Arijit SinghSingh's performance at Chandigarh, c. 2025Born (1987-04-25) 25 April 1987 (age 38)Jiaganj, Murshidabad, West Bengal, IndiaAlma materSripat Singh CollegeOccupationsPlayback singerComposerMusic producerYears active2007–presentWorksDiscographySpouses Ruprekha Banerjee (m. 2013) Koel Roy (m. 2014) Children3RelativesAmrita Singh Majumder (sister)[1]AwardsFull listHonoursPadma Shri (2025)Musical careerGenres Filmi Sufi Rock Pop Folk EDM R'n'B Ghazals Qawwali Nazm Bhajan Classical Labels Oriyon Music Zee Music Company T-Series Sony Music India Muslux Studio YRF Music Eros Music Tips Musical artistYouTube informationChannel@Official_ArijitSinghYears active2019–presentSubscribers5.30 millionViews4.08 billionLast updated: 19 September 2025 Signature
Arijit Singh (Bengali pronunciation: [ɔrid͡ʒit ʃiŋho]; born 25 April 1987) is an Indian playback singer, composer, music producer and instrumentalist. A leading figure in contemporary Hindi film music, he is the recipient of several accolades including two National Film Awards and eight Filmfare Awards. He was conferred the Padma Shri by the Government of India in 2025.[2]
Singh began his career when he participated in the reality show Fame Gurukul in 2005. He made his Hindi cinema debut in 2011 with the song "Phir Mohabbat" for the film Murder 2. He received wider recognition with the release of "Tum Hi Ho" from Aashiqui 2 in 2013, which earned him his first Filmfare Award for Best Male Playback Singer.[3][4]
He won the National Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer twice for the songs "Binte Dil" from Padmaat (2018) and "Kesariya" from Brahmāstra: Part One – Shiva (2022).
Spotify declared Singh the most-streamed Indian artist for seven consecutive years (2019–2025).[5] As of November 2025, he is the most-followed artist globally on Spotify, with over 166 million followers.[6][7]
Early life[edit]Arijit Singh was born on 25 April 1987[8] in Jiaganj, Murshidabad, West Bengal, to Kakkar Singh, a Punjabi Sikh father[9] and Aditi Singh, a Bengali Hindu mother.[10] His paternal family came from Lahore during the Partition.[9] He began his music training at a very young age at home. His maternal aunt trained in Indian classical music, and his maternal grandmother used to sing. His maternal uncle played the tabla, and his mother also sang and played the tabla. He studied at Raja Bijay Singh High School and later at the Sripat Singh College, a University of Kalyani affiliate.[10] According to him he "was a decent student, but cared more about music" and his parents decided to train him professionally. He was taught Indian classical music by Rajendra Prasad Hazari and trained in tabla by Dhirendra Prasad Hazari. Birendra Prasad Hazari taught him Rabindra Sangeet (songs written and composed by Rabindranath Tagore) and pop music.[10] At the age of three, he started training under the Hazari brothers, and at the age of nine, he got a scholarship from the government for training in vocals in Indian classical music.[11]
Growing up, he listened to Mozart, Beethoven and Modern Bengali music.[citation needed] He idolised musicians like Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, Ustad Rashid Khan, Zakir Hussain and Anand Chatterjee, and enjoyed listening to Kishore Kumar, Hemant Kumar, and Manna Dey.[12]
Career[edit] Career beginnings (2005–2009)[edit]Singh's musical career began when his guru Rajendra Prasad Hazari encouraged him to lee his hometown and participate in the reality show Fame Gurukul (2005) at the age of 18.[13]
During the show, filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali recognised his talent and had him sing Yun Shabnami, a song intended for his film Saawariya. The recording was later removed following changes in the film's script and was never released.[14][15]
After Fame Gurukul, Kumar Taurani of Tips signed Singh for a music album that was ultimately shelved. [citation needed]
Singh later moved to Mumbai in 2006 to work as a freelancer, initially living in a rented accommodation in the Lokhandwala area. He invested his early earnings in setting up a personal recording studio and worked as a music programmer and producer for advertisements, radio stations, and television channels.[16][17]
He subsequently worked as a music programmer and producer with composers including Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, Vishal–Shekhar, Mithoon, Monty Sharma and Pritam. [citation needed]
2010–13: Early releases and Aashiqui 2[edit]In 2010, Singh collaborated with Pritam on films such as Golmaal 3, Crook and Action Replayy. He sang "Neeve Na Neeve Na" for the Telugu film Kedi and made his Hindi film playback debut with "Phir Mohabbat" from Murder 2.He gained wider recognition after singing "Raabta" from Agent Vinod and went on to contribute to soundtracks of films including Players, Cocktail and Barfi!.[18]
Singh's breakthrough came with the film Aashiqui 2 (2013), particularly the song "Tum Hi Ho", which earned him several accolades including the Filmfare Award for Best Male Playback Singer.
He subsequently recorded songs for films such as Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, Chennai Express, Jackpot and Goliyon Ki Raasleela: Ram-Leela.[19]
2014–19: Continued success[edit]Singh continued to collaborate with Pritam and other composers through the mid-2010s. He sang "Khairiyat" from the film Chhichhore, composed by Pritam and written by Amitabh Bhattacharya. The song was released in September 2019 and received widespread popularity.[20]
In the same year, Singh sang "Tujhe Kitna Chahne Lage" for the film Kabir Singh.[21]
Later in 2019, he collaborated with Shilpa Rao on the song "Ghungroo" from the film War, composed by Vishal–Shekhar with lyrics by Kumaar.[22]
2020–present[edit]In 2020, Singh recorded songs for several Hindi films, including Love Aaj Kal, Chhapaak, Street Dancer 3D, and Malang. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he also lent his voice to the Amazon Prime Video series The Forgotten Army – Azaadi Ke Liye.
In July 2020, Singh announced the launch of his independent music label, Oriyon Music, marking a shift toward releasing non-film music and exercising greater creative control over his work.[23] Later that year, he released the non-film single “Dil Ko Maine Di Kasam”, composed by Amaal Mallik.[24] In October 2020, Singh released “Rihaa”, his first independent single under Oriyon Music, serving as singer, composer, and producer. A Bengali version titled “Mukto Kore Dao” was also released.[25]
In 2021, Singh continued to record film music across Hindi and regional cinema. Among his releases that year was “O Saaiyaan” from the film The Power.[26]
In 2023, Singh continued to lead Bollywood playback singing with tracks such as "Kesariya" from Brahmāstra: Part One – Shiva. His rendition won widespread acclaim and earned him the Filmfare Award for Best Male Playback Singer at the 68th Filmfare Awards, marking his seventh win in this category.[27]
In 2025, he won his eighth Filmfare Award for Best Male Playback Singer for the song "Sajni" from Laapataa Ladies, equalling Kishore Kumar's record for most wins in this category.[28]
Singh has remained one of the most-streamed Indian artists on digital platforms throughout the 2020s, with his catalogue continuing to feature prominently on Spotify India year-end charts.[29]
Singh has remained one of the most-streamed Indian artists on digital platforms throughout the 2020s, with his catalogue continuing to feature prominently on Spotify India year-end charts.[30]
Vocals and musical style[edit]Singh is known for his "natural" and "nasal" voice, praised for its texture, depth, and emotive quality. He is a soulful baritone, described as "raw and grainy" yet versatile across genres.[31]
Though best known for romantic songs, Singh performs across styles, including club tracks Raat Bhar, electronic Blame The Night, Punjabi folk Samjhawan, Sufi/qawwali Mast Magan, and ghazals Gulon Mein Rang Bhare.[32] He enjoys classical and folk music, oids hey metal, and credits lyricists such as Irshad Kamil, Sayeed Quadri, and Amitabh Bhattacharya for shaping his interpretations.[33]
Singh views singing as an art of expression, emphasizing understanding lyrics and rhythm over rigid technique, and credits his guru Rajendra Prasad Hazari for encouraging a balance of classical and modern training.[34]
Public image and influences[edit]Arijit has shared his fondness for singer Kishore Kumar,[35] while citing Mohit Chauhan and Atif Aslam as inspirations with whom he is often compared.[36] Though he has been inspired by many artists, Singh named KK as his fourite singer along with Ayushmann Khurrana.[citation needed] He named Pritam Chakraborty, Vishal–Shekhar, Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, Amit Trivedi, Mithoon and A. R. Rahman as his fourite music directors.[10] Singh has idolised Ghulam Ali, Jagjit Singh and Mehdi Hassan.[citation needed]
In an interview with Filmbeat in April 2013, he declared that he is the biggest fan of singer Krishnakumar Kunnath (KK). [citation needed] His desire to sing for Aamir Khan[35] came to reality in 2016 with the song "Naina" from Dangal.[37] In an interview with The Indian Express, Singh stated that he loves the work of Shalmali Kholgade, Shefali Alvares, and Irfan. He also mentioned that his "current fourite" singer is Chinmayi.[38]
In 2016 he appeared on the popular chat and comedy show The Kapil Sharma Show aired on Sony TV India. The show's host Kapil Sharma explained the difficulties he had bringing Singh on the show due to his shy nature.[39]
Singh has often been portrayed by the Indian media as a "small-town boy who made it big".[40] He had also been trolled on social media to which he replied "I use my social media sparingly for things that are close to my heart. I don't read the comments. My team filters out the comments for me, and I don't involve myself a lot in paying attention to criticism on social media. I speak what I want to speak, and my team lets me know the needful."[41][42]
Arijit enjoys listening to retro songs by singers Lata Mangeshkar, Kishore Kumar, Mohammed Rafi and Asha Bhosle and the classical and ghazal songs along with the music of Coldplay. He expressed his desire to work with artist Norah Jones someday as he loves her music. He says he is uncomfortable with all the attention that fame has brought.[43]
Impact and recognition[edit]In an interview music director and composer, Pritam said: "Arijit is a good singer, a smart musician, and an intelligent musician as well."[44] Vishal Dadlani of the music director duo Vishal–Shekhar said Singh is a phenomenal singer.[45] In another interview, he said "Arijit has the ability and the openness needed to make every recording a genuine collaboration. He's also a really nice guy, with no ego. That helps."[46] Filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali in an Interview with The Hindu said, "Arijit Singh is very special".[47]
Shreya Ghoshal remarked that he "is versatile and has a soulful voice".[48] Shankar Mahadevan said "I knew him before he became Arijit Singh. He is an educated musician, he understands his Sargam, and he has got depth."[49] Suresh Wadkar praised him as one of the "great singers of this generation".[50] Sonu Nigam rated Arijit higher than himself, at 7 on 10.[51]
Personal life[edit]In 2014, Singh married Koel Roy, a childhood friend and a neighbour of his,[12][52] shortly after both divorced their former partners.[53] Singh has a step daughter from Koel's first marriage and 2 sons from Koel's marriage with him.[54] Singh currently resides in Andheri, Mumbai. Singh says apart from being a singer, he is a badminton player, a writer, a movie freak and a documentary maker. He also likes cricket and cites Sachin Tendulkar, Lance Klusener, Sour Ganguly, and Jonty Rhodes as his fourite sportsmen. He is an ardent football fan, and a Manchester United fan. He also expressed a wish to sing the anthem for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.[55] In badminton, he likes Saina Nehwal.[43]
Singh's mother, Aditi Singh, died from a cerebral stroke on 20 May 2021.[56] She was 52 years of age.[57]
Discography[edit] Main article: List of songs recorded by Arijit Singh Concerts, tours and events[edit] 2013–2015[edit]Singh performed live with Harshdeep Kaur at the Dubai Music Week Bollywood Night concert in September 2013, including hits like “Kabira”. Later that year, on 10 November 2013, he performed "Kabira" at the event organized by Xier Institute.[58]
Arijit Singh performing live at ovo Wembley arena on 16 July 2016.By 2014, Arijit Singh had established himself as a prominent playback singer, leading to the organization of his first major concert tours. These early tours were primarily domestic, focusing on major Indian cities such as Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, and Bangalore. Singh's performances were noted for their emotional depth and versatility, blending romantic ballads, folk, ghazals, and pop-infused tracks. His ability to perform for hours without a break, often accompanied by a talented ensemble of musicians, became a defining feature of his shows. He performed at events like the Mirchi Music Awards, the Satej Youth Fest, and also had a live concert in Thane. Additionally, he performed at the Indian Idol Junior finale with contestant Debanjana Karmakar. Singh also performed at 6th Mirchi Music Awards in 2014.
