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Suresh Wadkar is an Indian playback singer and music educator known for his work in Hindi and Marathi cinema, as well as in devotional and semi-classical music. Trained in Hindustani classical music, he emerged as a prominent voice in the Indian film industry from the late 1970s onwards, and is associated with a soft, melodious style suited to lyrical compositions.
| Full name | Suresh Ishwar Wadkar |
|---|---|
| Born | 7 August 1955, Kolhapur, Maharashtra |
| Profession | Playback singer, music teacher |
| Languages | Hindi, Marathi, Bhojpuri, Konkani, Odia, Bengali, among others |
| Genres | Film playback, ghazal, bhajan, semi-classical |
| Guru | Pandit Jialal Vasant |
| Notable honours | Padma Shri (2020), National Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer |
| Institution | Ajivasan Music Academy, Mumbai |
Suresh Wadkar was born on 7 August 1955 in Kolhapur, Maharashtra. He began his formal training in Hindustani classical music at a young age under Pandit Jialal Vasant at the Prabhat Sangeetalaya school in Mumbai, where he later also taught. His grounding in classical traditions has remained central to his vocal style.
His entry into film playback singing came after he participated in the Sur Singaar Sansad's Sur Singaar competition in 1976, which brought him to the attention of leading composers in Mumbai.
Wadkar's playback career took shape in the late 1970s and early 1980s with composers including Ravindra Jain, Laxmikant–Pyarelal, Khayyam, Kalyanji–Anandji and, in later years, A. R. Rahman. Some of the films and songs commonly identified with him include:
Wadkar is among the most recognised playback voices in Marathi cinema and non-film Marathi music. He has recorded extensively for Marathi devotional albums, including renderings of abhangs of saint poets such as Tukaram and Dnyaneshwar, and has worked with leading Marathi composers across decades.
Outside cinema, Wadkar has built a substantial body of devotional recordings, including bhajans, abhangs and Sanskrit chants. He has lent his voice to widely circulated devotional projects, and has also performed ghazals and semi-classical concert repertoire on the live stage in India and abroad.
Wadkar founded the Ajivasan Music Academy in Mumbai, which trains students in Hindustani classical and light music. The academy continues the lineage of his guru Pandit Jialal Vasant. He has also appeared as a mentor and judge on Indian television music talent shows in both Hindi and Marathi.
Wadkar's singing is marked by clear diction, restrained ornamentation and an emphasis on melodic line, which has made his voice well suited to compositions rooted in classical ragas as well as to lyrical, contemplative film songs. Within Marathi music in particular, he is regarded as a key custodian of the bhajan and abhang traditions in the post-independence era. As a teacher and institution-builder, he has contributed to training a generation of younger singers in Mumbai.