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Overtone singing

Overtone singing, also known as overtone chanting, harmonic singing, polyphonic overtone singing, or diphonic singing, is a set of singing techniques in which the vocalist manipulates the resonances of the vocal tract to arouse the perception of additional separate notes beyond the fundamental frequency that is being produced.

Polyphonic overtone singing Pachelbel's Canon, performed by Wolfgang Saus
Chirgilchin performing various styles of Tuvan throat singing.

From a fundamental pitch, made by the human voice, the belonging harmonic overtones can be selectively amplified by changing the vocal tract: the dimensions and the shape of the resonant cavities of the mouth and the pharynx.[1][2] That resonant tuning allows singers to create more than one pitch at the same time (the fundamental and one or more selected overtones) and usually generates a single fundamental frequency with their vocal folds.

Overtone singing should not be confused with throat singing, although many throat singing techniques include overtone singing. As mentioned, overtone singing involves the careful manipulations of the vocal tract, and throat singing is mostly related to the voice source.

Asia edit

Mongolia and Buryatia edit

It is thought that the art of overtone singing originated in southwestern Mongolia in today's Khovd Province and Govi Altai region. Nowadays, overtone singing is found throughout the country and Mongolia is often considered the most active center of overtone singing in the world.[3] The most commonly practiced style, called khöömii (Cyrillic: хөөмий), can be divided up into the following categories:

  • Uruulyn / labial khöömii
  • Tagnain / palatal khöömii
  • Khamryn / nasal khöömii
  • Bagalzuuryn, khooloin / glottal, throat khöömii
  • Tseejiin khondiin, khevliin / chest cavity, stomach khöömii
  • Turlegt, khosmoljin khöömii / khöömii combined with long song

Mongolians also use many other singing styles such as karkhiraa (literally 'growling') and isgeree.

Tuva edit

Tuvan overtone singing is practiced in the Republic of Tuva (southern Siberia, Russia).

The Tuvan way of singing overtones is based on appreciation of complex sounds with multiple layers or textures, which is how the Tuvans developed a wide range of rhythmic and melodic styles during the centuries. Most of the styles are sung with korekteer (korek 'chest' + teer 'sing'), literally 'to sing with chest voice'. Styles include:

  • Khöömei
  • Sygyt
  • Kargyraa (which also uses a second sound source made by false vocal folds. This technique is called "false-folds-diplophony")

Other sub-styles include:

  • Borbangnadyr,
  • Chylandyk,
  • Dumchuktaar,
  • Ezengileer.
  • Byrlang (a unique type of vibrato, mainly applied to khöömei and kargyraa styles)

The melodies are traditionally created by using the 6th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 12th, 13th and sometimes the 16th harmonics, which form the major pentatonic scale, so the 7th and 11th harmonics are carefully skipped.

The most peculiar melody, from Tuvan tradition, is "Artii Sayir", mostly performed in kargyraa style.[citation needed]

Altai and Khakassia edit

Tuva's neighbouring Russian regions, the Altai Republic to the west and Khakassia to the northwest, have developed forms of throat singing called kai (Altay: кай, qay) or khai (Khakas: хай, xay). In Altai, this is used mostly for epic poetry performance, to the instrumental accompaniment of a topshur. Altai narrators (kai-chi) perform in kargyraa, khöömei, and sygyt styles, which are similar to those in Tuva. They also have their own style, a very high harmonics, emerging from kargyraa. Variations of kai are:

  • Karkyra,
  • Sybysky,
  • Homei, and
  • Sygyt.

The first well-known kai-chi was Alexei Kalkin.

Chukchi Peninsula edit

The Chukchi people of the Chukchi Peninsula in the extreme northeast of Russia also practice a form of throat singing.[4]

Tibet edit

Tibetan Buddhist chanting is a subgenre of throat singing, mainly practiced by monks of Tibet, including Khokhonor (Qinghai) province in the Tibetan plateau area, Tibetan monks of Nepal, Bhutan, India, and various locations in the Himalayan region. Most often the chants hold to the lower pitches possible in throat singing. Various ceremonies and prayers call for throat singing in Tibetan Buddhism, often with more than one monk chanting at a time. There are different Tibetan throat singing styles, such as Gyuke (Standard Tibetan: རྒྱུད་སྐད་ Wylie: rgyud skad), which uses the lowest pitch of voice; Dzoke (མཛོ་སྐད་ mdzo skad); and Gyer (གྱེར་ gyer).

Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan edit

The poet-musicians of Kazakhstan and the Uzbek region of Karakalpakstan, known as zhirau, employ throat singing in their epic poetry recitations, accompanied by the dombra.[5] Zhirau singers believe that the ability to throat-sing is an innate gift of selected Kazakhs, and that it cannot be taught.

