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By:

Nilanjana Das

13 December 2025 at 2:23:37 pm

The show must go on

Assam’s cultural void and the Post Malone moment. The cultural vacuum left by the demise of Zubeen Garg continues to echo through Assam, resurfacing sharply during the recent Post Malone concert in Guwahati. Zubeen, the state’s most beloved musical icon, had dominated the cultural landscape for over three decades. With songs in more than 40 languages and dialects, and a career spanning 33 years, he was not just a singer but a cultural force whose music stitched together generations. His...

The show must go on

Assam’s cultural void and the Post Malone moment. The cultural vacuum left by the demise of Zubeen Garg continues to echo through Assam, resurfacing sharply during the recent Post Malone concert in Guwahati. Zubeen, the state’s most beloved musical icon, had dominated the cultural landscape for over three decades. With songs in more than 40 languages and dialects, and a career spanning 33 years, he was not just a singer but a cultural force whose music stitched together generations. His Bollywood hit Ya Ali  from Gangster  (2006) catapulted him to national fame, but in Assam, he had long been revered as the state’s “first true rockstar.” His sudden and tragic death on September 19 in Singapore where he had travelled to perform at a live show left an emotional void unlike anything the region had experienced in recent memory. The circumstances of the accident during a yacht trip triggered an outpouring of grief and anger. Assam came to a standstill: shops closed, schools shut down, and streets emptied. In a haunting echo of his earlier remark that Assam would “shut down for seven days” upon his passing, the state seemed to fulfil his prophecy. The cultural heartbeat he embodied fell silent. Months later, when Post Malone arrived in Assam for a performance, the global superstar stepped into an emotional landscape still shaped by that loss. Guwahati was ready for a high-voltage concert, but what unfolded was a reminder of the immense cultural space Zubeen once occupied. As Malone paused mid-performance to honour the late legend, saying, “To be in the home of the great legendary Zubeen tonight… I’ve come to play some street songs,”  the crowd erupted not just in excitement, but in collective remembrance. Reopened Wound The tribute was unexpected, and it reopened a wound that had barely begun to heal. Social media lit up instantly, with fans describing the moment as heartfelt and deeply resonant. The applause that followed was not only for the American artist but for the memory of the man whose absence still defines the cultural mood of the region. In that moment, Guwahati became the stage where two worlds met: one global, electrifying and loud; the other, grieving, nostalgic, and searching for the familiar voice it had lost. The Post Malone concert didn’t fill the vacuum because perhaps it can never be filled but it made the silence Zubeen left behind feel alive again. Assam still measures its cultural pulse against the space Zubeen once occupied.  Every tribute, every memory, every gathering reminds people of the unmistakable truth: the void he left is permanent, and the landscape of Assamese music will forever bear the imprint of the legend who is no longer here. Charges Framed A Special Investigation Team (SIT), probing into the death of singer Zubeen Garg, on Friday charged four accused – Shyamkanu Mahanta, Siddhartha Sharma, Shekhar Jyoti Goswami and Amritprava Mahanta – with murder in its chargesheet filed in a Guwahati court. Shyamkanu Mahanta was the chief organiser of the North East India Festival, which was attended by Garg in Singapore, where he died under mysterious circumstances while swimming in the sea on September 19. Garg's cousin and suspended Assam Police officer Sandipan Garg has been charged with culpable homicide not amounting to murder in the chargsheet submitted at the Chief Judicial Magistrate's Court earlier in the day, lawyers said. Sharma was the singer's secretary, while Shekhar Jyoti Goswami and Amritprava Mahanta were members of Garg's band. The singer's two personal security officers (PSOs) Nandeswar Bora and Prabin Baishya have been charged under Section 31c of the BNS, which deals with criminal breach of trust by misappropriating funds or property entrusted to them, the lawyers said. The Assam government had constituted the SIT, led by Special DGP M P Gupta, to investigate into the singer's death. Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma had claimed in the recently concluded assembly session that Garg's death was 'plain and simple murder'. (The writer is a media professional and a Research Associate with IIM, Shilong. Views personal.)

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