Concerning how we hear, I’m a musician (with uTube channel) who sees a color-shape for each note. It is spectral. C is red. C# is red-orange. D is orange. Etc. It is generally understood that D major is also an intrinsically happy key, as in Hayden’s “Sunrise Symphony.” D can bring happiness. Sound can do that. But sound can also heal physically. Medics apparently use the 11th harmonic (the 11th overtone) to pair with the root note, and this sound can be used to shatter kidney stones, or even cure a disease, say, a disease in the blood in alternative medicine, etc, etc. Anyway, towards the end of my father’s life, he would cry out in his sleep. One night he cried out in a dream. I stood up, from my piano, startled. I thought to play his cry on the piano. It was a D note. Through the dark hall, I ran to his room, hoping to ask him about his dream. What was the secret to D? What was the secret to happiness? Brimming with excitement, I stirred him a bit and asked “Dad, dad, what were you dreaming?” He looked up at me, groggily, and said “eleven.” Then he turned around and went back to sleep. The eleventh harmonic had spoken.
lucky 11! THANKS! You made my day. Since i posted this I’ve made some very poignant videos on this subject. Do take a peek! // _The Acoustic Rabbit Hole_@@cheezyridr
Thanks so much for this overview about the history of overtone singing. It remains such a fascinating topic. And also thank you for mentioning and sharing the documentary! 🙏
You're opening so many doors, I'm going to listen to this video many times over so I can absorb all of this great knowledge, explore the links and experience all of these various styles of overtone singing. I love sounds and soundscapes, the more unusual the happier I get. I try to incorporate whistles, clicks, snaps, and polyphonic electronic synthesizers into my music. I back midi and sound based projects to help bring new innovations to our world. I believe the path to world peace is through art and music. How can you want to kill another human being when you've discovered what an amazing artist and musician they are?
It's a big pleasure to hear all these things you share with. Not only because of a lot of interesting informations, but just a hearing your gentle voice - that's a big pleasure. Thank you!
Woman you are without a doubt what the ancients desired in the female voicetrist to stimulate, soothe and inspire. I doappreciate your stage presence but i must noot follow you lest i run aground and wreck my ship. A pleasure for sure
Thankyou very much! trumpets are very full of overtones which give them their distictive sound, I figure if it is possible with the voice then why not with the trumpet! with some success so far
Great presentation! I was glad to hear you mention David Hykes’ “Hearing Solar Winds” and Toby Twining’s “Chrysalid Requiem” in your discussion; both of those albums are extraordinary, and have long been close to my heart.
Thank You for the information... Anna Maria, You have a very Pleasant Voice... It would be Unique, Epic and very Interesting to Hear You Overtone Talking as well... Has anyone done it ? Wish You all the Best...
Meine Klavierlehrerin hat mir das gezeigt und deinen TH-cam Kanal. Es ist sehr interessant. My piano teacher showed me this, as well as your TH-cam channel, and I thought it was very interesting.
Anna Maria, thank you for this video, you are so agreable and sweet.......your voice amaze me (us) ciao by the way: demetrio stratos was an italian singer of this politically oriented group named area. he tragicly died in 1979.
Toby Twining's Chrysalid Requiem is insane. But then, Toby studied with Ben Johnston who wrote insane microtonal string quartets. Awesome, mind-bending music.
@@AnnaMariaHefele They're available on TH-cam, as recorded by the Kepler Quartet, and a few of them have recorded performances by a couple of other quartets, too. Ben Johnston's notation system is something of an important part of microtonal notation history, a kind of precursor to Helmholtz-Ellis notation, Sagittal notation, and others. Potentially very useful for notating overtone singing that involves "higher" harmonic relationships.
This is awesome! I can only do it when I'm toasty.. Maybe if I practice more I can do it while sober. I start with a whistle and transition into western overtone
Dear Anna, I love your videos and especially this historical account which is much needed and appreciated. But I'm puzzled why you didn't mention the Tibetan Buddhist overtone chanting tradition such as the Gyuto Tantric Choir which is how I first discovered this type of singing . Maybe one day you'll do another video on the rich Tibetan tradition of Sacred Chant......Namasate
Thank you so much for this video. What an effort! It's like an academic work with the passionate practicioner's fascination with the subject shining through as a cherry on top. I first noticed the sounds of overtone singing on a movie soundtrack (Geronimo) on which Huun-Huur-Tu appear. Decades later, I accidentally ran into your channel. Might kargyraa be somewhat related in how the sounds are created to the growl vocals of metal music, or are these two entirely different? I'm curious. Thanks again.