Besides zhirau, there is another form of throat singing called "Kömeimen än aituw (Көмеймен ән айту)" in Kazakhstan. This technique is similar to throat singing in Altai Republic. The Kömeimen än aituw is now being revived by famous Kazakh ethno-folk musical bands HasSak and Turan Ensemble, after Kazakhs believed that this form of throat singing might have been died out because of Russian conquest or rarely practiced or didn't know them at all due to lack of documentings of this practice.

Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan edit

Balochi Nur Sur is one of the ancient forms of overtone singing and is still popular in parts of Pakistan, Iran, and Afghanistan – especially in the Sulaiman Mountains.[citation needed]

Kurdistan edit

Dengbêj, the Kurdish-Yazidi style of bardic chanting, often incorporates overtones as part of the chant, and in a way which is distinct from other forms of overtone singing. There is an article 'Dengbêj - Kurdish long song and overtone singing' by Nick Hobbs in 2020 where he discusses the use of overtones in dengbêj in some detail. Dengbêj is largely a traditional style of Turkish Kurdistan and practitioners are mostly Anatolian. Dengbêj singers often also sing Kurdish folk song but overtones can rarely be heard in Kurdish traditional music outside of dengbêj.

Europe edit

Sardinia edit

On the island of Sardinia (Italy), especially in the subregion of Barbagia, one of the two different styles of polyphonic singing is marked by the use of throat singing. This kind of choir is called "singing a tenore". The other style, known as cuncordu, does not use throat singing. Cantu a Tenore is practiced by groups of four male singers, each of whom has a distinct role; the 'oche or boche (pronounced /oke/ or /boke/, "voice") is the solo voice, while the mesu 'oche or mesu boche ("half voice"), contra ("against"), and bassu ("bass") – listed in descending pitch order – form a chorus (another meaning of tenore). Boche and mesu boche sing in a regular voice, whereas contra and bassu sings with the use of the false vocal folds, just like the Tuvan Khoomei and Kargyraa techniques. In 2005, Unesco classed the cantu a tenore as an intangible world heritage.[6] The most well known groups who perform the singing a Tenore are from Bitti, Orosei, Oniferi, and Neoneli. Each town has usually more than one group, and their name is based on a specific place, or monument, and then their hometown: for example: Tenore Su Remediu(place) de Orosei(Town).

Northern Europe edit

The Sami people of the northern parts of Sweden, Norway, Finland, and the Kola Peninsula in Russia have a singing genre called yoik. While overtone techniques are not a defining feature of yoik, individuals sometimes utilize overtones in the production of yoik.

Bashkortostan edit

The Bashkirs of Bashkortostan, Russia have a style of overtone singing called özläü (sometimes spelled uzlyau; Bashkort Өзләү), which has nearly died out. In addition, Bashkorts also sing uzlyau while playing the kurai flute, a national instrument. This technique of vocalizing into a flute can also be found in folk music as far west as the Balkans and Hungary.

Andalusia edit

In Flamenco's Cante Jondo singers often include overtonal colour at the end of phrases. Perhaps originating as a way of facilitating sustain, and then becoming an appreciated ornamentation in its own right. There are many examples but Carmen Linares and Duquende often incorporate overtones. [citation needed]



Africa edit

South Africa edit

Some Thembu Xhosa women of South Africa have a low, rhythmic style of throat-singing, similar to the Tuvan Kargyraa style, that is called umngqokolo. It is often accompanied by call-and-response vocals and complicated poly-rhythms.[7][8][9]

Non-traditional styles edit

Canada, United States, and Europe edit

The 1920s Texan singer of cowboy songs, Arthur Miles, independently created a style of overtone singing, similar to sygyt, as a supplement to the normal yodelling of country western music. Blind Willie Johnson, also of Texas, is not a true overtone singer according to National Geographic, but his ability to shift from guttural grunting noises to a soft lullaby is suggestive of the tonal timbres of overtone singing.[10]

Starting in the 1960s, some musicians in the West either have collaborated with traditional throat singers or ventured into the realm of throat singing and overtone singing, or both. Some made original musical contributions and helped this art rediscover its transcultural universality. As harmonics are universal to all physical sounds, the notion of authenticity is best understood in terms of musical quality. Musicians of note in this genre include Collegium Vocale Köln (who first began using this technique in 1968), Michael Vetter, Tran Quang Hai, David Hykes,[11] Jill Purce, Jim Cole, Ry Cooder, Paul Pena (mixing the traditional Tuvan style with that of American Blues), Steve Sklar, and Kiva (specializing in jazz/ world beat genres and composing for overtone choirs). Others include composer Baird Hersey and his group Prana with Krishna Das (overtone singing and Hindu mantra), as well as Canadian songwriter Nathan Rogers, who has become an adept throat singer and teaches Tuvan throat singing in Winnipeg, Manitoba.[citation needed]

Paul Pena was featured in the documentary Genghis Blues, which tells the story of his pilgrimage to Tuva to compete in their annual throat singing competition. The film won the documentary award at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival, and was nominated for an Oscar in 2000.

