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Robert Kobler

TMV World Member
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Everything posted by Robert Kobler

  1. And another post! I had the chance to watch Huun Huur Tu 1998 or 1999 in my hometown Passau, Germany and it did sound really, really cool. Although, talking to a technician, it was quite difficult for him to mix the the instruments of this foreign culture which are very native and as he told me did make only very silent sounds so he had to amplify them very strongly. Not for the voices, they were mindblowing! Robert again
  2. Referring to the former posts, I must say that it took more than a year for me to get overtones that could really be heard loudly. I had no possibility to lear it from youtube or other media as I didn´t have a computer then and the internet was far away in time to be used by everyone. All I had was actually a video of a concert of Huun Huur Tu looking concentrated on the movements of the singers´ larynx (as far as it can be seen on the outside). Getting throatsinging was even more difficult, as I had nothing I could learn of. It was nothing but trial and error. Was a cool feeling when the first "growl" appeared and it was worth some pain! Keep on singing! Robert
  3. Hello alltogether, I´m new in the forum and it´s quite astonishing for me to read about overtone and throatsinging here. The first time I heard of tuvinian throat and overtonesinging was in 1997 on a video of the band Huun HuurTu with Kaigal-ool Khovalyg singing overtone AND thoratsinging at once. From then on I have tried to learn it myself and ave been quite successful although for me it is only a short vocal effect (some seconds) which makes me hoarse. Searching for other throat singers I found Tibetan Monks singing the Yamantaka-Ritual, which is absolutely amazing although kind of frightening. Here is an example:
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