iWorld
Arijit Singh announces retirement from playback singing
MUMBAI: Arijit Singh, the voice that has defined a decade of Hindi film music, has announced he will no longer take on new playback singing assignments. The decision, revealed in a candid New Year message on social media, marks a dramatic pivot in one of Indian cinema’s most prolific musical careers.
“I am calling it off,” Singh wrote, thanking listeners for years of support while making it clear that this is not a retreat from music itself. Existing commitments will be honoured, he said, with some releases still expected this year. Beyond that, no new film songs.
The move ends an era. Since his breakout with Aashiqui 2, Singh has been near-ubiquitous across Hindi cinema soundtracks, lending his voice to blockbuster films including Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, Tamasha, Ae Dil Hai Mushkil and Airlift. For years, Hindi cinema has struggled to imagine itself without him; now it must.
Singh framed the decision as creative necessity rather than fatigue. He cited boredom with repetition, a desire to explore other musical languages and a pull back towards Indian classical music. “I need to do some other music to live,” he wrote, adding that he wants to learn afresh and create independently as a “small little artist”.
He also hinted at making space for the next generation. The excitement, he said, lies in hearing new voices emerge and finding renewed motivation through them.
The announcement triggered an outpouring from the music fraternity. Amaal Mallik called it the end of an era for film music. Badshah summed it up in three words: “Sadiyon mein ek.” Younger artists urged him to channel his energies into independent work.
Singh insisted the announcement was no emotional tease. He is stepping away from Bollywood playback, not from music. His future lies in his own compositions, released when he feels ready, and in reconnecting with classical traditions that first shaped him.
For an industry long addicted to a single voice, the silence ahead will be deafening. For Arijit Singh, the next act promises something rarer: freedom.