Tuvan singer Sainkho Namtchylak has collaborated with free jazz musicians such as Evan Parker and Ned Rothenberg. Lester Bowie and Ornette Coleman have worked with the Tenores di Bitti, and Eleanor Hovda has written a piece using the Xhosa style of singing. DJs and performers of electronic music like The KLF have also merged their music with throat singing, overtone singing, or with the theory of harmonics behind it.

Tran Quang Hai, a researcher on overtone singing since 1969 in Paris, France, has published many articles, videos on overtone singing from 1971. His film "The Song of Harmonics" directed by Hugo Zemp in 1989 obtained 4 international prizes in Estonia (1990) France (1990) and Canada (1991).

David Hykes, a pioneer in new music, contemplative chant and healing sounds, founded Harmonic Chant in New York in 1975, the year he also founded his legendary group, The Harmonic Choir, considered to be one of the world's pre-eminent overtone ensembles.

Wolfgang Saus, from Germany, is considered one of the major teachers/performers of "polyphonic overtone singing" in Europe. Formerly trained as a classical baritone, his unique skills make him instantly recognizable. He's also a renowned composer and arranger of polyphonic overtone singing music for solo voice and choirs.

A cappella singer Avi Kaplan also exhibited overtone singing during his group's (Pentatonix) performances. He merged throat singing together with a cappella dubstep.

The Overtone Choir Spektrum from Prague, Czech Republic, is unique among overtone choirs, particularly because it connects traditional choir singing with overtone techniques. It is the only one of its kind in the Czech Republic, and one of only a few in the world.[2] [3]

MuOM Ecstatic Voices is another unique and peculiar overtone singing choir, as it combines in its own compositions Western overtone singing and Tuvan/Mongolian throat singing techniques (such as kargyraa, khoomei, sygyt, ezengiler, bonbarnadyr, among others). Created in Barcelona in 2008, with 8 singers on average, it has specialised in the creation of overtone polyphonies, (each singer is emitting an overtone) in addition to the polyphony of the fundamentals, creating two distinguishable sound planes.[4]

Sherden Overtone Choir was founded in 2016 in Sardinia by Ilaria Orefice and Giovanni Bortoluzzi. The choir combines Tuvan Throat Singing Styles with Sardinian Throat singing.

Contemporary multi-instrumentalist performer The Suitcase Junket employs a self-taught overtone singing, or throat singing technique in his live and recorded performances.

Several contemporary classical composers have incorporated overtone singing into their works. Karlheinz Stockhausen was one of the first, with Stimmung in 1968. Tran Quang Hai (b.1944), a French national of Vietnamese origin, created the composition "Ve Nguon" with the collaboration of Vietnamese composer Nguyen Van Tuong in 1975, in Paris.[citation needed] "Past Life Melodies" for SATB chorus by Australian composer Sarah Hopkins (b. 1958) also calls for this technique. In Water Passion after St. Matthew by Tan Dun, the soprano and bass soloists sing in a variety of techniques including overtone singing of the Mongolian style.

American singer Lalah Hathaway masters a rare type of multiphonic overtone singing which allows her to "split" her voice and sing several notes at the same time.[12][13][14] Hathaway earned her first career GRAMMY for 2013 for Best R&B Performance for "Something" with Snarky Puppy, where she displayed this ability.[15] Hathaway also demonstrated this talent on the Jennifer Hudson Show. [16]

In 2014 German singer Anna-Maria Hefele went viral on YouTube with her "polyphonic overtone" singing. The Huffington Post has commented on her "amazing ability" and her singing being "utterly bizarre".[17] On 10 October 2014, she was number two on The Guardian's Viral Video Chart,[18] with one online video titled Polyphonic Overtone Singing, which features Hefele as she demonstrates and explains overtones. As of February 2023, this video has received more than 20 million views.