Kargyraa uses ventricular fold/false cord phonation, which is also used for some kinds of metal extreme vocals, though I think in a different way. The best info I’ve found on metal vocal distortion has come from Aliki Katriou.
it definitely exists! But if I would talk about everything, it would be very very long in the end... :-) so this is just a scratching on the surface of the topic.
well, it doesn't hurt... overtone singing works well if the voice is strong in sound. It won't work so good with breathy voices. But you do not need to have an educated classical singing voice to do overtone singing :-)
Lovely video. It was great to see Tran Quang Hai mentioned, I have an old CD i got 20 years ago where he plays 15 different jaw harps and does throat singing at the same time on 3 pieces. I wonder if you've ever seen the documentary on physicist Richard Feynman and his friend Ralph Leighton's quest to go to Tuva in the 1970's and 80's. I saw it in 1990 this was the first time I heard of overtone singing. Here is a youtube link: th-cam.com/video/Qeauwu2uIwM/w-d-xo.html
in addition: Michael Vetter im Gespräch mit Hildegard Curth und Norbert Ely / RIAS - 29. April 1989 (in German) 5 parts th-cam.com/video/9hS2vklqdJ0/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/QfeZce-CjDo/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/oNnNgBqILAk/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/859TQpmk65k/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/DtRiQpwI2ak/w-d-xo.html
Well, I can also sing two notes together, but I started not so long ago, so I'm not doing so well yet. I read about you when I started looking for information about this feature. So far I can only sing two notes an octave apart, but I'm only 15 years old! So everything is still ahead. th-cam.com/video/9EVTqPy4TfA/w-d-xo.html In this video there are 3 screenshots with the data of the sound level meter with a built-in spectrometer.
Concerning how we hear, I’m a musician (with uTube channel) who sees a color-shape for each note. It is spectral. C is red. C# is red-orange. D is orange. Etc. It is generally understood that D major is also an intrinsically happy key, as in Hayden’s “Sunrise Symphony.” D can bring happiness. Sound can do that. But sound can also heal physically. Medics apparently use the 11th harmonic (the 11th overtone) to pair with the root note, and this sound can be used to shatter kidney stones, or even cure a disease, say, a disease in the blood in alternative medicine, etc, etc. Anyway, towards the end of my father’s life, he would cry out in his sleep. One night he cried out in a dream. I stood up, from my piano, startled. I thought to play his cry on the piano. It was a D note. Through the dark hall, I ran to his room, hoping to ask him about his dream. What was the secret to D? What was the secret to happiness? Brimming with excitement, I stirred him a bit and asked “Dad, dad, what were you dreaming?” He looked up at me, groggily, and said “eleven.” Then he turned around and went back to sleep. The eleventh harmonic had spoken.
that was really cool, i'm glad you shared that. coincidently, i am the 11th person to like your comment
lucky 11! THANKS! You made my day. Since i posted this I’ve made some very poignant videos on this subject. Do take a peek! // _The Acoustic Rabbit Hole_@@cheezyridr
I could spend the rest of my life just listening to her speak.
Go watch some bjork interviews lol
i love the mongolian music, it's what lead me to your videos. i have passed your videos to dozens of people, and they are always amazed
No comments! Very interesting ! Thank you,Anna-Maria!
Thank you. I love you.
The way you explain... I wish all teachers are like you... thanks a lot for the video
You have a very lovely way of speaking! I feel that you have done a lot of inner work.
Dear Anna, both you and your amazing work as well as teachings are a human universal level treasure!
Infinite thanks to you!
У народов Сибири и Дальнего Востока (Тыва, Монголия) это - в традиции!
Thanks so much for this overview about the history of overtone singing. It remains such a fascinating topic. And also thank you for mentioning and sharing the documentary! 🙏
Any time :-) :-)
Thank you for sharing our culture with the world. You are masterful at both singing and teaching. I wish you the best.
I really fell in love 😍 with the way you talk , your smile 😃😊 and even your voice for sure . Wish you all the best anna Maria ❤💙
You're opening so many doors, I'm going to listen to this video many times over so I can absorb all of this great knowledge, explore the links and experience all of these various styles of overtone singing. I love sounds and soundscapes, the more unusual the happier I get. I try to incorporate whistles, clicks, snaps, and polyphonic electronic synthesizers into my music. I back midi and sound based projects to help bring new innovations to our world. I believe the path to world peace is through art and music. How can you want to kill another human being when you've discovered what an amazing artist and musician they are?
Great information. I love you Anna, your an inspiration.
Wow Anna-Maria Hefele, this video is very interesting and informational as well. Thank you for sharing this topic with us.
