
Guyanese Voice, Global Impact: Amrita Naraine Joins Guinness World Record Music Project
- guyanamusicscene
- Aug 16
- 2 min read
By GT Music Scene | August 16th, 2025
When the voices of 195 women from 195 nations came together in one song, history was made. Among them was Guyana’s own Amrita Naraine, a singer, researcher, and cultural innovator, who carried the Golden Arrowhead proudly into the Guinness World Records.
The global music project, titled 195, brought together women from every UN-recognized country to contribute vocals to a single recording earning the distinction of the “Most Nationalities to Contribute Vocals to a Musical Recording (Single Song).” Sung in the healing frequency of 528 Hz, the track was more than just music: it was an anthem of unity, peace, and global sisterhood.
The song premiered earlier this year at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, during the Frequency School event on January 20, 2025. For Amrita, the opportunity was not only a once-in-a-lifetime experience but also a reflection of her life’s mission using creativity and technology to build bridges across communities.

It’s an honor to represent Guyana on this global stage, but even more powerful to be part of a movement that proves women’s voices are stronger together,” Amrita shared. “This project aligns with my passion for blending arts and innovation to create collective impact.
A Guyanese Woman in Global Company
Amrita Naraine is no stranger to pioneering work. She is a Chevening Scholar, a UAL alumna, and an award-winning creative researcher. Her expertise spans data science, AI, cultural policy, and storytelling fields she fuses with artistry to empower the Caribbean’s creative industries.
Her career has been marked by trailblazing research into media manipulation, ethical content systems, and the power of digital advocacy. Yet through it all, music remains at the core of her identity.
In joining 195, Amrita did more than lend her voice; she represented Guyana’s spirit, culture, and resilience on a platform designed to showcase the universality of women’s expression.

Why It Matters
For Guyana, Amrita’s involvement is a reminder of the global reach of our creative voices. For Caribbean women, it’s an inspiration proof that talent nurtured here can reverberate worldwide, alongside peers from every corner of the globe.
This achievement also highlights a shifting narrative in the arts: one where technology, research, and cultural heritage intersect. Amrita embodies this evolution, showing that Caribbean creatives are not only participants but leaders in global conversations around innovation and artistry.
A Legacy of Voices
195 is more than a world record it’s a living testament to collaboration, healing, and hope. In a world often divided, this chorus of women reminds us that music remains the most universal language.
And thanks to Amrita Naraine, Guyana’s voice is forever a part of that historic harmony.
GT Music Scene celebrates Amrita and all the women breaking barriers, amplifying Caribbean creativity, and proving that our voices can and do resonate across the world.
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