Istanbul-based British singer Nikolai Galen incorporates overtones into his experimental work. They can be heard on his solo album Emanuel Vigeland, the Black Paintings album Screams and Silence and the Hoca Nasreddin album A Headful of Birds.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Titze 2008; Titze 1994; Pariser & Zimmerman 2004
  2. ^ Welch, Graham; Sundberg, Johan (2002), Parncutt; McPherson (eds.), "Solo Voice", The Science & Psychology of Music Performance, Oxford University Press, pp. 252–268, doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195138108.003.0016, ISBN 978-0-19-513810-8, retrieved 2021-10-03
  3. ^ Sklar, 2005
  4. ^ Deschênes, Bruno (2002-03-04). "Inuit Throat-Singing". Mustrad.org.uk. Retrieved 2008-11-27.
  5. ^ Margarethe, Adams (2013). "The Fiddle's Voice: Timbre, Musical Learning, and Collaborative Ethnography in Central and Inner Asia". Collaborative Anthropologies. 6 (1). University of Nebraska Press: 149–169. doi:10.1353/cla.2013.0010. S2CID 191364601.
  6. ^ Bandinu 2006.
  7. ^ Dr. Dave Dargie "Some recent developments in Xhosa music : activities of the Ngqoko Traditional Xhoa Music Ensemble, and at the University of Fort Hare". Retrieved on 2014-04-23.
  8. ^ Dr. Dave Dargie "UMNGQOKOLO – Thembu Xhosa – OVERTONE SINGING filmed 1985–1998 in South Africa". Retrieved on 2014-04-23.
  9. ^ Dargie, Dave. "Xhosa Overtone Singing" The world of South African music: A reader. Cambridge Scholars Press, 2005. 152–155 Google Books Web. 23 Apr. 2014. [1]
  10. ^ Miller, Bruce. . National Geographic. Archived from the original on May 26, 2012. Retrieved February 20, 2012.
  11. ^ Bellamy and MacLean 2005, 515.
  12. ^ ""Overtones & Polyphonic Singing" Lalah Hathaway Interview Part 8". YouTube. March 10, 2024. Retrieved April 12, 2024.
  13. ^ "Snarky Puppy feat. Lalah Hathaway – Something (Family Dinner – Volume One)". YouTube. September 23, 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  14. ^ "Lalah Hathaway Does the Impossible and So Can You". HuffPost. November 11, 2014 [September 11, 2014]. Retrieved April 12, 2024.
  15. ^ "How did Lalah Hathaway make 'Something'?". Grammy.com. May 15, 2017. Retrieved March 28, 2020.
  16. ^ "Jennifer Hudson Blown Away Heating Lalah Hathaway 'Split' Her Voice". YouTube. May 8, 2023. Retrieved April 12, 2024.
  17. ^ "German Musician Anna-Maria Hefele Demonstrates Polyphonic Overtone Singing, And It's Amazing". Huffington Post. 7 October 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  18. ^ Perraudin, Frances (10 October 2014). "Viral Video Chart". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 October 2014.

References edit

  • Bandinu, Omar (2006). "", Siti 2, no.3 (July–September): 16–21.
  • Bellamy, Isabel, and Donald MacLean (2005). Radiant Healing: The Many Paths to Personal Harmony and Planetary Wholeness. Buddina, Queensland (Australia): Joshua Books. ISBN 0-9756878-5-9
  • Haouli, Janete El (2006). Demetrio Stratos: en busca de la voz-música. México, D. F.: Radio Educación – Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes.
  • Hefele, Eklund & McAllister (2019). "Polyphonic Overtone Singing: An Acoustic and Physiological (MRI) Analysis and a First-person Description of a Unique Mode of Singing". In: Mattias Heldner (ed.): Proceedings from Fonetik 2019, 10–12 June 2019, Stockholm, Sweden. PERILUS XXVII, ISSN 0282-6690, ISBN 978-91-7797-984-5 (print version), ISBN 978-91-7797-985-2 (electronic version), doi:10.5281/zenodo.3246011, pp. 91–96.
  • Levin, Theodore C., and Michael E. Edgerton (1999). "The Throat Singers of Tuva". Scientific American 281, no. 3 (September): 80–87.
  • Levin, Theodore, and Valentina Süzükei (2006). Where Rivers and Mountains Sing. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-34715-7.
  • Pariser, David, and Enid Zimmerman (2004). "Learning in the Visual Arts: Characteristics of Gifted and Talented Individuals," in Handbook of Research and Policy in Art Education, Elliot W. Eisner and Michael D. Day (editors). Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. p. 388. ISBN 978-0-8058-4972-1.
  • Saus, Wolfgang (2004). Oberton Singen. Schönau im Odenwald: Traumzeit-Verlag. ISBN 3-933825-36-9 (German).
  • Sklar, Steve (2005). "Types of throat singing" "[5]"
  • Titze, Ingo R. (1994). Principles of Voice Production. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-717893-3 Reprinted Iowa City: National Center for Voice and Speech, 2000. (NCVS.org) ISBN 978-0-87414-122-1 .
  • Titze, Ingo R. (2008). "The Human Instrument". Scientific American 298, no. 1 (July):94–101. PM 18225701
  • Tongeren, Mark C. van (2002). Overtone Singing: Physics and Metaphysics of Harmonics in East and West. Amsterdam: Fusica. ISBN 90-807163-2-4 (pbk), ISBN 90-807163-1-6 (cloth).
  • Tran Quang Hai (2018) "50 Years of Research in Vietnamese Traditional Music and Overtone Singing". 462p, Tu Sach Khai Tri, California, USA,ISBN 978-1-7902-3908-5

