Throat singing is something that crosses more cultures than many realize, and has been banned through history by colonial powers in a number of those cultures as well. But it's a tradition that has hung on, and is alive in contemporary music as well. This week, we're going to check out both traditional and contemporary examples around the world.
- Tuvan kargiraa
- Mongolian Xoomij
- Egschiglen - Tavan Hasag
- Tibetan Buddhist monk with singing bowl, cymbals, and ganta
- Three Tibetan Buddhist monks
- Harmonic Tibetan Buddhist monk chanting
- Cantu a tenore - Su lamentu de su pastore
- Cantu a tenore - Su grande agrariu
- Xhosa Umngqokolo
- Sayo & Utae - Rekuhkara
- Inuit katajjaq - Three throat-game songs
- Inuit Women's Music of Povungnituk - Song of a Sea Shore
- Inuit Women's Music of Povungnituk - Song of Cooking Seal Flippers
- Inuit Women's Music of Povungnituk - Song of Seaweed
- Yat-Kha - Tozhu Girl
- Yat-Kha - Opei Khoomei
- Yat-Kha - Kadarchy
- Kara-Sai Ak-Ool - U Miloy Sergi
- Mikko Heikinpoika ft. Hilda Lansman - Polar Night
- SOOHAN & Mikko Heikinpoika - Omnimanni
- Heilung - Carpathian Forest
- Heilung - Hakkerskaldyr
- The Jerry Cans - Ukiuq
- Weaves ft. Tanya Tagaq - Scream
- Tanya Tagaq ft. Mike Patton - Fire ~ Ikuma
- July Talk ft. Tanya Tagaq - Beck + Call
- Bjork ft. Tanya Tagaq - Ancestors
- A Tribe Called Red ft. Tanya Tagaq - Sila
- The HU - Sad But True
- The HU ft. Jacoby Shaddix - Wolf Totem
Version: 20241125
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