Kongar-ol Ondar

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Ondarnyng Ayany (Ondar's Medley) 00:00 Tools
Alash Hem (The Alash River) 00:00 Tools
Durgen Chugaa (Fast Talk) 00:00 Tools
Eshten Charlyyry Berge (It's Hard To Lose A Friend) 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove 00:00 Tools
Good Horses (Eki A'ttar) 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove (Bolur Daa-Bol, Bolbas Daa-Bol) 00:00 Tools
Sunezin Yry (Soul's Song) 00:00 Tools
Where Has My Country Gone? (Kongurei) (with Willie Nelson) 00:00 Tools
Big River (Ulug Hem) 00:00 Tools
Good Horses 00:00 Tools
Kargyraa Rap (Durgen Chugaa) (with Richard Feynman) 00:00 Tools
The Other Side of the Mountain (Kaldak Hamar) 00:00 Tools
Little Yurt on the Prairie 00:00 Tools
Little Yurt on the Prairie (Arty Saiyyr) 00:00 Tools
My Tuva (meeng tyvam) 00:00 Tools
Kargyraa Rap 00:00 Tools
Big River 00:00 Tools
Two Lands, One Tribe (Alash Khem) (with Bill Miller) 00:00 Tools
Harness Your Horse And Catch The Wind (A'ttyng Derii) 00:00 Tools
Where Has My Country Gone? 00:00 Tools
It's Hard To Lose A Friend 00:00 Tools
Two Lands, One Tribe 00:00 Tools
Sünezin Yry (Soul's Song) 00:00 Tools
My Tuva 00:00 Tools
Harness Your Horse and Catch the Wind 00:00 Tools
Hidden ! 00:00 Tools
Other Side Of The Mountain 00:00 Tools
Dürgen Chugaa (Fast Talk) 00:00 Tools
The Other Side of the Mountain 00:00 Tools
Medley in the style of Ondar 00:00 Tools
Alash Khem 00:00 Tools
Kaldak Hamar (The Other Side of the Mountain) 00:00 Tools
Dymzhuktaar 00:00 Tools
Medley of Throat-Singing Styles Accompanied by Doshpuluur 00:00 Tools
Shamanic Prayer for Richard Feynman 00:00 Tools
Alash Khem (Alash River) 00:00 Tools
Meeng Tuvam (My Tuva) 00:00 Tools
Kongurey (Where Has My Country Gone?) 00:00 Tools
Fast Words 00:00 Tools
Meeng Tyvam 00:00 Tools
Melody On The Khomus 00:00 Tools
Khoomei 00:00 Tools
What You Talkin About 00:00 Tools
Baï-la-Taïgam 00:00 Tools
Melody on the Khomus (Tuvan jaw harp) 00:00 Tools
Höömeï 00:00 Tools
Alash Khem (The Alash River) 00:00 Tools
Kargyraa Moan 00:00 Tools
Kaldak Hamar 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Eglip Kelir Kushtarym 00:00 Tools
Hidden Track 00:00 Tools
Gonna Move 00:00 Tools
Tooruktug Dolgaï Tangdym 00:00 Tools
Charazym (My Beauty) 00:00 Tools
Eglip Kelir Kushtarym (Returning Birds) 00:00 Tools
Öpei Khöömeï 00:00 Tools
Eki A'ttar 00:00 Tools
Bai-la-Taigam (My Taiga) 00:00 Tools
Charazhym 00:00 Tools
Ondarnyng Ayany (Medley In The Style Of Ondar) 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove (Breakbeat Science Remix) 00:00 Tools
Ondar's Medley 00:00 Tools
Kaldak Hamar (Live) 00:00 Tools
Opei Khoomei 00:00 Tools
[Silence] No Audio 00:00 Tools
Eki A'ttar (Good Horses) (Live) 00:00 Tools
Arty Saiyyr 00:00 Tools
Hidden ! - Instructional Track 00:00 Tools
Tuva Farewell 00:00 Tools
Center of Asia 00:00 Tools
Dürgen Chugaa 00:00 Tools
Instructional Track 00:00 Tools
Kongurey 00:00 Tools
Meeng Tuvam 00:00 Tools
No Audio 00:00 Tools
Höömei 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove (Hani Num Club mix) 00:00 Tools
You Gotta Move 00:00 Tools
Dumzhuktaar (Tuvan throat-humming) 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove (Desert Remix) 00:00 Tools
Tras D'Orizao (Beyond The Horizon) 00:00 Tools
Ulug Khem 00:00 Tools
What You Talkin' About? 00:00 Tools
A'ttyng Derii 00:00 Tools
Kalzang-Khamnyng Choreen Kizhi Ölürge Alganyyr Algyzhy 00:00 Tools