External links edit

  • Overtone singing used in choir music – Overtone Choir Spektrum & Jan Stanek
  • Overtone singing in a water tower – Jim Cole & Spectral Voices
  • Audio samples of overtone and throat singing
  • Online overtone singing generator
  • Overtone singing research.
  • Harmonic singing vs. normal singing – acoustical measurements and explanation
  • Scientific American: The Throat Singers of Tuva
  • Types of Throat Singing with Tips /Tuvan Throat-Singing by Steve Sklar
  • Audio samples of throat singing
  • www.overtonesinging.com Overtone Singing with Rollin Rachele
  • Tuva throat singers on Flickr
  • Kiva's audio samples and information on overtone singing
  • Chukchi throat singing (Zoïa Tagrin'a, Olga Letykaï)
  • [6] – articles, video clips on overtone singing in Tuva, Mongolia, South Africa, Tibet
  • [7] – articles, video clips on overtone singing in the world.

overtone, singing, confused, with, throat, singing, inuit, ainu, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, new. Not to be confused with throat singing of the Inuit and Ainu This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Overtone singing news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Overtone singing also known as overtone chanting harmonic singing polyphonic overtone singing or diphonic singing is a set of singing techniques in which the vocalist manipulates the resonances of the vocal tract to arouse the perception of additional separate notes beyond the fundamental frequency that is being produced source source source source source source source Polyphonic overtone singing Pachelbel s Canon performed by Wolfgang Saus Chirgilchin performing various styles of Tuvan throat singing From a fundamental pitch made by the human voice the belonging harmonic overtones can be selectively amplified by changing the vocal tract the dimensions and the shape of the resonant cavities of the mouth and the pharynx 1 2 That resonant tuning allows singers to create more than one pitch at the same time the fundamental and one or more selected overtones and usually generates a single fundamental frequency with their vocal folds Overtone singing should not be confused with throat singing although many throat singing techniques include overtone singing As mentioned overtone singing involves the careful manipulations of the vocal tract and throat singing is mostly related to the voice source Contents 1 Asia 1 1 Mongolia and Buryatia 1 2 Tuva 1 3 Altai and Khakassia 1 4 Chukchi Peninsula 1 5 Tibet 1 6 Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan 1 7 Pakistan Iran and Afghanistan 1 8 Kurdistan 2 Europe 2 1 Sardinia 2 2 Northern Europe 2 3 Bashkortostan 2 4 Andalusia 3 Africa 3 1 South Africa 4 Non traditional styles 4 1 Canada United States and Europe 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksAsia editMongolia and Buryatia edit Main article Music of Mongolia Overtone singing It is thought that the art of overtone singing originated in southwestern Mongolia in today s Khovd Province and Govi Altai region Nowadays overtone singing is found throughout the country and Mongolia is often considered the most active center of overtone singing in the world 3 The most commonly practiced style called khoomii Cyrillic hoomij can be divided up into the following categories Uruulyn labial khoomii Tagnain palatal khoomii Khamryn nasal khoomii Bagalzuuryn khooloin glottal throat khoomii Tseejiin khondiin khevliin chest cavity stomach khoomii Turlegt khosmoljin khoomii khoomii combined with long song Mongolians also use many other singing styles such as karkhiraa literally growling and isgeree Tuva edit Main article Tuvan throat singing Tuvan overtone singing is practiced in the Republic of Tuva southern Siberia Russia The Tuvan way of singing overtones is based on appreciation of complex sounds with multiple layers or textures which is how the Tuvans developed a wide range of rhythmic and melodic styles during the centuries Most of the styles are sung with korekteer korek chest teer sing literally to sing with chest voice Styles include Khoomei Sygyt Kargyraa which also uses a second sound source made by false vocal folds This technique is called false folds diplophony Other sub styles include Borbangnadyr Chylandyk Dumchuktaar Ezengileer Byrlang a unique type of vibrato mainly applied to khoomei and kargyraa styles The melodies are traditionally created by using the 6th 8th 9th 10th 12th 13th and sometimes the 16th harmonics which form the major pentatonic scale so the 7th and 11th harmonics are carefully skipped The most peculiar melody from Tuvan tradition is Artii Sayir mostly performed in kargyraa style citation needed Altai and Khakassia edit Tuva s neighbouring Russian regions the Altai Republic to the west and Khakassia to the northwest have developed forms of throat singing called kai Altay kaj qay or khai Khakas haj xay In Altai this is used mostly for epic poetry performance to the instrumental accompaniment of a topshur Altai narrators kai chi perform in kargyraa khoomei and sygyt styles which are similar to those in Tuva They also have their own style a very high harmonics emerging from kargyraa Variations of kai are Karkyra Sybysky Homei and Sygyt The first well known kai chi was Alexei Kalkin Chukchi Peninsula edit The Chukchi people of the Chukchi Peninsula in the extreme northeast of Russia also