Renowned Assamese flutist and music director Dipak Sarma passed away on Monday morning, November 3, at 6:15 am. He had been receiving treatment in Guwahati before being shifted to Rela Hospital in Chennai, where he had been on ventilator support for several days.
Sarma was widely admired for his contribution to Assamese music and cinema. A versatile artist, he composed for several acclaimed films, including Jonky Panoi and Jatinga Ityadi, and had recently been working on Luitak Vetibo Kune. His albums Story of Love (Raaga and Rocks International) and Beyond the Horizon reflected his ability to merge Indian classical traditions with modern sounds.
Dear Reader,
Every day, our team at EastMojo travels through rain, rough roads, and remote hills to bring you stories that matter – stories from your town, your people, your Northeast.
We do this because we believe in truthful, independent journalism. No big corporate backing, no government pressure – just honest reporting by local journalists who live and breathe the same air you do.
But to keep doing this work, we need you. Your small contribution helps us pay our reporters fairly, reach places others ignore, and keep asking the tough questions.
If you believe the Northeast deserves its own fearless voice, stand with us.
Support independent journalism. Subscribe to EastMojo
Thank you,
Karma Paljor
Editor-in-Chief, eastmojo.com
Beyond the film industry, Sarma’s compositions featured in national television serials such as Karm and Wazir on Zee TV. He also performed in instrumental jugalbandis for Kaleidoscope on Star Plus, expanding his reach beyond regional audiences.
Over his career, Sarma received several honours, including the NETV Best Musician Award in 2006, the Sangeet Prabha Award in 2007, and the Azim Hazarika Award from the Sivasagar Press Club.
Also read | Assam schoolgirl Huma shines at Int’l AI conference in Azerbaijan
Related
Latest Stories