Eki A'ttar (Good Horses) 00:00 Tools
Kargyraa Rap (Dürgen Chugaa) (with Richard Feynman) 00:00 Tools
Kongurey (Where Has My Country Gone ) 00:00 Tools
Genghis Blues Soundbites 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove (Thievery Corp. Remix) 00:00 Tools
Shamanic Prayer in the Style of "Kalzang" for Richard Feynman 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove (Pete Tongs Essential Selection Mix) 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove (Hani Remix) 00:00 Tools
Melody on the Khomus (Tuvan ja 00:00 Tools
[Silence] 00:00 Tools
Medley Of Throat Singing Styles Accompanied By Doshpuulur 00:00 Tools
Tooruktug Dolgaп Tangdym (The Forest is Full of Cedar Nuts) 00:00 Tools
Baï-La-Taïgam (My Taiga) 00:00 Tools
Hydden Track 00:00 Tools
Tooruktug Dolgaï Tangdym (The Forest Is Full of Cedar Nuts) 00:00 Tools
Dymzhuktar 00:00 Tools
Tuva Groove (Pete Tongs Essential Selection Mix) 00:00 Tools
Alash Khem [Alash River] 00:00 Tools
Eglip Kelir Kushtarym (Returni 00:00 Tools
Charazhym (My Beauty) 00:00 Tools
Medley On The Homus 00:00 Tools
Dumzhuktaar (Tuvan throat-humm 00:00 Tools
Where Has My Country Gone? (Kongurei) 00:00 Tools
Shamanic Prayer in the Style o 00:00 Tools
Taiga 00:00 Tools
Öpei Höömeï 00:00 Tools
Öpei Khöömeï (Tuvan Lullaby) 00:00 Tools
Dymzhuktaar (Tuvan Throat-Humming) 00:00 Tools
Opei Khoomei (Tuvan lullaby) 00:00 Tools
'kalzang'-Khamnyng Choreen Kizhi Ölürge Alganyyr Algyzhy (Shamanic Prayer In The Style Of 'zalzang' For Richard Feynman) 00:00 Tools
Terraplane Blues 00:00 Tools
[untitled] 00:00 Tools
Khöömei 00:00 Tools
Tooruktug Dolgaп Tangdym (The 00:00 Tools
Where Has My Country Gone 00:00 Tools
Kaldak-Hamar (The Other Side Of The Mountain) 00:00 Tools
Two Lands, One Tribe (alash khem) 00:00 Tools
kargyraa rap (durgen chugaa) 00:00 Tools
Kaldak Hamar [Live] 00:00 Tools
Shamanic P Rayer For A Departed Soul In The Style Of Kalzang 00:00 Tools
What You Talkin' About 00:00 Tools
Tooruktug Dolgaï Tangdym (The Forest Is Full Of Cedar Nuts - Tuvan National Anthem) 00:00 Tools
Eki A'ttar (Good Horses) [Live] 00:00 Tools
Kongar-ol Ondar - 02 - Good Horses 00:00 Tools
Melody on the Khomus [Tuvan Jaw Harp] 00:00 Tools
'what You Talkin' About-' 00:00 Tools
Dymzhuktaar [Tuvan Throat-Humming] 00:00 Tools
Öpei Khöömeï [Tuvan Lullaby] 00:00 Tools
Meeng Tuvam [My Tuva] 00:00 Tools
... 00:00 Tools
Kongurei 00:00 Tools
Hoomei 00:00 Tools
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Kongar-ol Ondar was born in 1962 near the Hemchik River in western Tuva, within sight of the ruins of the Chadaana Buddhist Monastery destroyed by the communists in the 1930's. Ondar's epic saga would converge around his singular vocal gift to make him Tuva's musical ambassador to the world. As a child, he was taught the fundamentals of throat-singing by his uncle. "Throat-singing is a tradition of Tuva that is very old," Ondar recently remarked. "it is inspired by the beautiful landscape of Tuva, which is full of sounds -- the windswept open range with grazing livestock, the mountain forests full of birds and animals and the countless streams tumbling out of the mountains onto the open range to form mighty rivers. Our throat-singing has been passed down for countless generations. It is the immortal part of ourselves. By 1980, after finishing his primary education, Ondar had already begun his career as a professional