practice a form of throat singing 4 Tibet edit Tibetan Buddhist chanting is a subgenre of throat singing mainly practiced by monks of Tibet including Khokhonor Qinghai province in the Tibetan plateau area Tibetan monks of Nepal Bhutan India and various locations in the Himalayan region Most often the chants hold to the lower pitches possible in throat singing Various ceremonies and prayers call for throat singing in Tibetan Buddhism often with more than one monk chanting at a time There are different Tibetan throat singing styles such as Gyuke Standard Tibetan ར ད ས ད Wylie rgyud skad which uses the lowest pitch of voice Dzoke མཛ ས ད mdzo skad and Gyer ག ར gyer Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan edit The poet musicians of Kazakhstan and the Uzbek region of Karakalpakstan known as zhirau employ throat singing in their epic poetry recitations accompanied by the dombra 5 Zhirau singers believe that the ability to throat sing is an innate gift of selected Kazakhs and that it cannot be taught Besides zhirau there is another form of throat singing called Komeimen an aituw Komejmen әn ajtu in Kazakhstan This technique is similar to throat singing in Altai Republic The Komeimen an aituw is now being revived by famous Kazakh ethno folk musical bands HasSak and Turan Ensemble after Kazakhs believed that this form of throat singing might have been died out because of Russian conquest or rarely practiced or didn t know them at all due to lack of documentings of this practice Pakistan Iran and Afghanistan edit Balochi Nur Sur is one of the ancient forms of overtone singing and is still popular in parts of Pakistan Iran and Afghanistan especially in the Sulaiman Mountains citation needed Kurdistan edit Dengbej the Kurdish Yazidi style of bardic chanting often incorporates overtones as part of the chant and in a way which is distinct from other forms of overtone singing There is an article Dengbej Kurdish long song and overtone singing by Nick Hobbs in 2020 where he discusses the use of overtones in dengbej in some detail Dengbej is largely a traditional style of Turkish Kurdistan and practitioners are mostly Anatolian Dengbej singers often also sing Kurdish folk song but overtones can rarely be heard in Kurdish traditional music outside of dengbej Europe editSardinia edit Main article Cantu a tenore On the island of Sardinia Italy especially in the subregion of Barbagia one of the two different styles of polyphonic singing is marked by the use of throat singing This kind of choir is called singing a tenore The other style known as cuncordu does not use throat singing Cantu a Tenore is practiced by groups of four male singers each of whom has a distinct role the oche or boche pronounced oke or boke voice is the solo voice while the mesu oche or mesu boche half voice contra against and bassu bass listed in descending pitch order form a chorus another meaning of tenore Boche and mesu boche sing in a regular voice whereas contra and bassu sings with the use of the false vocal folds just like the Tuvan Khoomei and Kargyraa techniques In 2005 Unesco classed the cantu a tenore as an intangible world heritage 6 The most well known groups who perform the singing a Tenore are from Bitti Orosei Oniferi and Neoneli Each town has usually more than one group and their name is based on a specific place or monument and then their hometown for example Tenore Su Remediu place de Orosei Town Northern Europe edit The Sami people of the northern parts of Sweden Norway Finland and the Kola Peninsula in Russia have a singing genre called yoik While overtone techniques are not a defining feature of yoik individuals sometimes utilize overtones in the production of yoik Bashkortostan edit The Bashkirs of Bashkortostan Russia have a style of overtone singing called ozlau sometimes spelled uzlyau Bashkort Өzlәү which has nearly died out In addition Bashkorts also sing uzlyau while playing the kurai flute a national instrument This technique of vocalizing into a flute can also be found in folk music as far west as the Balkans and Hungary Andalusia edit In Flamenco s Cante Jondo singers often include overtonal colour at the end of phrases Perhaps originating as a way of facilitating sustain and then becoming an appreciated ornamentation in its own right There are many examples but Carmen Linares and Duquende often incorporate overtones citation needed Africa editSouth Africa edit Some Thembu Xhosa women of South Africa have a low rhythmic style of throat singing similar to the Tuvan Kargyraa style that is called umngqokolo It is often accompanied by call and response vocals and complicated poly rhythms 7 8 9 Non traditional styles editCanada United States and Europe edit The 1920s Texan singer of cowboy songs Arthur Miles independently created a style of overtone singing similar to sygyt as a supplement to the normal yodelling of country western music Blind Willie Johnson also of Texas is not a true overtone singer according to National Geographic but his ability to shift from guttural grunting noises to a soft lullaby is suggestive of the tonal timbres of overtone singing 10 Starting in the 1960s some musicians in the West either have collaborated with traditional throat singers or ventured into the realm of throat singing and overtone singing or both Some made original musical contributions and helped this art rediscover its transcultural