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BBC World Music Award nominees Huun Huur Tu practice the folk sound common in the Tuva Republic, a vocal intonation so precise and resonant, you can almost hear the vocal chords reverberating like they belong on a well-played string instrument.
—Washington Post
The whistling of the high-mountain wind forms eerie overtones and a postmodern statement. The repeated thrum of a string against wood and hide turns into a meditative, evocative figure straight from the avant-garde. The descendants of isolated Siberian herdsmen make serious, strangely universal music out of some of the planet’s quirkiest acoustics.
The acoustic quartet Huun-Huur-Tu prove that Tuvan music can take plenty of intelligent innovation. Using traditional instruments and drawing subtly on twentieth-century composers, funky rhythms, and the decades they spent honing their overtone singing, the band members transform ancient songs into complex acoustic compositions. Beginning over seventeen years ago, Huun-Huur-Tu has almost single-handedly introduced the outside world to the boundless wealth of Tuvan traditions, thanks in great part to their superior musicianship. Hailing from the high pastures of the Altai Mountains in south central Siberia, the musicians have spent many years perfecting their throat singing and instrumental approaches as well as interpreting the vibrant songs of their homeland.
Well-established as “world music” masters, Huun-Huur-Tu has long been involved in pushing the envelope and digging deep into their roots to find new possibilities. The most recent member to join the group, Radik Tyulyush, a third-generation throat-singer, talented multi-instrumentalist, and conservatory-trained composer, added a dose of youthful energy and rhythmic complexity recalling good old American funk.
Producer’s Circle member Tom G.