Inside Asha Bhosle’s haunting last collaboration with Gorillaz: 'Almost like she wrote her own goodbye'

Fans revisit the track as its lyrics take on a new poignant meaning after Bhosle's passing

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The Shadowy Light - album cover
The Shadowy Light - album cover
The Mountain/Gorillaz

Dubai: The final official recording of legendary singer Asha Bhosle has taken on profound emotional weight following her death on 12 April 2026 in Mumbai at the age of 92.

Her last release, “The Shadowy Light,” a collaboration with virtual band Gorillaz from their album The Mountain (Parvat), is now being widely regarded as an unintended farewell.

Recorded during the final phase of her career and released just weeks before her passing, the track brought together Bhosle’s instantly recognisable voice with Gorillaz’s experimental, genre-blending production.

At its core, The Shadowy Light explores ideas of transition, impermanence, and spiritual release. Drawing on imagery associated with rivers, journeys, and liberation, the song evokes philosophical concepts often linked to Indian thought particularly the idea that life is not an endpoint but a passage into another form of existence.

While it was not written as a farewell, it's themes have gained a new emotional resonance in the wake of Bhosle’s passing.

Following her death, listeners and users online have reinterpreted the track through a different lens. "Her last song was about death and reincarnation. Almost like she wrote her own goodbye." Shared one user on YouTube.

Another fan on Instagram said "She recorded over 12,000 songs in her lifetime and fittingly, her final note was for Gorillaz!" .

In a heartfelt tribute, Gorillaz honoured the late Asha Bhosle with a deeply personal note from Damon Albarn, reflecting on both admiration and memory. "Asha Boshle was someone I had admired from afar for many years, her voice was my gateway to the marvellous world of Bollywood. I met her twice in Mumbai and was entranced by her grace and poise at the age of 91. The memory of sitting cross-legged playing R. D. Burman’s harmonium while she sang will stay with me forever."

He continued "I send my deepest condolences to her lovely family. Asha, you had the voice of an angel, we love you.”

Bhosle’s career spanned more than eight decades and thousands of recordings across genres, languages, and styles. Against that vast body of work, The Shadowy Light now occupies a unique place.

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