I came here due to switch-researching between Eastern and Western styles. Thank you for this great overview
Yeah, I could just listen to her talk forever. So calming.
What a wonderful exposition of the history of the two strands of this musical technique, Maria. This is all very interesting. Thank you.
Polyphonic overtones crosses many cultures. Thanks for this brief explained that is accessible to all.
It's a big pleasure to hear all these things you share with. Not only because of a lot of interesting informations, but just a hearing your gentle voice - that's a big pleasure. Thank you!
Аня, душевно, чувственно. Спасибо, дорогая, привет из Западной Сибири!
Thank you for this gift!
Hallo Anna-Maria, danke für diese sehr interessante Übersicht! Beste Grüße und eine schöne Vorweihnachtszeit!
Thank you for the video, Anna-Maria! Danke
Loved it!!!!!!! You deserve much more attention.
Woman you are without a doubt what the ancients desired in the female voicetrist to stimulate, soothe and inspire.
I doappreciate your stage presence but i must noot follow you lest i run aground and wreck my ship.
A pleasure for sure
Thank you for your quite interesting historical overview !
Thank you for everything, for your passion and your energy :)
Thankyou very much! trumpets are very full of overtones which give them their distictive sound, I figure if it is possible with the voice then why not with the trumpet! with some success so far
Great presentation!
I was glad to hear you mention David Hykes’ “Hearing Solar Winds” and Toby Twining’s “Chrysalid Requiem” in your discussion; both of those albums are extraordinary, and have long been close to my heart.
yes, I love them too...
Thank you Anna
Amazing, thanks for this history lesson. So much to learn about this music.
Thank You for the information... Anna Maria, You have a very Pleasant Voice...
It would be Unique, Epic and very Interesting to Hear You Overtone Talking as well... Has anyone done it ? Wish You all the Best...
You are great, Thank You for your enchanted voice, music and inspiration ! 🌺🌞🌷🙏
Sung your way right into my sub feed. 🎶🎶🎶
Passionnant, merci!
Oh un français 🤣 pourquoi faire un commentaire en français personne ne comprendra rien XD
@@DCBfanboy Mais si mais si, les plus curieux utiliseront un traducteur, et tant pis pour les autres ;) Merci pour ton comm...Mon préciiiiieux! :)
@@SOPRATENOR pas faux ! Mais de rien ! XD
Thank you so much for sharing all this!!
I am scared how interested i got into it!
thank you beautiful lady for sharing the passion of your life, you are a marvel
Thank you for teaching us. I’m practicing!
I would do this when I was very young just playing around 😊
You're amazing
This is great info, thank you for sharing! 🙏
This was fabulous! So much great info. Thanks, and well done!
amazing, thank you so much for this.
Thanks for all the links in video info, that would have been a nightmare to try and search for everything.
Meine Klavierlehrerin hat mir das gezeigt und deinen TH-cam Kanal. Es ist sehr interessant. My piano teacher showed me this, as well as your TH-cam channel, and I thought it was very interesting.
Anna Maria, thank you for this video, you are so agreable and sweet.......your voice amaze me (us) ciao by the way: demetrio stratos was an italian singer of this politically oriented group named area. he tragicly died in 1979.
Thanks for the very informative lecture ! Greetings
Thank you for this video! :)
this is an absolutely invaluable video, thank you.
Absolutly amayzing
Toby Twining's Chrysalid Requiem is insane. But then, Toby studied with Ben Johnston who wrote insane microtonal string quartets. Awesome, mind-bending music.
I didnt know that! Have to check out that string quartets :-)
@@AnnaMariaHefele They're available on TH-cam, as recorded by the Kepler Quartet, and a few of them have recorded performances by a couple of other quartets, too. Ben Johnston's notation system is something of an important part of microtonal notation history, a kind of precursor to Helmholtz-Ellis notation, Sagittal notation, and others. Potentially very useful for notating overtone singing that involves "higher" harmonic relationships.
awesome!
This is awesome! I can only do it when I'm toasty.. Maybe if I practice more I can do it while sober. I start with a whistle and transition into western overtone
You are the best...
Creativity! 😍
Такая милая, просто приятно слушать.)🌞🌟🌹
Checking out that recording from Arthur Miles - that's neat! It fits that "classic" country style really well.
tysm for sharing🙏🏾😍🎶🎶
Lady-- you're the tops!