vocalist, employed by the Tuvan House Of Culture. He later became the MC and featured singer with the popular local group, the Cheleesh Ensemble. In late 1983, Ondar was drafted into the Soviet Navy, which seemed blissfully unaware that its young recruit hailed from an entirely landlocked country. While stationed on Siberia's Kamchatka Peninsula, he suffered a broken neck while loading hundred pound bags of sugar and, after 45 days in sick bay, was honorably discharged. Returning to his native land, Ondar studied at the Kyzyl Pedagogical Institute and became a Russian language teacher. The haunting music of his homeland, however, was never far from his heart and mind. "As I am a Tuvan, I believe that throat-singing is in my blood," asserts Ondar. "When I was a boy, I would go every summer high into the mountains to stay with one of my mother's uncles. There, in the evenings in the camp, I would hear the old man sing to himself. He would have a few drinks of arak -- the local brew made from fermented goat's milk -- and sing two, three or even four notes at once. Later, at school, I sang and sang and sang, until I got it, too." It was from such rich recollections and deep cultural roots that Ondar determined to make throat-singing his life. In 1985, he formed the Tuva Ensemble which, defying official displeasure, began performing concerts both in Tuva and in neighboring Soviet republics. By the early '90s Ondar's reputation had begun to take on an international scope, first with a series of well-received performances in Europe and then as the winner of the UNESCO-sponsored International Festival of Throat-Singing. A year later, after a hugely successful tour of the Netherlands, the Tuva Ensemble recorded their first album, Tuva: Voices From The Land Of The Eagle (on the independent PAN label). Small wonder that, in 1992, he was honored by his grateful nation with the title of People's Throat-Singer of Tuva. Ondar's odyssey had only begun. As word-of-mouth about this remarkable vocal style and its prime practitioner began to spread among a select group of savvy musicians, Ondar found himself in demand for a diverse range of globe-spanning projects. In 1993 alone, he performed and recorded with The Kronos Quartet, for their album Night Prayers; Ry Cooder, as well as Frank Zappa, the Grateful Dead's Micky Hart, The Chieftains and Johnny "Guitar" Watson. Ondar was also a special guest at a command performance in New York City, sharing the stage with a troupe of Tibetan Monks and Japanese avant garde pioneer Kitaro. In 1994, Ondar joined forces with San Francisco artist Paul "Earthquake" Pena to record a groundbreaking blend of throat-singing and blues, aptly titled Genghis Blues. He subsequently went on tour with Pena, and after returning home, sang for an august audience that included Tuvan leader Sherig-ool Oorzhak and former Russian Federation President Boris Yeltsin, who afterward named Ondar a National Artist Of Russia. It was a far cry from the days when the authorities all but banned throat-singing in the Soviet Empire. Additional accolades, awards and albums followed, including the 1995 release Echoes Of Tuva and appearances at San Francisco's Asian Art Museum, the Japan Society in New York and the Korea Society Center at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC. http://www.ondar.com/ Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.