On 27 January 2015, Arijit Singh performed at the Spring Fest, the annual cultural festival of IIT Kharagpur, one of India's premier technical institutes. This concert was a significant draw for students and local fans, featuring a setlist of his early Bollywood hits like "Tum Hi Ho" (Aashiqui 2), "Kabira" (Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani), and "Raabta" (Agent Vinod). [citation needed]
The performance, held at Jnan Ghosh Stadium , drew thousands of attendees and was noted for its emotional intensity and audience engagement. His performance was noted for its emotional delivery and ability to engage a young audience. This concert was one of Singh's major Mumbai performances in 2015, organized at the spacious MMRDA Grounds, a popular venue for large-scale events. In April 2015, he performed at the Siri Fort Auditorium in New Delhi, a prestigious venue known for hosting cultural events. This concert was notable for its intimate setting compared to outdoor stadium shows, allowing Singh to connect closely with the audience. After this Singh performance at the Netaji Indoor Stadium in Kolkata was a homecoming event, drawing a massive crowd of local fans. On 15 January 2015, Singh made his debut performance in Dubai with the 50-piece Grand Symphony Orchestra from London. The concert was presented by Raging Tigers and supported by Emax and Splash as sponsors.[59]
2016–2018[edit]On 5 February 2016, Arijit Singh performed at the Dubai World Trade Centre, accompanied by a full symphony orchestra. The concert was organized by Raging Tiger Events in association with Audi.[60] In March 2016, he performed at the Albert Hall Museum in Jaipur as part of the Rajasthan Day celebrations.[61] That same year, Singh held his first concert in Chandigarh at the Sector 17 Parade Ground.[62] On 30 April 2016, he performed at Labh Ganga Garden in Indore with a grand symphony orchestra.[63] Later, on 17 July 2016, Singh performed at AFAS Live in Amsterdam, Netherlands.[64] His final concert of the year took place in December at the Sardar Patel Stadium in Nrangpura, Ahmedabad.[65]
US tour (2017)[edit]In 2017, Arijit Singh toured the United States, performing in several cities including Dallas, Austin, Houston, Newark, San Jose, Chicago, Atlanta, and Washington, D.C. The tour was contracted and managed by Rose Productions. The shows were well-attended, with over 100,000 people in total with grand Symphony orchestra.[66]
MTV India Tour (2017–2018)[edit] Arijit Singh performance at MMRDA ground Mumbai in 2018.The MTV India tour featuring Arijit Singh was a concert series spanning multiple cities and months. It kicked off in Kolkata on 24 December and continued through March 2018, hitting major cities like Gurgaon, Chandigarh, Indore, Pune, Guwahati, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Ahmedabad, and Mumbai. The tour was a collaboration between MTV and Wizcraft International.[67]
2019–2021[edit]During 2019, Arijit Singh embarked on his first North American tour and performed in the Middle East and India. His 2020 concerts were interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, resuming with limited shows in late 2021. On 6 June 2021, Arijit Singh hosted a Facebook Live concert with the primary aim of raising funds to help rural India in the fight against COVID-19. This initiative was a partnership between Arijit Singh, Facebook, and GiveIndia, a non-governmental organization. The concert served as a fundraising effort to gather donations for this cause.[68][69]
List of concerts, tours, showing dates, venue and attendance Title Dates City, State Country Venue Attendance Note(s) Ref(s) — 6 January 2019 Nrangpura, Ahmedabad India Sardar Patel Stadium Not radially ailable Arijit Singh performed in Ahmedabad, India, as part of the "ASNeverB4" concert series celebrating 20 years of Gypsy Events. [70] — 11 January 2019 Dubai UAE Dubai World Trade Centre 7000+ [71] — 18 January 2019 Doha Qatar Lusail Sports Arena 12000+ [72] "North America Tour" 5 April 2019 Everett, Washington United States Angel of the Winds Arena 100,000+ During April and May 2019, Arijit Singh embarked on his first 12-city tour across the United States. [73] 6 April 2019 Oakland, California United States Oakland Arena 7 April 2019 Los Angeles, California United States Peacock Theatre 12 April 2019 Sugar Land, Texas United States Smart Financial Centre 13 April 2019 Newark, New Jersey United States Prudential Center 14 April 2019 Boston, Massachusetts United States Agganis Arena 20 April 2019 Fairfax, Virginia United States EagleBank Arena 26 April 2019 Hoffman Estates, Illinois United States Now Arena 27 April 2019 Orlando, Florida United States Addition Financial Arena 3 May 2019 Garland, Texas United States Curtis Culwell Center 4 May 2019 Duluth, Georgia United States Gas South Arena 5 May 2019 Ypsilanti, Michigan United States George Gervin GameAbove Center — 23 November 2019 Hyderabad, Telangana India Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium Not ailable [74] "One Night Only Tour" 25 January 2020 Mumbai, Maharashtra India Jio World Garden 10,500 Bengaluru and New Delhi concert's were also a part of this tour which were further postponed due to beginning of COVID-19 pandemic. [75] 2 February 2020 Kolkata, West Bengal India Eco Park, New Town Not ailable [76] — 19 November 2021 Yas Island, Abu Dhabi UAE Etihad Arena Not ailable This concert was his first live performance after the COVID-19 outbreak and marked his return to Yas Island after five years. The event was produced and promoted by PME (Portfolio Managing Events), a UAE-based company. [77] 2022–2024[edit]In 2022, Arijit Singh embarked on an international tour titled as "UK and Europe tour", "North America tour" and "Australia tour".[78][79] Singh also embarked on a multy-city tour titled as "One Night Only" India tour starts from November 2022 to March 2023.[80]
Arijit Singh performance at Hyderabad on 7 Dec 2024Singh also paid tribute to Lata Mangeshkar on the Star Plus show "Naam Reh Jayegaa" in an episode that aired on 5 June at 7 p.m.. The show featured various singers, including Singh, paying homage to the legendary singer. He sang some of Lata Mangeshkar's most popular songs in various Indian languages for the special episode.[81]
Singh did perform at the opening ceremony of the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2023. He was one of the main performers, along with Tamannaah Bhatia and Rashmika Mandanna. The ceremony took place in Ahmedabad at the Narendra Modi Stadium. During the ceremony, he sang several popular songs, including "Kesariya" and "Jhoome Jo Pathaan". Singh's performance was well-received, with fans particularly reacting to his rendition of "Deva Deva".[82] He also performed at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad, India, before the highly anticipated match between India and Pakistan on 14 October 2023. The performance was part of a pre-match show organized after the BCCI and ICC decided not to hold an official opening ceremony for the World Cup.[83] In March 2024, Singh performed at the pre-wedding festivities of Anant Ambani and Radhika Merchant, held in Jamnagar.[84]
