Japan’s air guitar queen denied fourth world crown by Canadian at championships in Finland

They’re the most fervent musicians no one has ever heard.

Performers at this year’s Air Guitar World Championships in Finland tuned up on August 23 at the Olympics of air guitar for the 27th time, featuring dedicated competitors like “Shred Lasso” and “Guitarantula”.

This year’s challenge began on August 21 with Airientation in Oulu, a city nearly 540 kilometres (335 miles) north of Helsinki, and was headlined by a class open to veterans and new guitarists alike.

The Dark Horses Qualifications followed on August 22, culminating with the World Championships Final the following night, which saw the crowning of Canada’s Zachary “Ichabod Fame” Knowles as the 2024 Air Guitar World Champion.

It was a tough competition, with2023 world champion Nanami “Seven Seas” Nagura of Japan and 2022 winner Kirill “Guitarantula” Blumenkrants of France in second and third place respectively.

Contestants are judged on the performance of two songs in two separate rounds, each lasting 60 seconds. While passion is a must, a real pick or even a finger-picking style is optional. Props and costumes are allowed – but backup bands and real instruments are forbidden.

This year’s audience favourite was Mathilde Dollat from France with an intense show made all the more dramatic by the heavy rain that drenched the performer and audience alike.

Nanami last year took home her third title, making her the air guitarist with the most world titles in a competition that dates back to 1996. In Oulu she was vying for a fourth win, but was up against nine dark horses as well as the national champions from the United States, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Ireland, Finland and France.

The jury had to consider a contestant’s “originality, ability to be taken over by the music, stage presence, technical merit, artistic impression and airness” in deciding to award points on a 4.0 to 6.0 scale, according to the competition’s online rule book. The contestant with the highest total cumulative score won.

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Nanami “Seven Seas” Nagura from Japan performs during the final of the Air Guitar World Championship in Oulu, Finland. She was bidding for her fourth world title but had to settle for second place. Photo: EPA-EFE
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Crowd favourite Mathilde Dollat from France performs during the final of the 2024 Air Guitar World Championship. Photo: EPA-EFE
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Kirill “Guitarantula” Blumenkrants from France performs during the final of the 2024 Air Guitar World Championship. the 2022 champion took third place this year. Photo: EPA-EFE

In addition to international camaraderie, the tournament also promotes inclusivity.

“Air guitar playing is not instrumental sports or arts, nor does it require any special venues or skills, so it is accessible to all,” according to the championships’ website. “Air guitar can be grasped regardless of gender, age, ethnic background, sexual orientation and social status. Air guitar playing is equal.”

The contest organisers aim to promote world peace with their slogan, “Make Air, Not War”.

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Kurt “Shred Lasso” Brown from USA/Finland performs during the final of the 2024 Air Guitar World Championship. Photo: EPA-EFE
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Dave “Iron Age” Chen from Taiwan performs during the final of the 2024 Air Guitar World Championship. Photo: EPA-EFE
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Junichi Kamada from Japan performs during the Dark Horses qualifying round of the 2024 Air Guitar World Championship. Photo: EPA-EFE
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Sven Smith aka Sven Spandex Smith from the United Kingdom performs during the Dark Horses qualifying round of the 2024 Air Guitar World Championship. Photo: EPA-EFE

“According to the ideology of the competition, wars would end, climate change stop and all bad things disappear, if all the people in the world played the Air Guitar,” the competition website says. “This is why the whole universe is invited to play the Air Guitar for world peace at the end of the competition.”

So pick up your air guitar and play.

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