HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentBappi Lahiri obituary: The undeniable and continuing importance of Bollywood's Disco King

Bappi Lahiri obituary: The undeniable and continuing importance of Bollywood's Disco King

Bappi Lahiri, the composer-singer who brought synthesised disco to India, was known for his prolific oeuvre spanning more than 40 years, his sartorial signature and cult status in countries like Russia.

February 17, 2022 / 11:05 IST
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Bappi Lahiri with legendary singer Kishore Kumar. (Image: Instagram/bappilahiri_official_)
Bappi Lahiri with legendary singer Kishore Kumar. (Image: Instagram/bappilahiri_official_)

Bappi Lahiri, music composer and singer known for his own brand of synthesised disco, passed away in Mumbai from sleep apnea - a medical condition in which oxygen supply to the brain can get cut off during sleep. He was 69.

Born Alokesh Lahiri in Jalpaiguri, West Bengal, to classical musician parents, “Bappi Da” (as he was fondly called in the film industry by many) was initiated in classical music as early as four. He remained a devoted classical musician, although he became the Bollywood Disco King by the early 1980s.

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Somen Kutty Sarkar, a Mumbai-based music producer and arranger, who has worked with Lahiri for several years during his global concert tours and who has known him closely for more than a decade, remembers him as an easy-going artiste who was always open to new sounds and rhythms. “He knew how to extract the best out of his musicians, he was adaptable and a dream collaborator,” Sarkar says. Sarkar has been part of sessions in which Lahiri would sit with his harmonium and sing Indian classical. “Very few people know that beneath the bling and the disco, was a serious, brilliant Indian classical singer.”

Lahiri’s signature was his versatility, offset by his singularity. He composed for several Bengali films, including his debut as a composer in the Bengali film Daadu (1972), for which, Lata Mangeshkar sang his composition. His first Hindi film as music composer was Nanha Shikari (1973). Over hundreds of films, Lahiri’s compositions have been sung by Kishore Kumar—who was also related to him as a  maternal uncle, and was a profound influence in his life and music—and other legends such as Mohammad Rafi, Lata Mangeshkar, Asha Bhonsle and Usha Uthup.