List of concerts, tours, showing dates, venue and attendance Title Dates City, state Country Venue Attendance Note(s) Ref(s) "UK & Europe Tour" 29 April 2022 Rotterdam Netherlands Rotterdam Ahoy Arena 12000+ The tour was promoted by Rock On Music in association with Whiterock Entertainment and TLC Events. [85] 1 May 2022 Birmingham England Utilita Arena N/A 2 May 2022 London England OVO Arena Wembley N/A "North America Tour" 6 May 2022 Chicago United States Now Arena N/A The Arijit Singh North America Tour in 2022 was a series of concerts organized by ShowFest across the United States and Canada, beginning in May 2022 after a three-year hiatus for his North American audience. The tour, titled "Arijit Singh – Live in Concert," featured a grand production with Arijit's superhit songs and was described as a "larger-than-life Live Experience". [86] 7 May 2022 Bay Area Oakland Arena N/A 8 May 2022 Dallas Curtis Culwell Center N/A 14 May 2022 Orlando, Florida Addition Financial Arena N/A 15 May 2022 Boston DCU Center N/A 20 May 2022 Houston NRG Arena N/A 21 May 2022 Atlanta Gas South Arena N/A 22 May 2022 Austin, Texas H.E.B Center at Cedar Park N/A 27 May 2022 Washington, D.C. EagleBank Arena N/A 28 May 2022 New Jersey CURE Insurance Arena N/A 3 June 2022 Vancouver Canada Pacific Coliseum N/A 4 June 2022 Seattle United States Angel of the Winds Arena N/A 5 June 2022 Phoenix, Arizona Gila River Arena N/A 11 June 2022 Toronto Canada First Ontario Center N/A 12 June 2022 Detroit United States Masonic Temple N/A "Australia Tour" 16 July 2022 Sydney Australia International Convention Centre Sydney N/A Though, it was a sold-out event, and the concert was organised by Heart & Soul Productions. [87] 17 July 2022 Melbourne John Cain Arena N/A [88] "One Night Only India Tour" 26 November 2022 Mumbai India Jio World Garden — — [89] 17 December 2022 Hyderabad GMR Arena — — [90] 25 December 2022 Ahmedabad VIP Road, Shela Extension — — [91] "UAE Tour" 20 January 2023 Dubai United Arab Emirates Coca-Cola Arena — — [92] "India Tour" 27 January 2023 Pune India The Mills, Rajabahadur International ltd — — [93] 4 February 2023 Chennai YMCA Nandanam — — [94] 4 March 2023 Bengaluru NICE Ground — — [95] 18 March 2023 Delhi Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, Delhi — — 25 March 2023 Raipur JORA Ground — — [96] 4 April 2023 Siliguri Kanchenjunga Stadium — — [97] "International Tours" 14 April 2023 Brisbane Australia Brisbane Entertainment Centre — — [98] 16 April 2023 Auckland New Zealand Spark Arena — — [99] 22 April 2023 Perth Australia Perth Arena — — [100] — 4 November 2023 Chandigarh India Exhibition Ground, sector 34 — — [101] 25 November 2023 Kathmandu Nepal Hyatt Regency Ground — — [102] 16 December 2023 Assam India ACA Stadium — — [103] 6 April 2024 Bangkok Thailand Impact Arena — — [104] 24 April 2024 Dubai UAE Coca-Cola Arena — — [105] 16 November 2024 Bukit Jalil Malaysia Axiata Arena — — [106] Awards and nominations[edit] Main article: List of awards and nominations received by Arijit SinghAt the start of his career, Singh received the Upcoming Male Vocalist of the Year award at the 2013 Mirchi Music Awards for "Duaa". He was awarded the Wizcraft Honour for Best Live Performer, and featured among the top 10 artists at The SSE Arena, Wembley in the SSE Live Awards 2016.[107] He was awarded the Padma Shri in 2025 by the Government of India.[108]
Singh has won multiple Filmfare Awards, IIFA Awards, Zee Cine Awards, Screen Awards, and Stardust Awards. Notably, he won Filmfare awards for five consecutive years from 2016 to 2020 and received nine awards from ten nominations for "Tum Hi Ho" (Aashiqui 2, 2013). He also won the IIFA Best Male Singer award for the same song in 2014.[citation needed]He received the Youth Icon – Music Award from The National Indian Students Union UK in 2014 and was named the most popular artist of 2014 by Hungama Digital Media Entertainment.[109]
Singh won the Best Male Vocalist award at the 7th Mirchi Music Awards for "Samjhawan" and the Best Male Playback Singer Filmfare award for "Sooraj Dooba Hain" in 2016. He was also awarded the GiMA for songs "Soch Na Sake", "Gerua", and "Sanam Re". [citation needed]
He won the Stardust Award for Best Male Playback Singer for "Channa Mereya" (2016) and multiple awards for "Ae Dil Hai Mushkil" in 2017, including the 62nd Filmfare Best Male Playback Singer and Male Vocalist of the Year at the Mirchi Music Awards. He won Best Male Playback Singer at the 63rd Filmfare Awards for "Roke Na Ruke Naina" (Badrinath Ki Dulhaniya) and the 66th National Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer for "Binte Dil" (Padmaat).[110]
He won Filmfare awards for "Kalank" (2022) and "Kesariya" (Brahmāstra: Part One – Shiva, 2023), bringing his total Filmfare Best Male Playback Singer wins to seven.[111] In 2025, he won his eighth Filmfare award for "Sajni" (Laapataa Ladies), equalling the record of Kishore Kumar for most wins in the category.[112]
See also[edit] List of awards and nominations received by Arijit Singh List of Indian playback singers List of songs recorded by Arijit Singh References[edit] ^ "Arijit Singh reacts to sister Amrita's new song: 'It feels like Maa singing'". The Times of India. Retrieved 27 July 2025. ^ "Balakrishna, Ajith, Shekhar Kapur, Shobana honoured with Padma Bhushan, Arijit Singh, Ricky Kej conferred with Padma Shri". The Indian Express. 25 January 2025. Retrieved 26 January 2025. ^ "Awesome Arijit". New India Times. 25 April 2017. Retrieved 4 May 2017. ^ Pant, Aditi (24 May 2013). "I slept through auditions: Arijit Singh". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 27 April 2016. ^ "Spotify most streamed Indian artist in 2019: Arijit Singh tops". Zee Business. Retrieved 3 December 2025. ^ "Indian Singer Arijit Singh Surpasses Taylor Swift As Most-Followed Artist on Spotify". Consequence.net. 22 August 2024. Retrieved 24 August 2024. ^ Peters, Daniel (23 August 2024). "Indian singer Arijit Singh overtakes Taylor Swift as most-followed artist on Spotify". NME. Retrieved 26 August 2024. ^ "Happy Birthday Arijit Singh: From Tum Hi Ho to Gerua, his Top 10 songs". The Indian Express. 25 April 2016. Archived from the original on 26 April 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2016. ^ a b "Arijit Singh Is Everywhere, And Nowhere". Archived from the original on 13 October 2022. Retrieved 14 September 2019. Kakkar Singh, whose family came from Lahore... ^ a b c d Agarwal, Stuti (31 May 2013). "I still trel by public transport: Arijit Singh". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 9 February 2015. Retrieved 8 February 2015. ^ "My life has always been a mess". Zoom4India. Archived from the original on 21 April 2017. Retrieved 1 April 2017. ^ a b Raghuvendra Singh (19 August 2015). "Can't stop the music". Archived from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved 4 June 2017. ^ Chanda, Kathakali; Mitter, Sohini (16 December 2014). "The rise and rise of Arijit Singh". Forbes India. Archived from the original on 8 July 2017. Retrieved 8 February 2015. ^ "Arijit Singh Birthday: Revisiting soulful singer's journey in music industry". The Economic Times. 25 April 2023. Archived from the original on 2 May 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2024. ^ Ghosh, Sankhayan (5 February 2016). "If you will take music away from me I'll die". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 9 July 2017. Retrieved 9 July 2017. ^ Shaban, Sadiq (18 January 2015). "Arijit Singh holds Dubai spellbound with stunning performance". Khaleej Times. Archived from the original on 26 February 2015. Retrieved 24 February 2015. ^ "I had to sing 5 times to get the right feel". Archived from the original on 27 March 2017. Retrieved 26 March 2016. ^ Singh, Nirmika (28 June 2012). "Music review: Cocktail". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 30 June 2012. Retrieved 2 January 2015. ^ Jha, Subhash K. (21 October 2013). ""Ranveer and Deepika ge it all for the songs of Ram Leela" – Sanjay Leela Bhansali". Bollywood Hungama. Archived from the original on 3 February 2015. Retrieved 2 February 2015. ^ "India is listening to Arijit Singh and Pritam's 'Khairiyat'". The Indian Express. September 2019. Archived from the original on 14 September 2019. Retrieved 14 September 2019. ^ "Get ready for the romantic and intense Sufi title track from the winning team". The Times of India. TNN. Archived from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved 6 June 2024. ^ "War song Ghungroo: Hrithik Roshan, Vaani Kapoor's dance moves are unmissable". Hindustan Times. 