Dear Anna, I love your videos and especially this historical account which is much needed and appreciated. But I'm puzzled why you didn't mention the Tibetan Buddhist overtone chanting tradition such as the Gyuto Tantric Choir which is how I first discovered this type of singing . Maybe one day you'll do another video on the rich Tibetan tradition of Sacred Chant......Namasate
Mark Van Tongeren wrote a new book 'Overtone Singing: Harmonic Dimensions of the Human Voice', published in 2023 Terra Nova Press.
Thank you very much!! 👽🙏🏽
Vielen herzlichen für dieses Video!
awesome video
Thank you so much for this video. What an effort! It's like an academic work with the passionate practicioner's fascination with the subject shining through as a cherry on top.
I first noticed the sounds of overtone singing on a movie soundtrack (Geronimo) on which Huun-Huur-Tu appear. Decades later, I accidentally ran into your channel.
Might kargyraa be somewhat related in how the sounds are created to the growl vocals of metal music, or are these two entirely different? I'm curious.
Thanks again.
Kargyraa uses ventricular fold/false cord phonation, which is also used for some kinds of metal extreme vocals, though I think in a different way. The best info I’ve found on metal vocal distortion has come from Aliki Katriou.
@@iolairmuinnmalachybromham3103 Thanks for the interesting reply.
Very interesting and well presented. There could also be subtitles.
I AM FASCINATED!!! Subjugée!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Genial Anna!!
Amazing presentation, unbelievably informative! Thank you! I really enjoyed this!! 😊
Really interesting
haha...im a man that has i have a terrible deep voice but i luv lyrics and singing, and i could do it.
thx for your content
sorry, meant i didnt know what i was doing n hearig .
TY
Thank you Anna and i wanna mention allso the work of Nestor Kornblum wich is verry nice
Inuit throat singing is an example of a tradition of women throat singing
I wonder if everyone is capable of doing this? I love to sing and have tried to do overtone singing but sadly I don't have the technique.
Nice
Спасибо =]
Where does Inuit and native American throat singing come in? I don't know that I've heard polyphonics in their styles, but it could exist.
it definitely exists! But if I would talk about everything, it would be very very long in the end... :-) so this is just a scratching on the surface of the topic.
Inuit women of Canada’s north sing in throat singing style. This is their natural way of singing.
Bene Gesserit are real apparently
When the Teremin is not nerdy enough^^ im trying hard but i always only mange to sound like a mutulated duck
Do you have to have a good singing voice to do overtone singing well?
well, it doesn't hurt... overtone singing works well if the voice is strong in sound. It won't work so good with breathy voices. But you do not need to have an educated classical singing voice to do overtone singing :-)
I discovered I can whistle and hum, more of a droning moan, at the same time which produces similar harmonics, does anybody else do this?
I think a lot of people can do it.
That’s a good exercise, now try it with bowels ❤
Good time! Please subtitle in Russian. Thank you🙏🎶🌞
It is weird that I can recognize the 3 near the beginning without knowing the names just because I have heard them before.
💜
❤️
Lovely video. It was great to see Tran Quang Hai mentioned, I have an old CD i got 20 years ago where he plays 15 different jaw harps and does throat singing at the same time on 3 pieces. I wonder if you've ever seen the documentary on physicist Richard Feynman and his friend Ralph Leighton's quest to go to Tuva in the 1970's and 80's. I saw it in 1990 this was the first time I heard of overtone singing. Here is a youtube link: th-cam.com/video/Qeauwu2uIwM/w-d-xo.html
❤❤❤
I can't find the book anywhere. Can you help, please?
in addition:
Michael Vetter im Gespräch mit Hildegard Curth und Norbert Ely / RIAS - 29. April 1989 (in German)
5 parts
th-cam.com/video/9hS2vklqdJ0/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/QfeZce-CjDo/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/oNnNgBqILAk/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/859TQpmk65k/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/DtRiQpwI2ak/w-d-xo.html
Why can't I save this video in my watch later playlist?
how to study with you about this humai~!
Your stuff is good and you are very beautiful.
I enjoy movies so that's why I get lost.
Anguish from not remembering the feeling just thought and then I remember with all left over from anguish.
That's just who I am.
🧡💚💜
You did not talk about Inuit Throatsinging - predominantly by women.
Well, I can also sing two notes together, but I started not so long ago, so I'm not doing so well yet. I read about you when I started looking for information about this feature. So far I can only sing two notes an octave apart, but I'm only 15 years old! So everything is still ahead.
th-cam.com/video/9EVTqPy4TfA/w-d-xo.html
In this video there are 3 screenshots with the data of the sound level meter with a built-in spectrometer.
:)
😳😳😳😳😳
I suspect ancient "western" people also sang this way. We've lost touch with a lot of our old ways.