universality As harmonics are universal to all physical sounds the notion of authenticity is best understood in terms of musical quality Musicians of note in this genre include Collegium Vocale Koln who first began using this technique in 1968 Michael Vetter Tran Quang Hai David Hykes 11 Jill Purce Jim Cole Ry Cooder Paul Pena mixing the traditional Tuvan style with that of American Blues Steve Sklar and Kiva specializing in jazz world beat genres and composing for overtone choirs Others include composer Baird Hersey and his group Prana with Krishna Das overtone singing and Hindu mantra as well as Canadian songwriter Nathan Rogers who has become an adept throat singer and teaches Tuvan throat singing in Winnipeg Manitoba citation needed Paul Pena was featured in the documentary Genghis Blues which tells the story of his pilgrimage to Tuva to compete in their annual throat singing competition The film won the documentary award at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival and was nominated for an Oscar in 2000 Tuvan singer Sainkho Namtchylak has collaborated with free jazz musicians such as Evan Parker and Ned Rothenberg Lester Bowie and Ornette Coleman have worked with the Tenores di Bitti and Eleanor Hovda has written a piece using the Xhosa style of singing DJs and performers of electronic music like The KLF have also merged their music with throat singing overtone singing or with the theory of harmonics behind it Tran Quang Hai a researcher on overtone singing since 1969 in Paris France has published many articles videos on overtone singing from 1971 His film The Song of Harmonics directed by Hugo Zemp in 1989 obtained 4 international prizes in Estonia 1990 France 1990 and Canada 1991 David Hykes a pioneer in new music contemplative chant and healing sounds founded Harmonic Chant in New York in 1975 the year he also founded his legendary group The Harmonic Choir considered to be one of the world s pre eminent overtone ensembles Wolfgang Saus from Germany is considered one of the major teachers performers of polyphonic overtone singing in Europe Formerly trained as a classical baritone his unique skills make him instantly recognizable He s also a renowned composer and arranger of polyphonic overtone singing music for solo voice and choirs A cappella singer Avi Kaplan also exhibited overtone singing during his group s Pentatonix performances He merged throat singing together with a cappella dubstep The Overtone Choir Spektrum from Prague Czech Republic is unique among overtone choirs particularly because it connects traditional choir singing with overtone techniques It is the only one of its kind in the Czech Republic and one of only a few in the world 2 3 MuOM Ecstatic Voices is another unique and peculiar overtone singing choir as it combines in its own compositions Western overtone singing and Tuvan Mongolian throat singing techniques such as kargyraa khoomei sygyt ezengiler bonbarnadyr among others Created in Barcelona in 2008 with 8 singers on average it has specialised in the creation of overtone polyphonies each singer is emitting an overtone in addition to the polyphony of the fundamentals creating two distinguishable sound planes 4 Sherden Overtone Choir was founded in 2016 in Sardinia by Ilaria Orefice and Giovanni Bortoluzzi The choir combines Tuvan Throat Singing Styles with Sardinian Throat singing Contemporary multi instrumentalist performer The Suitcase Junket employs a self taught overtone singing or throat singing technique in his live and recorded performances Several contemporary classical composers have incorporated overtone singing into their works Karlheinz Stockhausen was one of the first with Stimmung in 1968 Tran Quang Hai b 1944 a French national of Vietnamese origin created the composition Ve Nguon with the collaboration of Vietnamese composer Nguyen Van Tuong in 1975 in Paris citation needed Past Life Melodies for SATB chorus by Australian composer Sarah Hopkins b 1958 also calls for this technique In Water Passion after St Matthew by Tan Dun the soprano and bass soloists sing in a variety of techniques including overtone singing of the Mongolian style American singer Lalah Hathaway masters a rare type of multiphonic overtone singing which allows her to split her voice and sing several notes at the same time 12 13 14 Hathaway earned her first career GRAMMY for 2013 for Best R amp B Performance for Something with Snarky Puppy where she displayed this ability 15 Hathaway also demonstrated this talent on the Jennifer Hudson Show 16 In 2014 German singer Anna Maria Hefele went viral on YouTube with her polyphonic overtone singing The Huffington Post has commented on her amazing ability and her singing being utterly bizarre 17 On 10 October 2014 she was number two on The Guardian s Viral Video Chart 18 with one online video titled Polyphonic Overtone Singing which features Hefele as she demonstrates and explains overtones As of February 2023 this video has received more than 20 million views Istanbul based British singer Nikolai Galen incorporates overtones into his experimental work They can be heard on his solo album Emanuel Vigeland the Black Paintings album Screams and Silence and the Hoca Nasreddin album A Headful of Birds See also editHuman voice List of overtone musiciansNotes edit Titze 2008 Titze 1994 Pariser amp Zimmerman 2004 Welch Graham Sundberg Johan 2002 Parncutt