2 October 2019. Archived from the original on 3 October 2019. Retrieved 6 October 2019. ^ Das, Garima (5 August 2020). "Arijit Singh gives an ultimatum to people using his voice without approval". Bollywood Bubble. Archived from the original on 16 December 2023. Retrieved 6 June 2024. ^ "Dil Ko Maine Di Kasam Video Song". 9 August 2020. Archived from the original on 2 March 2021. Retrieved 22 February 2021. ^ "Arijit Singh Is Singer-Composer-Filmmaker In His First Independent Single, 'Rihaa'". Film Companion. Archived from the original on 4 April 2023. Retrieved 6 June 2024. ^ "Check Out New Hindi Song Music Video – 'Oh Saaiyaan' Sung By Arijit Singh, Raj Pandit". The Times of India. 12 January 2021. Archived from the original on 30 June 2022. Retrieved 14 March 2021. ^ "Arijit Singh is awarded Filmfare award for best male playback singer at 68th Filmfare Award". Filmfare. Retrieved 28 April 2023. ^ Rajguru, Sumit. "70th Hyundai Filmfare Awards 2025 With Gujarat Tourism: Arijit Singh Creates History; Joins Kishore Kumar In THIS Achievement". Times Now. Archived from the original on 12 October 2025. Retrieved 12 October 2025. ^ "India's Spotify 2024 report card: I-pop on rise, Punjabi tunes rule". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 27 December 2024. Retrieved 27 December 2025. ^ "India's Spotify 2024 report card: I-pop on rise, Punjabi tunes rule". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 27 December 2024. Retrieved 27 December 2025. ^ Khurana, Suanshu (21 July 2013). "Arijit Singh: Hitting the Right Notes – Page 2". The Financial Express. Retrieved 22 January 2015. ^ "Superstars 2014: Croon along with Shalmali Kholgade, Arijit Singh". Hindustan Times. 31 December 2013. Retrieved 27 January 2015. ^ "Arijit Singh wants to direct a feature film". 18 September 2016. Retrieved 27 December 2025. ^ "Arts and technique of singing with Arijit Singh". Retrieved 9 February 2016. ^ a b Sahoo, Namrata (16 November 2013). "Striking the right chord". The Indian Express. Archived from the original on 18 January 2015. Retrieved 4 February 2015. ^ "Arijit Singh reacts to comparison with Atif Aslam!". in.movies.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on 13 October 2014. Retrieved 24 May 2020. ^ "Arijit Singh's 'Naina' from Aamir Khan starrer 'Dangal' will touch your heart! – Watch". Zee News. 2 January 2017. Archived from the original on 16 January 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2017. ^ Menghnani, Reet (12 June 2015). "A Real Romantic". The Indian Express. Archived from the original on 13 December 2015. Retrieved 15 February 2015. ^ "All is not OK for Arijit Singh but Kapil Sharma makes him smile". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 2 September 2016. Retrieved 19 March 2016. ^ "Arijit Singh small town boy who made it big in Bollywood". Archived from the original on 28 April 2017. Retrieved 10 April 2017. ^ "Arijit Singh: I don't read comments on social media – Times of India". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 21 February 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2019. ^ "ट्रोल होने पर पहली बार खुलकर बोले अरिजीत सिंह,'मुझे किसी बात से फर्क नहीं पड़ता'- Amarujala". Amar Ujala. Archived from the original on 29 January 2019. Retrieved 29 January 2019. ^ a b RnM Team (2 June 2015). "Arijit Singh -Music he become very corporate now". radio and music.com. Archived from the original on 2 November 2015. Retrieved 22 April 2017. ^ "Collaborating with Coldplay would be awesome says Pritam". RadioandMusic.com. 31 January 2017. Archived from the original on 12 June 2017. Retrieved 12 June 2017. ^ "Not happy about few music scores in the past:Vishal Dadlani". 27 October 2016. Retrieved 10 March 2017. ^ "Monopoly of Arijit Singh in playback singing today". 26 February 2017. Archived from the original on 10 April 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2017. ^ Sankhyan Ghosh (5 February 2016). "Interview with sanjay leela bansali". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 21 April 2017. Retrieved 26 March 2016. ^ "Arijit Singh in Concert". TLC Events. 30 July 2017. Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 30 July 2017. ^ "Arijit is an educated musician says shankar mahadevan". 2 November 2015. Archived from the original on 25 January 2016. Retrieved 9 February 2016. ^ "On song – always". The Gulf Today. 12 October 2014. Archived from the original on 26 February 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2015. ^ "On song – always". 12 October 2014. ^ "My life has always been mess". Archived from the original on 19 June 2017. Retrieved 1 April 2017. ^ Sen, Torsha (5 February 2013). "Singer Arijit Singh confirms that he is married". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 11 March 2015. Retrieved 24 February 2015. ^ "Arijit Singh Birthday: अरिजीत सिंह ने एक साल से कम में लिया पहली बीवी से तलाक, एक बेटी की मां से की थी दूसरी शादी!". Zee News (in Hindi). Archived from the original on 24 April 2024. Retrieved 24 April 2024. ^ "Arijit Singh wants to sing the 2022 World Cup Qatar anthem". The Statesman. 30 January 2019. Archived from the original on 20 September 2021. Retrieved 20 November 2019. ^ Taank, Shagun (20 May 2021). "Arijit Singh's Mother Dies At 52 Due To Cerebral Stroke". NDTV. Archived from the original on 4 April 2023. Retrieved 6 June 2024. ^ "Arijit Singh's mother Aditi Singh passes away, succumbs to a cerebral stroke". Bollywood Hungama. 20 May 2021. Archived from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved 6 June 2024. ^ "Soulful Arijit keeps audience spellbound at 'Xpressions'". The New Indian Express. 11 November 2013. Retrieved 10 July 2025. ^ "The Dubai Shopping Festival 2015 Guide". Masala.com. 11 January 2015. Retrieved 10 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh Live in Dubai – Feb 5th, 2016". Dubai bliss. 14 January 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2025. ^ Shukla, Richa (16 January 2017). "When Arijit Singh enthralled Jaipur and how!". The Times of India. Retrieved 11 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh's performance in Chandigarh on 16th, ticket rates". Amar Ujala. 13 April 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh Live in Concert-Indore". facebook.com. 30 April 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh ses the show in HMH Amsterdam for his fans". desiyup.com. 18 July 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2025. ^ Shah, Gopi (9 December 2016). "Arijit Singh 'As Never Before'". The Times of India. Retrieved 11 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh USA 2017 Tour". jakecharkey.com. April 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2025. ^ Dedhia, Zinal (26 March 2018). "Arijit Singh India Tour ends with a power-packed performance". radioandmusic.com. Retrieved 16 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh's Virtual Covid Relief Concert Gets 1.6 Mn Views, Ongoing Fundraiser Nets Rs 1.5 Cr". in.eventsfaqs.com. 9 June 2021. Retrieved 26 July 2025. ^ Mishra, Mayank. "Arijit Singh partners with GiveIndia and Facebook to extend COVID support to rural Indian towns and villages". Thecsruniverse. Archived from the original on 26 July 2025. Retrieved 26 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh Live ASNeverB4:Celebrating 20 years of Gypsy Events". creativeyatra.com. 6 January 2019. Retrieved 20 July 2025. ^ "Bollywood Singer Arijit Singh enthralled Dubai Audience with his soulful performance". m.eyeofriyadh.com. 14 January 2019. Retrieved 20 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh Live in Doha, Concert on 18th 2019". qatarofw.com. 18 January 2019. Retrieved 20 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh's New North American Tour Will Include Single Stop In Tri-State Region". prucenter.com. 17 January 2019. Retrieved 21 July 2025. ^ "My Music My Country brings Arijit Singh Live". thehansindia.com. 10 October 2019. Archived from the original on 22 July 2025. Retrieved 22 July 2025. ^ "Royal Stag hosted Arijit Singh Live in Mumbai: The singer won hearts at Paytm Insider and Oranjuice Entertainment sold-out live concert". radioandmusic.com. 30 January 2020. Retrieved 25 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh Live in Kolkata". facebook.com. 2 February 2020. Retrieved 25 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh to perform live for the first time after Covid outbreak". radioandmusic.com. Archived from the original on 26 July 2025. Retrieved 26 July 2025. ^ "Concert Review: Arijit Singh, Live in UK". iGlobal. 