, 2026

New Delhi: The Delhi Police's Special Cell arrested nine men with links to Pakistan's intelligence agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI),...

Indian Man Paid Traffickers To Assault Minor In US; Sentenced To 10 Years

Indian Man Paid Traffickers To Assault Minor In US; Sentenced To 10 Years

by OB Bureau
May 30, 2026

Omaha: An Indian man has been sentenced to 10 years in prison in the US for sexually assaulting a minor...

Next Post
Mrunal Thakur Compared To Madhubala By ‘Kalki’ Director, Urged Not To Do ‘Random Stuff’

Mrunal Thakur Compared To Madhubala By 'Kalki' Director, Urged Not To Do 'Random Stuff'

SAI International School SAI International School SAI International School
OdishaBytes

Copyright © 2026 Frontier Media

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • News Feed

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review

Copyright © 2026 Frontier Media

\r\nLove, delayed\r\n\r\nBy the time love arrived, life had already happened to both of them. Asha had endured a difficult early marriage and was raising three children alone. Burman, too, had seen his first marriage end.\r\n\r\nTheir relationship grew slowly—through rehearsals, recordings, long hours in studios, and an unspoken understanding of each other’s silences. Pancham pursued her persistently, drawn as much to her resilience as to her voice.\r\n\r\nWhen they finally married in 1980, it wasn’t a whirlwind romance—it was a second chance, chosen with awareness, not impulse.\r\n\r\nA partnership beyond perfection\r\n\r\nTheir marriage was not without fractures. They lived apart during phases, navigating the complexities of two strong, creative individuals. Yet, what remained untouched was respect—and the music. By the late 1980s, their relationship saw a shift as they began living separately, reportedly due to differences in lifestyle. But they continued to meet and share a space of respect and understanding.\r\n\r\nIn the 1980s, their collaborations matured into something quieter, deeper. Songs like “Mera Kuch Saamaan” from Ijaazat carried the weight of lived experiences—love that had seen joy, distance, and everything in between.\r\n\r\nAt home, they bonded over simple pleasures—like cooking—often competing playfully over who did it better. It was a relationship that thrived not on perfection, but on shared eccentricities.\r\n\r\nThe silence after the song\r\n\r\nWhen Pancham passed away in 1994, the music stopped—but the bond did not. In one of the most poignant moments of her life, Asha chose not to enter his room after his death. She wanted to remember him alive, not gone.\r\n\r\nIt was perhaps the most telling note in their story: love that refused to accept an ending.\r\n\r\nIn the grand narrative of Indian music, many collaborations have created magic. But few have blurred the line between the personal and the professional as seamlessly as Asha Bhosle and R. D. Burman.\r\n\r\nThey didn’t just compose songs—they composed each other’s lives.\r\n\r\nAnd long after the last note faded, their music continues to play—like a love story that refuses to end.","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"OB Bureau","url":"https://odishabytes.com/author/bureauob/","sameAs":["https://www.odishabytes.com","BytesOdisha"]},"articleSection":["India"],"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://assets.odishabytes.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/asha.webp","width":665,"height":665},"publisher":{"@type":"NewsMediaOrganization","name":"OdishaBytes","url":"https://odishabytes.com","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","url":"https://odishabytes.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Odisha-Byyes-Logo150-min.png"},"sameAs":["https://www.facebook.com/odishabytes/","https://x.com/BytesOdisha","https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZzaxCAclS9UoMtl51XuXkQ","https://odishabytes.com/feed/","https://news.google.com/publications/CAAqKggKIiRDQklTRlFnTWFoRUtEMjlrYVhOb1lXSjVkR1Z6TG1OdmJTZ0FQAQ?hl=en-IN&gl=IN&ceid=IN%3Aen"]},"isAccessibleForFree":true}