Happy Birhday à Tran Quang Hai qui nous fait l’honneur et l’amitié de nous suivre sur la •*•♪ღ♪• Tournée Anthologie du khöömii mongol •*•♪ღ♪• et le tournage du film. Un Grand Merci de toute l’équipe !
Photos de Jean François Castell
Happy Birhday à Tran Quang Hai qui nous fait l’honneur et l’amitié de nous suivre sur la •*•♪ღ♪• Tournée Anthologie du khöömii mongol •*•♪ღ♪• et le tournage du film. Un Grand Merci de toute l’équipe !
Photos de Jean François Castell
Om Day 02/10/2013 – Michnův palác, Prague CZ
overtone singing Wolfgang Saus/de,
accompaniment Jan Čada/cz
Wolfgang Saus http://www.oberton.org live in Munich at the premiere of the movie Trailer “Raum Klang Stimme – A Quest for the Origin of Harmonics”, a film documentary about overtone singing and harmonics http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwtUqs… by Minghao Xu. A concert of Klang der Stille http://www.klangderstille.com
Human Voice – The larynx, voicebox, vocal chords – how they work.
Animation showing resonance for different speech patterns as they are vocalized. 1920s Animation and Action overlay.
real-time MRI of vocal performance, with examples from an opera soprano, and an emcee/beatboxer. Presented at the ISMRM Sounds and Visions Session, May 2006, Seattle.
“Freude schöner Götterfunken” (Ode to Joy) in overtone singing style by Wolfgang Saus.
More information: http://www.oberton.org
What you see in this amazing dynamic MRI (MRT) is the tongue movement building up double resonances along the melody line of Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy”. Overtone singing is based on bringing together the second and third resonance frequency of the vocal trakt (also referred to as “formants”) on one frequency to enhance the loudness of a single overtone in the vocal sound spectrum. The second formant is controlled by the root of the tongue together with the epiglottis. The third formant is ruled by the space under the tongue, which is bigger than it seems in the video. Overtone singing is a constantly fine adjustment of the two resonance cavities.
It’s not easy to record (and sing) sound in the very noisy environment of a MRT (MRI). The team in Freiburg developed highly specialized equipment for recording and filtering. Nevertheless, the sound is of course not HiFi.
MRT footage with kind permission and many thanks to:
University Medical Center Freiburg
Medical Physics Dept. of Radiology &
Institut for Musicians’ Medicine
http://fim.mh-freiburg.de/
Prof. Dr. Bernhard Richter
Prof. Dr. Dr. Jürgen Hennig
Prof. Dr. Matthias Echternach
2015
Gyuke is style of tibetan sacred throat sining. Attention! Video contains English subtitles. If you have benefited, you can support the project – https://www.paypal.me/Utukin or zosimma@gmail.com
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