4 May 2022. Retrieved 29 July 2025. ^ "North America .. Looking forward to see u in 2022🙏". facebook.com. 9 December 2021. Retrieved 29 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh's One-night Only-India Tour to kickstart in Mumbai, other cities to follow". Indian Express Indulge. 22 November 2022. Retrieved 29 July 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh to pay special tribute to Lata Mangeshkar on TV show". The Times of India. 2 June 2022. Retrieved 1 August 2025. ^ "Watch: Crowd goes downright berserk as MS Dhoni grooves to Arijit Singh's song in breathtaking IPL 2023 opening ceremony". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 31 March 2023. Retrieved 3 August 2025. ^ "World Cup 2023 - Missed Arijit Singh's Performance Ahead Of India vs Pakistan Clash? Watch It Here". NDTV Sports. Archived from the original on 14 October 2023. Retrieved 4 August 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh Ends Ambani Bash On A Magical Note As He Sings O Maahi, Alvida And Naina. WATCH". Times Now. Archived from the original on 7 March 2024. Retrieved 3 August 2025. ^ Baddhan, Lakh. "Rock On Music reschedule Arijit Singh's UK tour to 2022". Bizasialive. Archived from the original on 6 March 2022. Retrieved 17 August 2025. ^ "ARIJIT SINGH - LIVE IN CONCERT". B4U music. Archived from the original on 3 July 2022. Retrieved 3 September 2025. ^ "𝗔𝗥𝗜𝗝𝗜𝗧 𝗦𝗜𝗡𝗚𝗛 𝗟𝗶𝘃𝗲 | 𝗢𝗻 𝗦𝗮𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗱𝗮𝘆 𝟭𝟲𝘁𝗵 𝗝𝘂𝗹𝘆 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟮 @ 𝗔𝘄𝗮𝗿𝗲 𝗦𝘂𝗽𝗲𝗿 𝗧𝗵𝗲𝗮𝘁𝗿𝗲 𝗮𝘁 𝗜𝗖𝗖 𝗦𝘆𝗱𝗻𝗲𝘆 𝗶𝗻 𝗗𝗮𝗿𝗹𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗛𝗮𝗿𝗯𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗡𝗦𝗪". Facebook.com. 30 May 2022. Retrieved 3 September 2025. ^ "Melbourne, what 👏 a 👏 night! The atmosphere on Sunday was extraordinary!". facebook.com. 22 July 2022. Retrieved 3 September 2025. ^ S Sen, Debarati. "Arijit Singh serenades Mumbaikars with his non-stop hits". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 29 November 2022. Retrieved 14 September 2025. ^ "Bombay was a great start to the One Night Only tour, now we move to Hyderabad, Kolkata, Bangalore & Delhi". facebook.com. 8 December 2022. Retrieved 24 September 2025. ^ "Ahmedabad …. Looking forward to see you on 25th December 2022". facebook.com. 6 December 2022. Retrieved 24 September 2025. ^ Fatima, Sakina (30 November 2022). "Arijit Singh to headline concert at Coca-Cola Arena Dubai". Siasat. Retrieved 24 September 2025. ^ "Excited to meet everyone live on January 27th in Pune". facebook.com. 20 December 2022. Retrieved 24 September 2025. ^ "CHENNAI SEE YOU ON FEB 4th 2023". facebook.com. 26 December 2022. Retrieved 24 September 2025. ^ "Bombay was a great start to the One Night Only tour, now we move to Hyderabad, Kolkata, Bangalore & Delhi". facebook.com. 8 December 2022. Retrieved 25 September 2025. ^ "Raipur…. Looking forward to see you on 25th March 2023". facebook.com. 9 March 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh live in Siliguri at Kanchanjanga stadium". facebook.com. 29 March 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh will be performing live at Brisbane Entertainment Centre on Friday, 14 April 2023 from 7pm". facebook.com. 29 March 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2025. ^ "Arijit Singh live in Auckland at Spark arena on 16 April 2023". instagram.com. 6 April 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2025. ^ "Hello Brisbane, Auckland & Perth Can't wait to meet you all". facebook.com. 11 April 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2025. ^ "Chandigarh, see you all on 4th November, 2023". facebook.com. 26 September 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2025. ^ KC/TKP, Deepak. "Arijit Singh to perform in Kathmandu". The Kathmandu Post. Archived from the original on 14 March 2024. Retrieved 8 October 2025. ^ "Get ready northeast for Arijit Singh's mega concert in Guwahati on Dec 16. Book your tickets on BookMyShow". North East Live. Archived from the original on 8 October 2025. Retrieved 8 October 2025. ^ "Hello Bangkok, see you all on 6th April,2024 at Impact Arena". facebook.com. 12 March 2024. Retrieved 10 October 2025. ^ "DUBAI, see you all on 27th April, 2024 at Coca-Cola Arena". facebook.com. 9 April 2024. Retrieved 10 October 2025. ^ "Hey Malaysia, it's been 10 years since I've been back, So excited to be returning to this beautiful city in November". facebook.com. 29 August 2024. Retrieved 10 October 2025. ^ "Kapil Sharma, Armaan Malik and Arijit Singh: The only three Indians in Wembley's top 10". Hindustan Times. 19 February 2017. Retrieved 21 April 2017. ^ "Padma Awards: Osamu Suzuki, Sharda Sinha get Padma Vibhushan, Arijit Singh gets Padma Shri". Hindustan Times. 25 January 2025. ^ "Priyanka Chopra, Arijit Singh named most popular artists of 2014". The Indian Express. 6 January 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2015. ^ "Winners of 66th NFA". The Times of India. 9 August 2019. Retrieved 9 August 2019. ^ "Arijit Singh is awarded Filmfare award for best male playback singer at 68th Filmfare Award". Filmfare. Retrieved 28 April 2023. ^ Rajguru, Sumit. "70th Hyundai Filmfare Awards 2025 With Gujarat Tourism: Arijit Singh Creates History; Joins Kishore Kumar In THIS Achievement". Times Now. Archived from the original on 12 October 2025. Retrieved 12 October 2025. External links[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arijit Singh. Arijit Singh at Spotify Arijit Singh at AllMusic Arijit Singh at IMDb Arijit Singh at Bollywood Hungama Arijit Singh at Gaana Arijit Singh on Twitter Links to related articles vteArijit Singh Awards and nominations Discography Television Fame Gurukul MTV Unplugged Related albums A Foreign Affair Hindi songs2012 "Raabta" "Duaa" "Phir Le Aya Dil (Reprise)" 2013 "Tum Hi Ho" "Laal Ishq" "Kabhi Jo Baadal Barse" "Kabira (Encore)" "Dilliwaali Girlfriend" "Ilahi" "Main Rang Sharbaton Ka (Reprise)" "Har Kisi Ko (Duet)" 2014 "Muskurane" "Samjhawan" "Suno Na Sangemarmar" "Mast Magan" "Sawan Aaya Hai" "Manwa Laage" "Raat Bhar" "Palat – Tera Hero Idhar Hai" 2015 "Sooraj Dooba Hain" "Aayat" "Judaai" "Baatein Ye Kabhi Na" "Tu Chale" "Gerua" "Sanam Re" 2016 "Channa Mereya" "Ae Dil Hai Mushkil" "Soch Na Sake" "Bolna" "Naina" "Nashe Si Chadh Gayi" 2017 "Zaalima" "Phir Bhi Tumko Chaahunga" "Phir Wahi" 2018"Ae Watan"2019 "Ghungroo "Tujhe Kitna Chahne Lage" "Bekhayali" "Pachtaoge" 2021 "Aashiqui Aa Gayi" 2022 "Kesariya" "Jhoome Jo Pathaan" 2023 "Pasoori Nu" "Chaleya" 2025 "Sapphire" Soundtracks Pagglait (2021) Category vteRecipients of Padma Shri in Art1950s Omkarnath Thakur (1955) Sthanam Narasimha Rao (1956) Sudhir Khastgir (1957) Dwaram Venkataswamy Naidu (1957) Debaki Bose (1958) Shambhu Maharaj (1958) Nargis (1958) Satyajit Ray (1958) Devika Rani (1958) 1960s K. K. Hebbar (1961) Bismillah Khan (1961) Raghunath Krishna Phadke (1961) Ashok Kumar (1962) Mehboob Khan (1963) Melville de Mellow (1963) Vinayak Pandurang Karmarkar (1964) Adi Pherozeshah Marzban (1964) P. C. Sorcar (1964) Guru Kunchu