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HUUN-HUUR-TU
Sunday, February 7, 2010 - 2:00pm
Amoeba Music
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Wednesday, February 10, 2010 - 9:00pm
Zanzibar
Saturday, February 13, 2010 - 6:30pm & 8:30pm
San Juan Capistrano Multicultural Center
Huun-Huur-Tu come from the former Soviet Autonomous Republic
of Tuva, a sparsely settled region of grasslands, boreal forests, and mountain
ridges that lies 2,500 miles east of Moscow Russia, situated at the center of
Asia, north of Mongolia. This indigenous music highlights rare instruments and
preserves what is arguably some of the world's oldest form of music making. The
best known genre of Tuvan music, xöömei (throat-singing), comprises what one
might call a lexicon of musical onomatopoeia in which natural sounds are mimetically
transformed into musical representations. Their past collaborations range from
Ry Cooder to The Kronos Quartet. The current album "Eternal" is a
collaboration with electronic musician & record producer Carmen Rizzo
(Niyaz, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Oakenfold, Seal) to form a unique blend of ambient
electronic and sonic textures compared to a Brian Eno style album. The album
takes you through a lush cinematic journey of almost dream like sequences of
deep happiness. Forty minutes of a thrilling ride from start to finish.
Kaigal-ool Khovalyg
An extremely talented, self-taught overtone singer, Khovalyg
worked as a shepherd until the age of 21, when he was invited to join the Tuvan
State Ensemble. He settled in Kyzyl and started teaching throat singing and
igil. A co-founder of Huun-Huur-Tu, he left the State Ensemble in 1993 to
devote his attention to the newly formed quartet. He has performed and recorded
with the Tuva Ensemble, Vershki da Koreshki, the World Groove Band and the
Volkov Trio. Covering a range from tenor to bass, Khovalyg is particularly
known for his unique rendition of the khöömei and kargyraa singing styles.
Sayan Bapa
Sayan Bapa, child of a Tuvan father and Russian mother, grew
up in the industrial town Ak-Dovurak. He received his musical training in
Kislovodsk, Northern Caucasus, where he played fretless bass in a Russian
jazz-rock band for several years. In the early 1990s he returned to Tuva to
study his roots, and became a member of a folk-rock band, performing
traditional Tuvan music on electric instruments. A co-founder of Huun-Huur-Tu,
Bapa is a versatile string instrumentalist, and performs on the doshpuluur,
igil and acoustic guitar. As a vocalist he is currently specializing in the
kargyraa style.
Radik Tyulyush
Radik was born in the Ovur area of The Republic of Tuva,
near the border with Mongolia. He has been interested in studying and
performing folk music since childhood, and he learned throat-singing from his
grand-dad. While Radik was still in secondary school, his family moved to
Kyzyl. After receiving his high school diploma, he started studying medicine.
Upon graduation he worked at the Centre of Folk Medicine in Kyzyl. He later
graduated from the Chyrgal-ool Arts School (Kyzyl), where he had been studying
igil. He participated in various Tuvan rock and folk collectives. Radik
currently teaches igil at the Kerndenbilija Arts School of The Republic of
Tuva. He joined Huun-Huur-Tu in 2005.
Alexei Saryglar
Alexei Saryglar joined the ensemble in 1995 to replace
Alexander Bapa. He completed his musical training in Ulan Ude as a
percussionist for classical and popular music, and became a member of the large
Russian state ensemble 'Siberian Souvenir'. A multi-talented performer,
Saryglar makes his mark as a sygyt singer, and his expertise with traditional
Tuvan percussion and string instruments naturally extends into the art of piano
playing. Like the other members of the ensemble, he resides in Kyzyl when not
on tour.
Amoeba Music
6400 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood,
CA
323-245-6400
Zanzibar
1301 5th St., Santa Monica, CA 90401
310-451-2221
San Juan Capistrano Multicultural Center
31495 El Camino Real, San Juan Capistrano
949-248-7469
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