McPherson eds Solo Voice The Science amp Psychology of Music Performance Oxford University Press pp 252 268 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780195138108 003 0016 ISBN 978 0 19 513810 8 retrieved 2021 10 03 Sklar 2005 Deschenes Bruno 2002 03 04 Inuit Throat Singing Mustrad org uk Retrieved 2008 11 27 Margarethe Adams 2013 The Fiddle s Voice Timbre Musical Learning and Collaborative Ethnography in Central and Inner Asia Collaborative Anthropologies 6 1 University of Nebraska Press 149 169 doi 10 1353 cla 2013 0010 S2CID 191364601 Bandinu 2006 Dr Dave Dargie Some recent developments in Xhosa music activities of the Ngqoko Traditional Xhoa Music Ensemble and at the University of Fort Hare Retrieved on 2014 04 23 Dr Dave Dargie UMNGQOKOLO Thembu Xhosa OVERTONE SINGING filmed 1985 1998 in South Africa Retrieved on 2014 04 23 Dargie Dave Xhosa Overtone Singing The world of South African music A reader Cambridge Scholars Press 2005 152 155 Google Books Web 23 Apr 2014 1 Miller Bruce Overtone Singing Music National Geographic Archived from the original on May 26 2012 Retrieved February 20 2012 Bellamy and MacLean 2005 515 Overtones amp Polyphonic Singing Lalah Hathaway Interview Part 8 YouTube March 10 2024 Retrieved April 12 2024 Snarky Puppy feat Lalah Hathaway Something Family Dinner Volume One YouTube September 23 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 Retrieved April 26 2020 Lalah Hathaway Does the Impossible and So Can You HuffPost November 11 2014 September 11 2014 Retrieved April 12 2024 How did Lalah Hathaway make Something Grammy com May 15 2017 Retrieved March 28 2020 Jennifer Hudson Blown Away Heating Lalah Hathaway Split Her Voice YouTube May 8 2023 Retrieved April 12 2024 German Musician Anna Maria Hefele Demonstrates Polyphonic Overtone Singing And It s Amazing Huffington Post 7 October 2014 Retrieved 12 October 2014 Perraudin Frances 10 October 2014 Viral Video Chart The Guardian Retrieved 12 October 2014 References editBandinu Omar 2006 Il canto a tenore dai nuraghi all Unesco Siti 2 no 3 July September 16 21 Bellamy Isabel and Donald MacLean 2005 Radiant Healing The Many Paths to Personal Harmony and Planetary Wholeness Buddina Queensland Australia Joshua Books ISBN 0 9756878 5 9 Haouli Janete El 2006 Demetrio Stratos en busca de la voz musica Mexico D F Radio Educacion Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes Hefele Eklund amp McAllister 2019 Polyphonic Overtone Singing An Acoustic and Physiological MRI Analysis and a First person Description of a Unique Mode of Singing In Mattias Heldner ed Proceedings from Fonetik 2019 10 12 June 2019 Stockholm Sweden PERILUS XXVII ISSN 0282 6690 ISBN 978 91 7797 984 5 print version ISBN 978 91 7797 985 2 electronic version doi 10 5281 zenodo 3246011 pp 91 96 Levin Theodore C and Michael E Edgerton 1999 The Throat Singers of Tuva Scientific American 281 no 3 September 80 87 Levin Theodore and Valentina Suzukei 2006 Where Rivers and Mountains Sing Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 34715 7 Pariser David and Enid Zimmerman 2004 Learning in the Visual Arts Characteristics of Gifted and Talented Individuals in Handbook of Research and Policy in Art Education Elliot W Eisner and Michael D Day editors Lawrence Erlbaum Associates p 388 ISBN 978 0 8058 4972 1 Saus Wolfgang 2004 Oberton Singen Schonau im Odenwald Traumzeit Verlag ISBN 3 933825 36 9 German Sklar Steve 2005 Types of throat singing 5 Titze Ingo R 1994 Principles of Voice Production Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 717893 3 Reprinted Iowa City National Center for Voice and Speech 2000 NCVS org ISBN 978 0 87414 122 1 Titze Ingo R 2008 The Human Instrument Scientific American 298 no 1 July 94 101 PM 18225701 Tongeren Mark C van 2002 Overtone Singing Physics and Metaphysics of Harmonics in East and West Amsterdam Fusica ISBN 90 807163 2 4 pbk ISBN 90 807163 1 6 cloth Tran Quang Hai 2018 50 Years of Research in Vietnamese Traditional Music and Overtone Singing 462p Tu Sach Khai Tri California USA ISBN 978 1 7902 3908 5External links editThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references September 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message Overtone singing used in choir music Overtone Choir Spektrum amp Jan Stanek Overtone singing in a water tower Jim Cole amp Spectral Voices Audio samples of overtone and throat singing Online overtone singing generator Ken Ichi Sakakibara Overtone singing research Harmonic singing vs normal singing acoustical measurements and explanation Scientific American The Throat Singers of Tuva Types of Throat Singing with Tips Tuvan Throat Singing by Steve Sklar Observation of the Laryngeal Movements for Throat Singing Vibration of two pairs of folds in human larynx Audio samples of throat singing www overtonesinging com Overtone Singing with Rollin Rachele Tuva throat singers on Flickr Kiva s audio samples and information on overtone singing Read in Serbian on muzickacentrala com Chukchi throat singing Zoia Tagrin a Olga Letykai Overtone singing music 6 articles video clips on overtone singing in Tuva Mongolia South Africa Tibet 7 articles video clips on overtone singing in the world Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Overtone singing amp oldid 1219308722, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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