Kurup (1965) V. Nagayya (1965) Rishankar Ral (1965) Mrinalini Sarabhai (1965) Sivaji Ganesan (1966) M. F. Husain (1966) Sumitra Charat Ram (1966) P. Bhanumathi (1966) Daji Bhatawadekar (1967) Vasant Desai (1967) Siddheshwari Devi (1967) Mohammed Rafi (1967) Sashadhar Mukherjee (1967) Vinjamuri Venkata Lakshmi Narasimha Rao (1967) M. R. Acharekar (1968) Begum Akhtar (1968) Sharan Rani Backliwal (1968) Nikhil Banerjee (1968) Sunil Dutt (1968) Durga Khote (1968) Yamini Krishnamurthy (1968) Shankar–Jaikishan (1968) Ayodhya Prasad (1968) Akkineni Nageswara Rao (1968) N. T. Rama Rao (1968) Devi Lal Samar (1968) Vyjayanthimala (1968) Khwaja Ahmad Abbas (1969) Did Abraham Cheulkar (1969) N. S. Bendre (1969) S. D. Burman (1969) B. Saroja Devi (1969) Indrani Rahman (1969) Balraj Sahni (1969) S. N. Swamy (artist) (1969) 1970s Sukumar Bose (1970) Prem Dhawan (1970) Ratna Fabri (1970) Gemini Ganesan (1970) Ritwik Ghatak (1970) Damayanti Joshi (1970) Abdul Halim Jaffer Khan (1970) Karl Jamshed Khandalala (1970) Madhiah Krishnan (1970) Rajendra Kumar (1970) Pankaj Mullick (1970) Kalamandalam Krishnan Nair (1970) Relangi (1970) Gummadi (1970) Vijay Ragh Rao (1970) V. Satyanarayana Sarma (1970) Maisnam Amubi Singh (1970) K. B. Sundarambal (1970) Avinash Vyas (1970) M. Balamuralikrishna (1971) Sankho Chaudhuri (1971) Manna Dey (1971) Tripti Mitra (1971) Vazhenkada Kunchu Nair (1971) Chenganoor Raman Pillai (1971) K. N. Dandayudhapani Pillai (1971) Shanta Rao (1971) Ri (1971) Sahir Ludhianvi (1971) Siyaram Tiwari (musician) (1971) Chiranjeet Chakraborty (1972) Girija Devi (1972) Vasudeo S. Gaitonde (1972) Sunil Janah (1972) Lalgudi Jayaraman (1972) Bhimsen Joshi (1972) Mahendra Kapoor (1972) Ram Kumar (artist) (1972) Hrishikesh Mukherjee (1972) Vazhuvoor Ramaiah Pillai (1972) Samta Prasad (1972) M. K. Radha (1972) Raghu Rai (1972) Krishna Reddy (1972) Waheeda Rehman (1972) Juthika Roy (1972) Suchitra Sen (1972) Gubbi Veeranna (1972) Sitara Devi (1973) T. N. Krishnan (1973) Kishan Maharaj (1973) Ramanathapuram C. S. Murugabhoopathy (1973) Thikkurissy Sukumaran Nair (1973) Uma Sharma (1973) S. G. Thakur Singh (1973) Kaifi Azmi (1974) Pushkar Bhan (1974) Mani Madha Chakyar (1974) Bindhyabasini Devi (1974) Naina Devi (1974) Girish Karnad (1974) Shriram Lagoo (1974) Kelucharan Mohapatra (1974) Nutan (1974) M. D. Ramanathan (1974) Som Nath Sadhu (1974) Emani Sankara Sastry (1974) Kripal Singh Shekhawat (1974) Manik Varma (1974) M. S. Gopalakrishnan (1975) Jasraj (1975) Amjad Ali Khan (1975) Gopi Krishna (1975) Sanjukta Panigrahi (1975) Basaraj Rajguru (1975) Kalyanam Raghuramayya (1975) M. S. Sathyu (1975) K. G. Subramanyan (1975) Gitchandra Tongbra (1975) K. J. Yesudas (1975) Shyam Benegal (1976) Raghunath Mohapatra (1976) Ram Narayan (1976) K. V. Narayanaswamy (1976) R. Nagendra Rao (1976) S. Somasundaram (1976) Parveen Sultana (1976) Dhanraj Bhagat (1977) Bhupen Hazarika (1977) Sheik Chinna Moulana (1977) Alla Rakha (1977) Jehangir Sabala (1977) Ghulam Rasool Santosh (1977) 1980s B. V. Karanth (1981) Namagiripettai Krishnan (1981) Gambhir Singh Mura (1981) Dashrath Patel (1981) S. H. Raza (1981) Padma Subrahmanyam (1981) Allah Jilai Bai (1982) Ammannur Madha Chakyar (1982) Jabbar Patel (1982) Virendra Prabhakar (1982) Gautam Vaghela (1982) Sirkazhi Govindarajan (1983) Gautam Vaghela (1982) Sirkazhi Govindarajan (1983) Sharafat Hussain Khan (1983) Nepal Mahata (1983) Handel Manuel (1983) Gulam Mohammed Sheikh (1983) Raghubir Singh (1983) Sobha Singh (1983) Habib Tanvir (1983) Ganga Devi (1984) Amitabh Bachchan (1984) Purushottam Das (1984) Adoor Gopalakrishnan (1984) Bhupen Khakhar (1984) Ben Kingsley (1984) Vinay Chandra Maudgalya (1984) Roshan Kumari (1984) Melikara Krishnankutty Nair (1984) N. Rajam (1984) Raja and Radha Reddy (1984) Nek Chand (1984) Ram Gopal Vijayvargiya (1984) Shanti De (1985) Asa Singh Mastana (1985) Laxman Pai (1985) Smita Patil (1985) Palghat R. Raghu (1985) Naseeruddin Shah (1985) Shankar Bapu Apegaonkar (1986) Kanika Banerjee (1986) Subrata Mitra (1986) Rajkumar Singhajit Singh (1986) Hisam-ud-din Usta (1986) K. Balachander (1987) Kumudini Lakhia (1987) Vijaya Mehta (1987) N. Ramani (1987) Aparna Sen (1987) Naresh Sohal (1987) Jitendra Abhisheki (1988) Shabana Azmi (1988) Teejan Bai (1988) Bikash Bhattacharjee (1988) Zakir Hussain (1988) Chindodi Leela (1988) Sudharani Raghupathy (1988) Sudarshan Sahoo (1988) Kudrat Singh (1988) Umayalpuram K. Sivaraman (1988) Jitendra Abhisheki (1988) Adyar K. Lakshman (1989) Haku Shah (1989) L. Subramaniam (1989) Ratan Thiyam (1989) Upendra Trivedi (1989) 1990s Mohan Agashe (1990) G. Arindan (1990) Prabha Atre (1990) Asgari Bai (1990) Gulab Bai (1990) Balwantrai Bhatt (1990) Diwaliben Bhil (1990) Raj Bisaria (1990) S. M. Ganapathy (1990) Kamal Haasan (1990) Bishamber Khanna (1990) Krishen Khanna (1990) Allu Ramalingaiah (1990) Tarun Majumdar (1990) Madhi Mudgal (1990) Om Puri (1990) Kanak Rele (1990) Leela Samson (1990) Maharajapuram Santhanam (1990) Kapila Vatsyayan (1990) Ranbir Singh Bisht (1991) Bharat Gopy (1991) Ghulam Mustafa Khan (1991) Hafeez Ahmed Khan (1991) Shanno Khurana (1991) Pratima Barua Pandey (1991) Manu Parekh (1991) Shivkumar Sharma (1991) Gurcharan Singh (painter) (1991) Sharda Sinha (1991) Alarmel Valli (1991) Jaya Bachchan (1992) Pankaj Charan Das (1992) Biren De (1992) Srirangam Gopalaratnam (1992) Sabri Khan (1992) Sunita Kohli (1992) Madurai N. Krishnan (1992) Manoj Kumar (1992) Meera Mukherjee (1992) Asha Parekh (1992) Nataraja Ramakrishna (1992) Bhagaban Sahu (1992) Anandji Virji Shah (1992) Kalyanji Virji Shah (Kalyanji-Anandji) (1992) Sundari K. Shridharani (1992) Tapan Sinha (1992) Muthiah Sthapati (1992) K. Viswanath (1992) Chitra Visweswaran (1992) Dipali Barthakur (1998) Mammootty (1998) Kunja Bihari Meher (1998) Krishnarao Sable (1998) Zohra Sehgal (1998) K. Ibomcha Sharma (1998) U. Srinivas (1998) Jed Akhtar (1999) Saryu Doshi (1999) Sulochana Latkar (1999) Sumati Mutatkar (1999) Shobha Deepak Singh (1999) Jagmohan Sursagar (1999) Ram V. Sutar (1999) 2000s Kanhai Chitrakar (2000) Shekhar Kapur (2000) Hema Malini (2000) Anjolie Ela Menon (2000) Shubha Mudgal (2000) Alyque Padamsee (2000) A. R. Rahman (2000) Ramanand Sagar (2000) S. P. Balasubrahmanyam (2001) Aamir Raza Husain (2001) Padmaja Phenany Joglekar (2001) Mohammed Tayab Khan (2001) Sunil Kothari (2001) Nerella Venu Madh (2001) Mohanlal (2001) Shobha Naidu (2001) D. V. S. Raju (2001) Avadhanam Sita Raman (2001) Siramdasu Venkata Rama Rao (2001) Thota Tharani (2001) W. D. Amaradeva (2002) Raj Begum (2002) Vishwa Mohan Bhatt (2002) Pushpa Bhuyan (2002) Rajan Devadas (2002) Darshana Jheri (2002) Abdul Latif Khan (2002) Mani Krishnaswami (2002) Fazal Mohammad (2002) Manorama (2002) Govind Nihalani (2002) Mani Ratnam (2002) Kiran Segal (2002) Naneetham Padmanabha Seshadri (2002) Saroja Vaidyanathan (2002) T. H. Vinayakram (2002) Jahnu Barua (2003) Danny Denzongpa (2003) Kshetrimayum Ongbi Thouranisabi Devi (2003) Rita Ganguly (2003) Ranjana Gauhar (2003) Sadashiv Vasantrao Gorakshkar (2003) Rakhee Gulzar (2003) Nemi Chandra Jain (2003) O. P. Jain (2003) Aamir Khan (2003) Shafaat Ahmed Khan (2003) T. M. Soundararajan (2003) Sukumari (2003) Satish Vyas (2003) Bharathiraja (2004) Maguni Charan Das (2004) Manoranjan Das (2004) D. K. Datar (2004) Kadri Gopalnath (2004) Hariharan (singer) (2004) Purshottam Das Jalota (2004) Krishn Kanhai (2004) Heisnam Kanhailal (2004) Anupam Kher (2004) Sikkil Sisters – Kunjumani & Neela (2004) Keezhpadam Kumaran Nair (2004) Sudha Ragunathan (2004) Haridwaramangalam A. K. Palanivel (2004) Veernala Jayarama Rao (2004) Bharati Shivaji (2004) Singh Bandhu (2004) Bhajan Sopori (2004) Neyyattinkara Vasudevan (2004) Muzaffar Ali (2005) Shameem Dev Azad (2005) M. Boyer (2005) K. S. Chithra (2005) Yumlembam Gambhini Devi (2005) Shah Rukh Khan (2005) Ghulam Sadiq Khan (2005) Kita Krishnamurti (2005) Chaturbhuj Meher (2005) Kumkum Mohanty (2005) Punaram Nishad (2005) Kedar Nath Sahoo (2005) Sougaijam Thanil Singh (2005) Kunnakudi Vaidyanathan (2005) Komala Varadan (2005) Puranchand Wadali (2005) Ileana Citaristi (2006) Mehmood Dhaulpuri (2006) Shree Lal Joshi (2006) Surinder Kaur (2006) Rashid Khan (musician) (2006) Vasundhara Komkali (2006) Yashodhar Mathpal (2006) Madhup Mudgal (2006) Kungal Chathunni Panicker (2006) Shyama Charan Pati (2006) Gayatri Sankaran (2006) Prasad Sawkar (2006) Aribam Syam Sharma (2006) Shobana (2006) Kanaka Srinivasan (2006) Pankaj Udhas (2006) Mohan Babu (2007) Geeta Chandran (2007) Astad Deboo (2007) Neelamani Devi (2007) Remo Fernandes (2007) P. Gopinathan (2007) Pushpa Hans (2007) Shanti Hiranand (2007) Ananda Shankar Jayant (2007) Govardhan Kumari (2007) Sonam Tshering Lepcha (2007) Balachandra Menon (2007) Shashikala (2007) Gajendra Narayan Singh (2007) Thingbaijam Babu Singh (2007) Pannuru Sripathy (2007) Valayapatti A. R. Subramaniam (2007) Waman Thakre (2007) P. R. Thilagam (2007) Tom Alter (2008) Moozhikkulam Kochukuttan Chakyar (2008) Jonnalagadda Gurappa Chetty (2008) Meenakshi Chitharanjan (2008) Madhuri Dixit Nene (2008) Kekoo Gandhy (2008) Helen Giri Syiem (2008) Jatin Goswami (2008) Hans Raj Hans (2008) Sabitri Heisnam (2008) Gokulotsji Maharaj (2008) P. K. Narayanan Nambiar (2008) Gennadi Mikhailovich Pechinkov (2008) Gangadhar Pradhan (2008) M. Night Shyamalan (2008) Sirkazhi G. Sivachidambaram (2008) Jawahar Wattal (2008) Ameena Ahmad Ahuja (2009) Aishwarya Rai Bachchan (2009) Hemi Bawa (2009) Brahmanandam (2009) Devayani (dancer) (2009) Suresh Dutta (2009) Kalamandalam Gopi (2009) Niranjan Goswami (2009) Geeta Kapur (2009) Nirmal Singh Khalsa (2009) Hashmat Ullah Khan (2009) Helen (2009) S. Krishnaswamy (2009) Akshay Kumar (2009) Iratham Mahadevan (2009) Hridaynath Mangeshkar (2009) Penaz Masani (2009) Shaoli Mitra (2009) Udit Narayan (2009) Govind Ram Nirmalkar (2009) Leela Omchery (2009) Pratapaditya Pal (2009) Aruna Sairam (2009) Mattannoor Sankarankutty (2009) Kumar Sanu (2009) Kiran Seth (2009) Gurumayum Gourakishor Sharma (2009) Skendrowell Syiemlieh (2009) Thilakan (2009) K. P. Udayabhanu (2009) Vivek (actor) (2009) 2010s Gul Bardhan (2010) Carmel Berkson (2010) Wasifuddin Dagar (2010) Haobam Ongbi Ngangbi Devi (2010) Nemai Ghosh (2010) Sumitra Guha (2010) Ulhas Kashalkar (2010) Saif Ali Khan (2010) Mukund Lath (2010) Ram Dayal Munda (2010) Arundathi Nag (2010) Raghunath Panigrahi (2010) Resul Pookutty (2010) Arjun Prajapati (2010) Rajkumar Achouba Singh (2010) Shobha Raju (2010) Mayadhar Raut (2010) Rekha (2010) Ajoy Chakrabarty (2011) Neelam Mansingh Chowdhry (2011) Makar Dhwaja Darogha (2011) Mahasundari Devi (2011) Gajam Govardhana (2011) Sunayana Hazarilal (2011) S. R. Janakiraman (2011) Jayaram (2011) Kajol (2011) Shaji N. Karun (2011) Girish Kasaralli (2011) Irrfan Khan (2011) Tabu (2011) Kalamandalam Kshemathy (2011) Peruvanam Kuttan Marar (2011) Jivya Soma Mashe (2011) Dadi Pudumjee (2011) M. K. Saroja (2011) Khangembam Mangi Singh (2011) Prahlad Tipanya (2011) Usha Uthup (2011) Satish Alekar (2012) Satish Alekar (2012) Vanraj Bhatia (2012) Nameirakpam Ibemni Devi (2012) Gopal Prasad Dubey (2012) Gundecha Brothers (2012) Chittani Ramachandra Hegde (2012) Anup Jalota (2012) Moti Lal Kemmu (2012) Shahid Parvez (2012) Mohanlal Chaturbhuj Kumhar (2012) Sakar Khan (2012) Joy Michael (2012) Minati Mishra (2012) Na Muthuswamy (2012) R. Nagarathnamma (2012) Kalamandalam Sivan Namboodiri (2012) Priyadarshan (2012) Priyadarshan (2012) Vijay Sharma (2012) Laila Tyabji (2012) Yamunabai Waikar (2012) S. Shakir Ali (2013) Gajam Anjaiah (2013) Bapu (2013) Pablo Bartholomew (2013) Purna Das Baul Samrat (2013) G. C. D. Bharti (2013) Apurba Kishore Bir (2013) Ghanakanta Bora (2013) B. Jayashree (2013) Hildamit Lepcha (2013) Madhu (actor) (2013) Sudha Malhotra (2013) Kailash Chandra Meher (2013) Brahmdeo Ram Pandit (2013) Nana Patekar (2013) Rekandar Nageswara Rao (2013) Ghulam Mohammad Saznawaz (2013) Jaymala Shiledar (2013) Ramesh Sippy (2013) Sridevi (2013) Suresh Talwalkar (2013) Mahrukh Tarapor (2013) Balwant Thakur (2013) Rajendra Tiku (2013) Mohammad Ali Baig (2014) Vidya Balan (2014) Musafir Ram Bhardwaj (2014) Sabitri Chatterjee (2014) Biman Bihari Das (2014) Sunil Das (2014) Elam Endira Devi (2014) Supriya Devi (2014) Vijay Ghate (2014) Nayana Apte Joshi (2014) Elam Endira Devi (2014) Supriya Devi (2014) Vijay Ghate (2014) Nayana Apte Joshi (2014) Rani Karnaa (2014) Bansi Kaul (2014) Moinuddin Khan (musician) (2014) Geeta Mahalik (2014) Paresh Maity (2014) Ram Mohan (2014) Sudarsan Pattnaik (2014) Paresh Rawal (2014) Kalamandalam Satyabhama (2014) Anuj Sharma (actor) (2014) Santosh Sivan (2014) Sooni Taraporevala (2014) Naresh Bedi (2015) Sanjay Leela Bhansali (2015) Rahul Jain (2015) Rindra Jain (2015) Prasoon Joshi (2015) A. Kanyakumari (2015) Prafulla Kar (2015) Tripti Mukherjee (2015) Neil Nongkynrih (2015) Kota Srinivasa Rao (2015) Shekhar Sen (2015) Pran Kumar Sharma (2015) Mahesh Raj Soni (2015) Malini Awasthi (2016) Madhur Bhandarkar (2016) Tulsidas Borkar (2016) Mamta Chandrakar (2016) Priyanka Chopra (2016) Ajay Devgn (2016) Bhikhudan Gadhvi (2016) Laxma Goud (2016) Saeed Jaffrey (2016) Venkatesh Kumar (2016) Naresh Chander Lal (2016) Bhalchandra Dattatray Mondhe (2016) Nila Madhab Panda (2016) Michael Postel (2016) Pratibha Prahlad (2016) S. S. Rajamouli (2016) Gulabo Sapera (2016) Prakash Chand Surana (2016) Basanti Bisht (2017) Baua Devi (2017) Jitendra Haripal (2017) Kailash Kher (2017) Sadhu Meher (2017) Aruna Mohanty (2017) T. K. Murthy (2017) Mukund Nayak (2017) Anuradha Paudwal (2017) Parassala B. Ponnammal (2017) Bharathi Vishnuvardhan (2017) Purushottam Upadhyay (2017) Doddarangegowda (2018) Manoj Joshi (actor) (2018) Pran Kishore Kaul (2018) Vijay Kichlu (2018) Prabhakar Maharana (2018) Sisir Mishra (2018) Vijayalakshmi Naneethakrishnan (2018) Gobardhan Panika (2018) R. Sathyanarayana (2018) Bhajju Shyam (2018) Ibrahim Sutar (2018) Rudrapatnam Brothers (2018) Baba Yogendra (2018) Anup Ranjan Pandey (2019) Manoj Bajpayee (2019) Pritam Bhartwan (2019) Jyoti Bhatt (2019) Swapan Chaudhuri (2019) Dinyar Contractor (2019) Thanga Darlong (2019) Prabhu Deva (2019) Godawari Dutta (2019) Jorarsinh Jad (2019) Fayaz Ahmad Jan (2019) K. G. Jayan (2019) Waman Kendre (2019) Kader Khan (2019) Abdul Gafur Khatri (2019) Shankar Mahadevan (2019) Narthaki Nataraj (2019) Milena Salvini (2019) Sirivennela Seetharama Sastry (2019) Rajeev Taranath (2019) Hiralal Yad (2019) Rajeshwar Acharya (2019) 2020s Shashadhar Acharya (2020) Indira P. P. Bora (2020) Bombay Sisters (2020) Vajira Chitrasena (2020) Puru Dadheech (2020) Madhu Mansuri Hasmukh (2020) Sarita Joshi (2020) Kangana Ranaut (2020) Ramzan Khan (2020) Manilal Nag (2020) Dalai Chalapathi Rao (2020) Adnan Sami (2020) Suresh Wadkar (2020) V. K. Munusamy (2020) Yadla Gopalarao (2020) Dulari Devi (2021) Bombay Jayashri (2021) KC Sivasankaran (2021) Rewben Mashangva (2021) Sanjida Khatun (2021) Annarapu Rama Swamy (2021) Nidumolu Sumathi (2021) Biren Kumar Basak (2021) Narayan Debnath (2021) Bhuri Bai (2021) Vinayak Khedekar (2021) Manjamma Jogathi (2021) Goseedu Shaik Hassan (Posthumous) (2022) Lalita Vakil (2022) H. R. Kesha Murthy (2022) Jamyang Tsering Namgyal (2022) Arjun Singh Dhurve (2022) Ram Sahay Panday (2022) Durga Bai Vyam (2022) Sulochana Chan (2022) Sonu Nigam (2022) Lourembam Bino Devi (2022) Konsam Ibomcha Singh (2022) Shyamamani Devi (2022) Thil Kongampattu A V Murugaiyan (2022) Chandraprakash Dwivedi (2022) Ram Dayal Sharma (2022) Khandu Wangchuk Bhutia (2022) S. Ballesh (2022) Sowcar Janaki (2022) R Muthukannammal (2022) A. K. C. Natarajan (2022) Darshanam Mogilaiah (2022) Sakini Ramachandraih (2022) Gaddam Padmaja Reddy (2022) Kamalini Asthana and Nalini Asthana (duo) (2022) Shivnath Mishra (2022) Sheesh Ram (2022) Ajita