In a year when Guinness World Records, the India Book of Records, and Femina magazine have turned their attention to one young musician from Chennai, Victoria Isaac has become a remarkably decorated young musician whose achievements have attracted national and international attention. Known by her stage name “Victoriastic,” the nine-year-old violinist, multi-instrumentalist and self-taught music producer has spent two to three years collecting an unusually long list of honours, without losing the enthusiasm of a child who loves to play.
Victoria’s best-known achievement remains her certification by Guinness World Records as the world’s Youngest Music Producer (Female), confirmed in Chennai on 6 October 2025 for her twelve-track debut album, Musically Fantastic, produced from the ground up at eight years and 160 days old. The path to that certificate was far from easy: her early submissions were turned down by Guinness more than once, and it took hard work and repeated attempts before the record finally met the organisation’s exacting standards and was verified.
The Guinness title, though, is only one entry on a longer list. Victoria currently holds four India Book of Records titles. The earliest, confirmed August 2024, recognised her as the youngest to play different musical instruments while skate dancing, the origin of her signature “Skate-Dance Music,” performing live violin while gliding on roller skates. In December 2024, she set a second record for using nineteen musical instruments to perform “Ek Pyaar Ka Nagma Hai” in just under seventeen minutes. In January 2026, she added a third title performing as a solo violinist alongside the professional band Saadhaga Paravaigal in Chennai, becoming the youngest soloist on record to share a stage with a professional band. Her fourth and most recent title, confirmed in June 2026, credits her with 62 solo musical performances delivered across district, state and national platforms over three years.
Alongside the certificates sits a quieter record of consistency: gold medals in skate dancing with musical instruments at district, state and national levels in 2024, and again at every level in 2025. Bhaskar Bharadwaj, who coaches her violin performance, sums up the run of titles in one line: “She is extremely talented and very much gifted” — an assessment echoed by her classical violin teacher, Suporno Chakraborty, and her sound engineering coach, Caroline Simon.
Victoria’s stage presence draws as much attention as her titles. At award ceremonies and concerts, she changes the mood of a room within minutes, drawing a standing ovation as she dances while playing violin, much like her own idol Lindsey Stirling. Asked about her secret, she says simply that she loves watching people enjoy themselves while she plays. “The stage is like my home,” she has said.
Her recognition has not stayed confined to record books and performances. In February 2026, Victoria appeared on the cover of Femina magazine as part of its “You Go, Girl! The U-10 Prodigies Creating History” feature, a Times Group special spotlighting India’s most extraordinary under-ten achievers. In the accompanying interview, she described the moment her Guinness title was confirmed as feeling “like a miracle,” and spoke about how a 2024 skate-dancing competition led her to experiment with playing instruments on roller skates, an idea her parents encouraged under her skating coach’s guidance. That same month, she was also named an Outstanding Laureate of the 11th edition of the World’s Best Musicians Competition, an international classical-music contest, recognising her album entry from India. The Rotary Club of Chennai Spotlight also later honoured her with its Young Achiever Award for 2025-26, presented at the Madras Cricket Club in April.
The honours then continued through the middle of 2026: the Indian Icon Award for Young Prodigy of the Year, presented in Hyderabad alongside the Telangana Awards; the Dr. K.C.G. Verghese Excellence Award for Child Prodigy from the Hindustan Group of Institutions in Chennai; and the Outstanding Artist honour at the South India Women Achievers Award in Bangalore. She also separately received the Changemaker Award, an Impact Award presented nationally under the “Heroes of Tomorrow” Action Campaign with the United Nations, recognising the social side of her work.
That social dimension is, by Victoria’s own account, just as important to her as any trophy. Through an initiative she calls “Melodies of Memories,” she performs live violin at senior care centres, palliative care centres and community halls across Chennai, bringing comfort and companionship to elderly residents. She hopes to formalise that work into a dedicated foundation. In March 2026, she partnered with the Chengalpattu District Collectorate and District Collector Malathi Helen on a voter-awareness campaign, performing the district’s official anthem on camera ahead of the state elections.
None of this success, Victoria’s family says, was planned. Her gift first became apparent at age three, when she began replaying nursery rhymes by ear on a mobile app; her parents responded by buying her instruments as toys rather than tools, and what began as play gradually evolved into formal study. Home-schooled to allow time for music and academics, she now trains at the KM Music Conservatory in Chennai, founded by composer A.R. Rahman, alongside specialist coaching in violin, sound engineering, guitar and percussion.
Victoria has also added a separate Asia Book of Records title for performing Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons in an Indian-pop arrangement playing violin while skate dancing, the same seven-minute piece. She was around eight years old when she first attempted it, an unusual pairing of advanced violin performance with roller skating now recognised by the Asia Book of Records.
