mills

My name is Mills Baker; I write about love, culture, art, religion, mental illness, philosophy, memory, politics and the rather random.

My Photo Blog
Flickr / Videos
Facebook / Twitter
Email / Archive


Overtone singing.

Mongolians at a bar in Beijing perform overtone singing, in which one person sings two notes simultaneously; I remember hearing it done by monks visiting my elementary school years ago. It’s almost trance-inducing, and for reasons I can’t explain the song above -better in person, of course- caused me to tear up.

Regarding this form of singing among the Tuvans: “[It] seems to have arisen as a result of geographic location and culture. The open landscape of Tuva allows for the sounds to carry a great distance. Ethnomusicologists studying throat singing in these areas mark khoomei as an integral part in the ancient pastoral animism that is still practiced today.”

Isn’t it beautiful to imagine “the open landscape” allowing such sounds to “carry a great distance,” part of an “ancient pastoral animism”?

Notes
  1. heylight reblogged this from findlilyhere and added:
    this is way better than my band (WHO BY THE WAY HAS A SHOW TONIGHT) hhehe
  2. findlilyhere reblogged this from robot-heart
  3. robot-heart reblogged this from mills
  4. brianpan reblogged this from mills
  5. huliwuxian reblogged this from mills
  6. roads2roam reblogged this from mills
  7. tristn reblogged this from mills and added:
    phonology lecture about the articulatory gestures...internal acoustics
  8. nayadiction reblogged this from mills and added:
    i will be in mongolia...july. we’ll be volunteering at an orphanage rotating between...
  9. lefan reblogged this from numbersixspeaks-deactivated2009 and added:
    There is an excellent book Tuva or Bustabout physicist Richard Feynman’s quest to enter Tannu Tuva during the Soviet...
  10. mills posted this