Srivasta (2022) Madhuri Barthwal (2022) Kaajee Singh (2022) Jodhaiya Bai Baiga (2023) Premjit Baria (2023) Usha Barle (2023) Hemant Chauhan (2023) Bhanubhai Chitara (2023) Hemoprova Chutia (2023) Subhadra Devi (2023) Hem Chandra Goswami (2023) Pritikana Goswami (2023) Ahmed and Mohammed Hussain (2023) Dilshad Hussain (2023) Mahipat Ki (2023) M. M. Keerani (2023) Parshuram Komaji Khune (2023) Maguni Charan Kuanr (2023) Domar Singh Kunvar (2023) Risingbor Kurkalang (2023) Rani Machaiah (2023) Ajay Kumar Mandi (2023) Nadoja Pindipapanahalli Munivenkatappa (2023) Ramesh and Shanti Parmar (2023) Krishna Patel (2023) K Kalyanasundaram Pillai (2023) Kapil Dev Prasad (2023) Shah Rasheed Ahmed Quadri (2023) C. V. Raju (2023) Pareshbhai Rathwa (2023) Mangala Kanti Roy (2023) K.C. Runremsangi (2023) Ritwik Sanyal (2023) Kota Satchidananda Sastry (2023) Neihunuo Sorhie (2023) Moa Subong (2023) Reena Tandon (2023) Coomi Nariman Wadia (2023) Ghulam Muhammad Zaz (2023) Khalil Ahamad (2024) Badrappan M (2024) Kaluram Bamaniya (2024) Rezwana Choudhury Bannya (2024) Naseem Bano (2024) Ramlal Bareth (2024) Gita Roy Barman (2024) Som Dutt Battu (2024) Takdira Begum (2024) Drona Bhuyan (2024) Ashok Kumar Biswas (2024) Smriti Rekha Chakma (2024) A Velu Ananda Chari (2024) Ghulam Nabi Dar (2024) Mahabir Singh Guddu (2024) Anupama Hoskere (2024) Jankilal (2024) Ratan Kahar (2024) Dasari Kondappa (2024) Jordan Lepcha (2024) Binod Maharana (2024) Uma Maheshwari D (2024) Ram Kumar Mallick (2024) Surendra Mohan Mishra (2024) Ali Mohammed & Ghani Mohammed (2024) Kiran Nadar (2024) Narayanan E P (2024) Bhagabat Padhan (2024) Sanatan Rudra Pal (2024) Binod Kumar Pasayat (2024) Silbi Passah (2024) Shanti Devi Paswan & Shivan Paswan (2024) Romalo Ram (2024) Nirmal Rishi (2024) Pran Sabharwal (2024) Gaddam Sammaiah (2024) Machihan Sasa (2024) Omprakash Sharma (2024) Godawari Singh (2024) Seshampatti T Sivalingam (2024) Urmila Srivasta (2024) Nepal Chandra Sutradhar (2024) Gopinath Swain (2024) Laxman Bhatt Tailang (2024) Jagdish Trivedi (2024) Balakrishnan Sadanam Puthiya Veetil (2024) Babu Ram Yad (2024) Adwaita Gadanayak (2025) Achyut Ramchandra Pal (2025) Arijit Singh (2025) Ashok Saraf (2025) Ashwini Bhide-Deshpande (2025) Barry Godfray John (2025) Batool Begam (2025) Bharat Gupt (2025) Bheru Singh Chouhan (2025) Bhimva Doddabalappa Shillekyathara (2025) Durga Charan Ranbir (2025) Farooq Ahmad Mir (2025) Gokul Chandra Das (2025) Guruvayur Dorai (2025) Harchandan Singh Bhatty (2025) Harjinder Singh Srinagar Wale (2025) Hassan Raghu (2025) Jaspinder Narula (2025) Joynacharan Bathari (2025) K. Omanakutty (2025) Madugula Nagaphani Sarma (2025) Mahir Nayak (2025) Mamata Shankar (2025) Miriyala Apparao (2025) Naren Gurung (2025) Nirmala Devi (2025) P Datchanamoorthy (2025) Pandi Ram Mandi (2025) Parmar Ljibhai Nagjibhai (2025) Purisai Kannappa Sambandan (2025) Radhakrishnan Devasenapathy (2025) Ranendra Bhanu Majumdar (2025) Ratan Parimoo (2025) Rebakanta Mahanta (2025) Ricky Kej (2025) Shyam Bihari Agrawal (2025) Tejendra Majumdar (2025) Thiyam Suryamukhi Devi (2025) Vasudeo Kamath (2025) Velu Aasaan (2025) Venkappa Ambaji Sugatekar (2025) vteFilmfare Award for Best Male Playback Singer1960–1980 Mukesh (1960) Mohammed Rafi (1961) Mohammed Rafi (1962) No Award (1963) Mahendra Kapoor (1964) Mohammed Rafi (1965) No Award (1966) Mohammed Rafi (1967) Mahendra Kapoor (1968) Mohammed Rafi (1969) Kishore Kumar (1970) Mukesh (1971) Manna Dey (1972) Mukesh (1973) Narendra Chanchal (1974) Mahendra Kapoor (1975) Kishore Kumar (1976) Mukesh (1977) Mohammed Rafi (1978) Kishore Kumar (1979) K. J. Yesudas (1980) 1981–2000 Kishore Kumar (1981) Amit Kumar (1982) Kishore Kumar (1983) Kishore Kumar (1984) Kishore Kumar (1985) Kishore Kumar (1986) The Razzie Award for Worst Original Song (1987) No Award (1988) Udit Narayan (1989) S. P. Balasubrahmanyam (1990) Kumar Sanu (1991) Kumar Sanu (1992) Kumar Sanu (1993) Kumar Sanu (1994) Kumar Sanu (1995) Udit Narayan (1996) Udit Narayan (1997) Abhijeet (1998) Sukhwinder Singh (1999) Udit Narayan (2000) 2001-2020 Lucky Ali (2001) Udit Narayan (2002) Sonu Nigam (2003) Sonu Nigam (2004) Kunal Ganjawala (2005) Himesh Reshammiya (2006) Shaan and Kailash Kher (2007) Shaan (2008) Sukhwinder Singh (2009) Mohit Chauhan (2010) Rahat Fateh Ali Khan (2011) Mohit Chauhan (2012) Ayushmann Khurrana (2013) Arijit Singh (2014) Ankit Tiwari (2015) Arijit Singh (2016) Arijit Singh (2017) Arijit Singh (2018) Arijit Singh (2019) Arijit Singh (2020) 2021–present Ragh Chaitanya (2021) B Praak (2022) Arijit Singh (2023) Bhupinder Babbal (2024) vteFilmfare Awards Bangla for Best Male Playback Singer2014–present Arijit Singh (2014) Nachiketa Chakraborty (2017) Nachiketa Chakraborty (2018) Anirban Bhattacharya (2021) Ishan Mitra (2022) Arijit Singh (2023) vteIIFA Award for Best Male Playback Singer Udit Narayan (2000) Lucky Ali (2001) Sonu Nigam (2002) Sonu Nigam (2003) Sonu Nigam (2004) Kunal Ganjawala (2005) Himesh Reshammiya (2006) Shaan (2007) Shaan (2008) Jed Ali (2009) Shaan (2010) Rahat Fateh Ali Khan (2011) Mohit Chauhan (2012) Sonu Nigam (2013) Arijit Singh (2014) Ankit Tiwari (2015) Papon (2016) Amit Mishra (2017) Arijit Singh (2018) Arijit Singh (2019) Arijit Singh (2020) No award (2021) Jubin Nautiyal (2022) Arijit Singh (2023) Bhupinder Babbal (2024) Jubin Nautiyal (2025) vteScreen Award for Best Male Playback Singer1995-2000 Kumar Sanu (1995) Hariharan (1996) Udit Narayan (1997) Abhijeet Bhattacharya (1998) Sukhwinder Singh (1999) Sukhwinder Singh (2000) 2001-present Lucky Ali (2001) Sonu Nigam (2002) Udit Narayan (2003) Kailash Kher (2004) Sonu Nigam (2005) Sonu Nigam (2006) Shaan (2007) Soham Chakrabarty (2008) KK (2009) Rahat Fateh Ali Khan (2010) Rahat Fateh Ali Khan (2011) Mohit Chauhan (2012) Jed Ali (2013) Arijit Singh (2014) Arijit Singh (2015) Papon (2016) Amit Mishra (2017) Arijit Singh (2018) Arijit Singh (2019) Sachet Tandon (2020) vteZee Cine Award for Best Playback Singer – Male Sonu Nigam (1998) Sukhwinder Singh (1999) Udit Narayan (2000) Lucky Ali (2001) Sonu Nigam (2002) Sonu Nigam (2003) Shaan (2004) Kunal Ganjawala (2005) Himesh Reshammiya (2006) Shaan (2007) Shaan (2008) No Award (2009) No Award (2010) Mohit Chauhan (2011) Mohit Chauhan (2012) Sonu Nigam (2013) Arijit Singh (2014) No Award (2015) Arijit Singh & Mohit Chauhan (2016) Arijit Singh (2017) Akhil Sachdeva (2018) Yasser Desai (2019) Arijit Singh (2020) Arijit Singh (2023) Arijit Singh (2024) vteNational Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer1967–1980 Mahendra Kapoor (1967) Manna Dey (1968) S. D. Burman (1969) Manna Dey (1970) Hemant Kumar (1971) K. J. Yesudas (1972) K. J. Yesudas (1973) Mukesh (1974) M. Balamuralikrishna (1975) K. J. Yesudas (1976) Mohammed Rafi (1977) Shimoga Subbanna (1978) S. P. Balasubrahmanyam (1979) Anup Ghoshal (1980) 1981–2000 S. P. Balasubrahmanyam (1981) K. J. Yesudas (1982) S. P. Balasubrahmanyam (1983) Bhimsen Joshi (1984) Jayachandran (1985) Hemant Kumar (1986) K. J. Yesudas (1987) S. P. Balasubrahmanyam (1988) Ajoy Chakrabarty (1989) M. G. Sreekumar (1990) K. J. Yesudas (1991) Dr. Rajkumar (1992) K. J. Yesudas (1993) P. Unnikrishnan (1994) S. P. Balasubrahmanyam (1995) S. P. Balasubrahmanyam (1996) Hariharan (1997) Sanjeev Abhyankar (1998) M. G. Sreekumar (1999) Shankar Mahadevan (2000) 2001–2020 Udit Narayan (2001) Udit Narayan (2002) Sonu Nigam (2003) Udit Narayan (2004) Naresh Iyer (2005) Gurdas Maan (2006) Shankar Mahadevan (2007) Hariharan (2008) Rupam Islam (2009) Suresh Wadkar (2010) Anand Bhate (2011) Shankar Mahadevan (2012) Rupankar (2013) Sukhwinder Singh (2014) Mahesh Kale (2015) Sundarayyar (2016) K. J. Yesudas (2017) Arijit Singh (2018) B Praak (2019) Rahul Deshpande (2020) 2021–present Kaala Bhaira (2021) Arijit Singh (2022) P V N S Rohit (2023) Authority control databases InternationalVIAFNationalUnited StatesArtistsMusicBrainz