@konataform Yo, I'm learning Tuvan/Mongolian overtone singing techniques as part of developing a proper control over cartilage distortion in performing harsh vocals and also just because dag kargyraa and sygyt are awesome. Thought you would get a kick out of that.
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Odgovor korisniku/ci @NotConvincing
NICE that rules. keep me updated
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Odgovor korisniku/ci @konataform
I will! I have the basics down with controlling both a pure voice/nasal drone and the aretynoid cartilage drone used in kargyraa, but the dag style specifically involves getting your vocal folds to vibrate at different rates to create an undertone and it's *hard.*
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Odgovor korisnicima @NotConvincing @konataform
...SHIT I THINK I'M ACTUALLY MAKING PROGRESS. It sounds like I'm dying but I'm picking up some deep chest resonance and apparently that's the key, dragging it deep into your torso like that.
1 reply 1 proslijeđeni tweet 3 korisnika označavaju da im se sviđa -
Odgovor korisnicima @NotConvincing @konataform
Will update as I continue to make progress. As it stands, I can make some really clean loud overtones with a clean drone, get some solid isolation using a cartilage drone, and shout the entire alphabet in one breath at max volume in a gnarly hardcore voice. It's fun.
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Odgovor korisnicima @NotConvincing @konataform
Also apparently my default form of vocal distortion is either epiglottal or aryepiglottal, which sounds like a mutant hell-lizard and is useful in small doses but should be used *very* carefully. Also it's used in a difficult style of throat singing which imitates birdsong.
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Odgovor korisnicima @NotConvincing @konataform
Borbangnadyr, I believe is the style in question; it's a subset of khoomei or sygyt, I think, and involves a lot of complex tongue and throat manipulation. There is also ezengileer, which imitates stirrups and involves rhythmically altering where it resonates in your face.
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Odgovor korisnicima @NotConvincing @konataform
Khoomei, for reference, is something of a catchall but tends to refer to the default overtone over clean-ish voice style; sygyt is the one with the really powerful whistling overtones, and kargyraa encompasses most of the "frog voice" cartilage-based styles.
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Odgovor korisnicima @NotConvincing @konataform
All of which, interestingly, were inadvertently replicated by black and death metal and hardcore vocalists over the decades. Like that ridiculous "pig squeal" thing slam vocalists do is basically a sygyt variant with some additional distortion and subharmonic techniques.
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To put it another way, in the process of creating what are essentially modern battle chants, extreme musicians have replicated the vocal techniques of shamans going back millennia. I find that terribly poetic.
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Odgovor korisniku/ci @NotConvincing
this rules wtf
1 reply 0 proslijeđenih tweetova 2 korisnika označavaju da im se sviđa -
Odgovor korisniku/ci @konataform
I KNOW, RIGHT? I find learning about this stuff and how to apply it super exciting and it's opening up all these connections between things which I'd always intuited but never had a full vocabulary for, on theoretical and philosophical and spiritual levels all at once.
1 reply 1 proslijeđeni tweet 3 korisnika označavaju da im se sviđa - Još 3 druga odgovora
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