The Score Magazine August 2018 issue | Page 42

SOUVIK CHAKRABORT Y Record Holder Musicians OF INDIA We all know about our celebrated singers setting chartbuster records and being part of popular media, but we hardly come across those musicians who out of their passion for music had done something so extraordinary that very few people can actually even think of let alone achieving the feat. The madness for music has a wide range of eccentrity and it does not only limit to the talent of just the musicians but it also delves deep to the understanding of music in a community. The list below will speak of the variety and the beauty of music; how it is perceived and how it is pursued by the ones who have deified it in their lives. The record setting 43 Notes on a Piano in One second- Mr. T. S. Satish Kumar who was born on 16th November, 1975, set in stone an unbelievable piece of record, by hitting 43 notes on a piano in one second. He used both his hands with equal dexterity to reach this impeccable feat. He is a music teacher and composer in Hyderabad and he achieved the record on January 16, 2018. 100 words song with 'SA'- Prasanna Bhojashettar is an engineering student and a singer, artist and musician of from Karnataka. In a bizarre record he has actually managed to write and sing a 100 words' song which begins with the sound ‘Sa’ in Kannada language and he set this record on 18th September 2016. 1090 notes on Harmonium with single hand in one minute- A Musician of Delhi, Manish Sharma who was born on March 02, 1992, actually did the unthinkable and achieved the feat at Durgapuri, Shahdara, Delhi on July 27, 2017. Largest Harmonium Ensemble- At the Tana Riri Festival of 2016, one of the District Administration of Gujarat successfully attempted and set the new world record for the one and only one largest harmonium ensemble with over half a thousand musicians. The festival grabbed major media attention as the event resonated along the banks of a Lake in Vadnagar, Gujarat. 50 Hindi Movie Songs in Duet for 2 Hours & half hours- Dr. Madhusudan Ghanekar & Mr. Kiran Gandhi, from Pune entertained the audience at a hall in Pune to set new records with Bollywood music. Not only did they 40 The Score Magazine highonscore.com sing in duet but also whistled the Bollywood movie songs, choosing from a wide range of classics and trending songs. 67 songs on Veena for five hours- It is simply mind boggling that the passion and the craze for music drives a singer to the extent that they can actually do the Herculean task of doing something not humanly possible, South Indian singer Vaikkom Vijayalakshmi has done just that. She set a world record by playing 67 songs at a concert non-stop for five hours that too on a gayathri veena, which is also a single- stringed musical instrument. The inventor of 'sushri’, smallest musical instrument- was invented by G. Jayaprakash from Kerala. The dimensions of the instrument is no bigger than a match box; it measures 4.5 cm length, 1.5 cm width and 1 mm thickness. With this miniature mouth organ Mr. jayprakash has already entered into the Limca Book of Records. The instrument is well researched and developed so much so that it is capable of playing all the seven musical notes on it, and it also recreates the sounds of multiple instruments like saxophone, clarinet, shehnai and nadaswaram at the same time. It is very inspiring that music is taken by heart by so many innovators, communities and of course audiophiles, hope the readers and the seekers of the records meet each other, and even newer records are meant and broken in the days to come!