After five days at drums, man beats world record

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After five days at drums, man beats world record

Postby admin » Mon Oct 08, 2007 7:41 pm

After five days at drums, man beats world record
October 08, 2007
Daniel Girard
Staff reporter

The beat went on.

And on and on and on.

Jagjit Singh Batalvi tapped his way into the record books yesterday, fingering his tabla, an Indian percussion instrument, for a fifth straight day. Fuelled by soups, fresh fruit juices and four-minute yoga meditation sessions every 10 hours, the Brampton man now unofficially holds the Guinness World Record for the individual drumming marathon.

When Batalvi eclipsed the previous mark of 101 hours at mid-afternoon, dozens of people in a room attached to the Shiromani Sikh temple in Mississauga let out a cheer led by men in traditional dress holding ceremonial kirpans, or daggers. Outside, handfuls of yellow and saffron-coloured balloons were released into the sky.

On a specially built podium, Batalvi sat expressionless as clocks reached the 2 p.m. milestone.

"I'm very relieved," said Batalvi, who intended to play until 11 p.m. – 110 hours since starting Wednesday. "I hope this will be an inspiration to all the youth all over the world that you can achieve anything you want if you put your mind to it."

Batalvi, 29, came to Canada from the Punjab about eight years ago. Trained in India by a pair of the world's best-known tabla players, he now teaches.

Organizers said his feat, which must be verified by Guinness, tops a record of 101 hours set in 2005.

ref: http://www.thestar.com/printArticle/264555
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