Shamshad Begum

Music Department

Birthday April 14, 1919

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Lahore, Punjab, British India (present-day Punjab, Pakistan)

DEATH DATE 2013-4-23, Hiranandani Gardens, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India (94 years old)

Nationality Pakistan

#54441 Most Popular

1919

Shamshad Begum (Hindi: शमशाद बेगम, IAST: Śamśād Bēgam; 14 April 1919 – 23 April 2013) was an Indian singer who was one of the first playback singers in the Hindi film industry.

Notable for her distinctive voice and range, she sang over 6,000 songs in Hindustani, Bengali, Marathi, Gujarati, Tamil, and Punjabi languages, among which 1287 were Hindi film songs.

She worked with renowned composers of the time, such as Naushad Ali and O. P. Nayyar, for whom she was one of their favorites.

Shamshad Begum was born in Lahore, British India (present-day Pakistan) on 14 April 1919 the day after the Jallianwala Bagh massacre took place in nearby Amritsar.

She was one of eight children, five sons and three daughters, born to a conservative Punjabi Muslim family of limited means.

Her father, Mian Hussain Baksh Maan, worked as a mechanic and her mother, Ghulam Fatima, was a pious lady of conservative disposition, a devoted wife and mother who raised her children with traditional family values.

1924

Begum's talent was first spotted by her principal when she was in primary school in 1924.

Impressed by the quality of her voice, she was made head singer of classroom prayer.

At 10, she started singing folk-based songs at religious functions and family marriages.

She received no formal musical training.

1929

Her singing ambitions, which she held from 1929, met with opposition from her family.

1930

Xenophone was a renowned music recording company, patronised by the rich, and her popularity grew in elite circles in the early 1930s.

1931

In 1931, when she was twelve, her uncle, who enjoyed qawwalis and ghazals, secretly took her to Jenophone (or Xenophone) Music Company for an audition with Lahore-based musician and composer, Ghulam Haider.

Begum said in an interview, "I sang Bahadur Shah Zafar's (the poet-ruler) ghazal Mera yaar mujhe mile agar."

An impressed Haider gave her a contract for twelve songs, with the same facilities provided to top singers.

It was Begum's paternal uncle Aamir Khan who convinced her father, Miya Hussain Baksh, to allow her to sing.

When she won a contract with a recording company, her father agreed to let her sing on the condition that she would record in a burka and not allow herself to be photographed.

She earned 15 rupees per song and was awarded 5,000 on the completion of the contract on Xenophone.

1932

In 1932, the teenage Shamshad came in contact with Ganpat Lal Batto, a Hindu law student who lived in the same neighbourhood and who was several years older than her.

In those days, marriages were performed while the bride and groom were very young, and Shamshad's parents were already looking out for a suitable alliance for her.

1934

Their efforts were on the verge of bearing fruit in 1934 when Ganpat Lal Batto and Shamshad made the decision to marry each other.

In 1934, despite strenuous opposition from both their families due to religious differences, 15-year-old Shamshad married Ganpat Lal Batto.

The couple had but one child, a daughter named Usha, who in due course married a Hindu gentleman, Lieutenant Colonel Yogesh Ratra, an officer in the Indian Army.

1937

Though she had won the Xenophone audition without having any formal music training, Hussain Bakshwale Sahab and later Ghulam Haider improved her singing skills between 1937 and 1939.

Her popular breakthrough came when she began singing on All India Radio (AIR) in Peshawar and Lahore from 1937.

Producer Dilsukh Pancholi wanted her to act as well in a film he was producing.

Begum readily agreed, gave a screen test and was selected.

Her father became angry when he found out and warned her that she would not be allowed to sing if she continued to harbour a desire to act.

1940

Her songs from the 1940s to the early 1970s remain popular and continue to be remixed.

1955

In 1955, Ganpat Lal Batto died in a road accident.

His death left Shamshad very distraught, because her husband had been the focus of her life and they had both been extremely devoted to each other.

He had handled many aspects of her career and contracts and had been a major positive energy behind her career progression.

After his death, Shamshad became listless and lost the fighting spirit to pursue her career, which registered a sharp decline thereafter.

Indeed, while Shamshad Begum was both an outstanding singer and a successful famous one, she was at some deeper level always a wife and mother first, someone who instinctively prioritised her family over her career.

By nature, she preferred to keep away from the public glare and from business dealings, taking the view that it was rather unseemly for a lady to be involved in such things.

After her husband's death, Shamshad Begum began living with her daughter and son-in-law in Mumbai, first in south Mumbai and later at Hiranandani Gardens.

She gradually became a recluse and devoted herself entirely to her grandchildren, to the point that the general public was unaware of whether she was alive or dead.

2004

In 2004, a controversy erupted in the media, when several publications wrongly reported that Shamshad Begum had died a few years previously.

Shamshad's family clarified in a press release that this was not so.

Her self-imposed seclusion is remarkable, because during all those decades away from the public eye, her old songs remained popular with the public and were often played on Vividh Bharati and All India Radio.