Shamir Tandon's Last Recording with Asha Bhosle: "Iron Lady" Remembered

Music composer Shamir Tandon shared a heartfelt tribute and pictures from his final recording session with the late legendary singer Asha Bhosle. He reminisced about her radiant spirit, daily riyaaz, and her plans for future projects until the very end. Tandon revealed their last unreleased track was penned by Prasoon Joshi and that Bhosle remained curious about modern music trends like AI. He fondly called her "Asha Aai" and an "iron lady," stating she passed away exactly as she had wished.

Key Points: Shamir Tandon Shares Final Recording Pics with Asha Bhosle

  • Final recording for unreleased song
  • Bhosle hailed as "iron lady"
  • Continued riyaaz till last days
  • Left on her own terms
  • Proud of granddaughter's music career
4 min read

Shamir Tandon shares pics from last recording with Asha Bhosle, calls her "iron lady"

Music composer Shamir Tandon shares heartfelt tribute and pictures from his last recording session with the legendary singer Asha Bhosle.

Shamir Tandon shares pics from last recording with Asha Bhosle, calls her "iron lady"
"Iron Lady, a true embodiment of women's empowerment, you left us exactly the way you had always envisioned. - Shamir Tandon"

Mumbai, April 13

Music composer Shamir Tandon paid a heartfelt tribute to legendary singer Asha Bhosle, reminiscing about his final recording with her for an unreleased track penned by Prasoon Joshi. He also shared pictures from the sets, hailing her as an "iron lady" and a true symbol of women's empowerment.

In a heartfelt note, Tandon reflected on his long association with the iconic singer, revealing that he spent hours by her side at her residence, where she appeared "silent, yet smiling, radiant and glowing as always."

Remembering her words, he said Bhosle had always told him, "Jaana toh sabko hai... Shamir ji, mere jaane ke baad, saari duniya ke saath meri musical life ko celebrate karna."

"After spending hours beside you all of yesterday, at your residence, seeing you silent -- yet smiling, radiant and glowing as always -- I feel a strange sense of peace. Iron Lady, a true embodiment of women's empowerment, you left us exactly the way you had always envisioned. Every box you spoke about... ticked," he wrote on Instagram.

Tandon fondly described her as "Asha Aai," sharing that she remained deeply connected to music till her last days, continuing her daily riyaaz and discussing upcoming recordings, concerts and creative ideas. He also recalled personal moments, including her cooking for him.

"Asha aai, You left while still singing with the same enthusiasm, doing your riyaaz every single day. I remember just couple of weeks ago hearing the strains of your tanpura and your taans. You left while cooking poha for me -- "mere haath ka hi khaiye" -- along with coffee for a vegetarian like me. You left discussing and planning the next recording, the next concert, the next studio visit, the next new podcast format - chaliye kuch naya karte hain," he added.

He noted that Bhosle felt "proud" about her granddaughter Zanai, "carving her own niche in the independent music circuit."

The composer added, "You left while taking care of everyone -- family, friends -- never allowing anyone to take care of you. You went in prime health, with almost no pain or suffering. You left young at heart, still eager to sing with the new generation entering the musical duniya."

He noted that Bhosle took pride in the next generation of artistes and remained curious about evolving trends such as artificial intelligence, autotune, and the future of music. "You left updated with the latest technology, spending hours discussing AI, autotune, royalties, rights and the future of creativity."

Calling her irreplaceable, Tandon said his decades-long association with Bhosle taught him invaluable life lessons beyond music.

"You left after telling me you didn't want a single penny for our last unreleased song -- instead, you wanted me to drive you to a big saree shop and buy you a beautiful saree. You left exactly the way you always said you would -- not spending more than a single day in a hospital, but going straight to where your contemporaries await you... for the next concert," he noted while adding that she left the way she wanted.

"Aai, I am at peace knowing you left exactly as you wished. You proved that if the mind believes, it can manifest. In nearly 25 years of spending such quality time with you at home, in studios, in concert arenas, I have learnt life lessons and management principles no business school could ever teach me -- and that's not even touching upon your music teachings..God made only *ONE* like you. Ps - this Is the max I could write today , Promise to do a series of posts on all my learnings from my association with you"

Asha Bhosle passed away in Mumbai on Sunday at the age of 92, marking the end of an era in Indian music.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The part about her wanting a saree instead of payment for the last song is so quintessentially Asha Bhosle! Full of life, love, and style till the very end. An era has truly ended. Om Shanti.
D
David E
Reading this from the US. Her global impact is incredible. To be so curious about AI and autotune at 92 shows why she remained relevant for decades. A masterclass in evolving with the times. Respect.
A
Anjali F
"Jaana toh sabko hai..." – that line hit hard. What a graceful, powerful way to look at life and death. She worked till her last breath, on her own terms. That's the ultimate empowerment. We can all learn from her.
S
Siddharth J
While the tribute is touching, I do wish the article had more about her actual musical legacy for younger readers—the iconic songs, the collaborations with R.D. Burman. The personal anecdotes are sweet, but her professional genius was monumental.
K
Kavya N
Cooking poha for someone even in her 90s! That's the Indian mother/grandmother in her. She was a superstar but so grounded. This tribute makes me miss my own aai. Asha Tai, you will be dearly missed. 🕊️

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