Yeah, I think Nature was responsible for the chant section of the Doom Hunter theme, using similar lyrics. Not entirely sure but both made awesome contributions to the atmosphere of the soundtrack.
Sorry man I hate to be that guy but the dude who sang this is an oktavist, not a throat singer. Throat singers have a dual-tone sound that's emitted via manipulating the resonances made through vocal chord vibrations. Two different styles, just for your information! :)
Not sorry, since I love to be that guy. Throat singers and oktavists are not mutually-exclusive categories - an oktavist can learn to throat sing just as well as anyone else could (and damn, what I'd pay to hear that!). Furthermore, you're confusing overtone singing - which relies on the shape of the oral cavity just as much as the vocal chords - with the larger array of throat singing techniques. In the Tuvan tradition, kargyraa is the name for a method of *undertone* singing that can sound remarkably similar to Mr Holloway's profoundly deep voice. That's where the confusion stems from, and since it's likely that more people have heard of throat singing than oktavism, it's understandable.
it's a pretty cool style of singing. they move and twist their tongue to shift the soundwaves and iirc those who are trained well in it can open up a second vocal chord that isn't used in normal speech.
This isn't throat singing. Throat singing uses the false cords and chest to sing with a resonant rumble, which natural sounds lower than just singing normally. This is sung by Eric Holloway, an octavist that can sing down to F1 naturally. With his vocal cords and not the false cords. The man just has a ridiculous range going WAY down.
This actually wasn't Nature singing. This is a octavist named Eric Holloway.
That man has a ridiculously deep voice
Yeah, I think Nature was responsible for the chant section of the Doom Hunter theme, using similar lyrics. Not entirely sure but both made awesome contributions to the atmosphere of the soundtrack.
What's scary is, this is his natural voice. He can go much lower.
Rest in peace to the dude who sung this
Name was Nature Ganganbaigal
He pass away?!
@@freshdwriter2371 unfortunately...
His name is Eric Holloway and he's alive, he's still uploading
@@RivalTangent kindly respect the dead
now thats a deep throat
just wanted to say that this is funny
still think this is funny
@@bolotniy still think it’s funny?
*My wife when I get out the shower
The song is called “ prayers of the diminished”
Your grandma who has been smoking for 50 years telling you about her youth:
That's what my dishwasher sounds like when I turn it on. Kind of think it's possessed now.
You need a chainsaw
This is intimidating and I love it!
Goddamn this game is amazing!
Sorry man I hate to be that guy but the dude who sang this is an oktavist, not a throat singer. Throat singers have a dual-tone sound that's emitted via manipulating the resonances made through vocal chord vibrations. Two different styles, just for your information! :)
Not sorry, since I love to be that guy. Throat singers and oktavists are not mutually-exclusive categories - an oktavist can learn to throat sing just as well as anyone else could (and damn, what I'd pay to hear that!). Furthermore, you're confusing overtone singing - which relies on the shape of the oral cavity just as much as the vocal chords - with the larger array of throat singing techniques. In the Tuvan tradition, kargyraa is the name for a method of *undertone* singing that can sound remarkably similar to Mr Holloway's profoundly deep voice. That's where the confusion stems from, and since it's likely that more people have heard of throat singing than oktavism, it's understandable.
@@savnetsinn_original fair enough man, in that case I apologise and stand corrected!
it's a pretty cool style of singing. they move and twist their tongue to shift the soundwaves and iirc those who are trained well in it can open up a second vocal chord that isn't used in normal speech.
This isn't throat singing.
Throat singing uses the false cords and chest to sing with a resonant rumble, which natural sounds lower than just singing normally.
This is sung by Eric Holloway, an octavist that can sing down to F1 naturally. With his vocal cords and not the false cords.
The man just has a ridiculous range going WAY down.
This wasn't Mongolian throat singing, it was Eric Holloway. And that was his normal voice. No techniques, nothing.
Bruh
Its not Mongolian throat singing. Im mongolian and throat singing cant get deep like that😂😂. And i play doom eternal😂😂
He has a TikTok if you're interested. His username is "thatbassvoice".
Go follow him. He's good.
Ok wise huskie