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Veteran Indian singer Gangubai Hangal dies

File - In this May 19, 2005 file photo, legendary Indian classical singer Gangubai Hanga is felicitated in Mumbai, India. Hangal, who battled caste and gender prejudices to establish a career that spanned more than seven decades, died Tuesday, July 21, 2009, after being briefly hospitalized for respiratory problems. She was 96. She died in Hubli, a city in Karnataka state, where she lived, PTI added. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi, File)
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Veteran Indian classical singer Gangubai Hangal, who battled caste and gender prejudices to establish a career that spanned more than seven decades, died Tuesday after being briefly hospitalized for respiratory problems. She was 96.

Hangal was put on a life-support system Monday night after her condition turned critical, her doctor, Asho Kalamadani, told Press Trust of India news agency. Her grandson Manoj Hangal was quoted saying she died early Tuesday.

With her powerful, deep voice, Hangal was often described as more gifted than most male singers of her time, and people had trouble matching her strong vocals with her small frame.

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She was one of the most well-known singers of Khayal, a style that belonged to the Hindustani, or north Indian, school of classical singing.

She was born on March 5, 1913, in the southern state of Karnataka and trained under Sawai Gandharva, a respected guru.

Born into a family of boatmen, considered low caste in Hinduism’s complex caste structure, Hangal battled that prejudice as well as the notion that singing wasn’t an appropriate profession for a woman of her generation.

She died in Hubli, a city in Karnataka state, where she lived, PTI reported.

She is survived by two sons.

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