Music of Mongolia
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Besides the traditional music,
Traditional music
Overtone singing
Overtone singing, known as höömij (throat),[1] is a singing technique also found in the general Central Asian area. This type of singing is considered more as a type of instrument.[2] It involves different ways of breathing: producing two distinctively audible pitches at the same time, one being a whistle like sound and the other being a drone bass. The sound is a result of locked breaths in the chest.
In Mongolia, the most famous throat-singers include Khalkhas like Gereltsogt and Sundui.
Khalkha singers have conceptualized Mongolian lyrical xöömei into several different styles while kharkhiraa remains a separate technique.[3]
- uyangiin xöömii /melodic or lyrical xöömii
- uruulyn / labial xöömii
- tagnain /palatal xöömii
- xamryn/ nasal xöömii
- bagaIzuuryn, xooloin / glottal, throat xöömii
- tseejiin xondiin, xeviiin / chest cavity, stomach xöömii
- türlegt or xosmoljin xöömii / xöömii combined with long song
Long song
"Long songs" (Urtyin duu[4]) are one of the main formats of Mongolian music. Firstly, when Genghis Khan first united Mongolia (13th century), many different tribes were brought together, and this allowed sharing of music that had not happened before. The song "Ertnii Saikhan" was a popular song at weddings and imperial meetings, and the song "Oyunt Khuu" was a popular song.[5] The most distinguishing feature is that each syllable of text is extended for a long duration; a four-minute song may only consist of ten words.[6] Other features are a slow tempo, wide intervals and no fixed rhythm. The richer and longer hold a singer has, the more appreciated the singer. Lyrical themes vary depending on context; they can be philosophical, religious, romance, or celebratory, and often use horses as a symbol or theme repeated throughout the song. Eastern Mongols typically use a morin khuur (horse-head fiddle) as accompaniment, sometimes with a type of indigenous flute named limbe. Oirat groups of the Western Mongols typically sing long songs unaccompanied or accompanied with the igil.
Court music
In neighboring China's autonomous region of
Pop music
Largely unknown outside of Mongolia, there is a thriving popular music scene centred in the city of
Hip hop/Rap has gained considerable popularity in Mongolia. From the early 1990s, Mongolian teenagers and youngsters formed dancing groups with anywhere between three and thirty members that started to compete in national tournaments. This was the beginning of the Mongolian hip-hop movement. For some reason, single rappers had never "made it" into the Mongolian hip-hop scene. Although, the Mongolian-Swedish rapper Battulga Munkhbayar, also known as The yellow Eminem and 50 öre, has made it to the big stages in Sweden because of his unique rap style. He wasn't so successful as a pickpocket on the streets of Bangkok, though, being arrested there for thieving a Slovak tourist's wallet in 2019.[7]
Early bands include Har Tas and MC Boys. The latter two groups represented the beginning of rap in Mongolia. Their songs mostly stressed social issues, philosophy and rebellious ideas. A later generation consisted of bands like Dain Ba Enkh, 2 Khüü, Erkh-Chölöö, Lumino, Mon-Ta-Rap, Ice Top, Odko, Gee, Quiza, B.A.T and URMC. They continued with similar messages as their predecessors but also came to include “soft” touches in their songs, which faced strong resistance from hardcore rap fans but were welcomed by the general public.
Popular folk music
There is also a long established and distinctive "Mongolian pop" genre that occupies the same place on the musical spectrum as Japanese Enka music or Western soft-pop-oriented folk music or country music. Classic singers from the late 20th and early 21st centuries include Vandan and Dulamsüren, Batsükh, Tömörkhuyag and Egschiglen. Some of the repeatedly heard lyrical themes are very distinctive for Mongolia: heartfelt tributes to the songwriter's mother, for example, or paeans to great horses.
Mongolian popular folk music is not considered
Classical music
Mongolia features a rich tradition of classical music and ballet. The classical music owes its prosperity in the 2nd half of the 20th century to a patronage of then Socialist government that favoured Western and Russian/Soviet classical arts to Western pop culture. In addition, the Mongolian composers developed a rich diversity of national symphony and ballet.
Musical Instruments
Horse-head fiddle
The horse-head fiddle, or morin khuur, is a distinctively Mongolian instrument and is seen as a symbol of the country. The instrument has two strings. There is some controversy regarding the traditional carving of a horse on the upper end of the pegbox. Some scholars believe that this is proof that the instrument was originally a shamanistic instrument. The staffs of shamans have a horse similarly carved on top; the horse is a much-revered animal in Mongolia.
Other traditional instruments
Other instruments used in Mongolian traditional music include the shudraga or shanz (a three-stringed, long-necked, strummed
See also
- The Hu
- Growl of Clown
- Bukhchuluun Ganburged
- Khusugtun
- Culture of Mongolia
- Architecture of Mongolia
- Soyol Erdene
- Music of Inner Mongolia
- Music of Buryatia
- Music of Kalmykia
- Music of Tuva
- Music of East Asia
- Music of Central Asia
References
- ^ "Traditional Instruments and Music of the Mongolia people - text in English".
- ^ "Mongolian art and culture".
- ^ Pegg, Carole (13 March 2020). "Mongolian conceptualizations of overtone singing (xöömii)". TRAN QUANG HAI's world throat singing. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
- ^ "Traditional Instruments and Music of the Mongolia people - text in English".
- ^ "TRADITIONAL MONGOLIAN MUSIC | Facts and Details".
- ^ "Mongolian Music and Traditional Musical Instruments Mongolia".
- ^ Mongolian pickpockets caught, Bangkok Post, April 3rd, 2019.
- Pegg, Carole. "Mongolian Music, Dance, and Oral Narrative: Performing Diverse Identities". 2001. University of Washington Press. Book & CD. ISBN 0-295-98112-1
- Pegg, Carole. "Sixty Horses in My Herd". 2000. In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), World Music, Vol. 2: Latin & North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific, pp 189–197. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books. ISBN 1-85828-636-0
- Central Asia in Words and Pictures: Mongolia
Further reading
- Marsh, Peter, Mongolian Rock and Pop Book: Mongolia Sings its Own Song. 1999. Press Institute of Mongolia/UNDP Mongolia Communications Office.[1] ISBN 99929-5-018-8