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View Full Version : `This Woman's Polyphonic Overtone Singing Doesn't Sound Humanly Possible`



LongTermGuy
10-05-2014, 02:23 PM
`I found this Interesting and amazing....wow!

`When you watch German musician Anna-Maria Hefele (http://xanmoo.com/am-oberton/) demonstrate a fewpolyphonic overtone singing techniques (http://newt.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/xoomi.html), you will get chills.

"Overtone singing is a voice technique where one person sings two notes at the same time," explains Hefele in the video above. On her website, Hefele says this style isoriginally from Mongolia, locally known as Sygyt. (http://xanmoo.com/am-oberton/meine-musik/)

Watch Hefele show off her perfect control, as she is able to sustain one constant low note, while simultaneously singing a high-pitched scale.

It seems impossible that the sounds are coming from just one woman, and Hefele's vocal control might leave you wondering if she is even human.
But she is not new to the craft. Hefele has been studying throat singing since 2005 (http://xanmoo.com/am-oberton/), and is a classically trained singer who plays instruments like the harp, mandolin, piano, didgeridoo and Schwegel.`


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vC9Qh709gas#t=128

Tyr-Ziu Saxnot
10-06-2014, 09:01 AM
`I found this Interesting and amazing....wow!

`When you watch German musician Anna-Maria Hefele (http://xanmoo.com/am-oberton/) demonstrate a fewpolyphonic overtone singing techniques (http://newt.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/xoomi.html), you will get chills.

"Overtone singing is a voice technique where one person sings two notes at the same time," explains Hefele in the video above. On her website, Hefele says this style isoriginally from Mongolia, locally known as Sygyt. (http://xanmoo.com/am-oberton/meine-musik/)

Watch Hefele show off her perfect control, as she is able to sustain one constant low note, while simultaneously singing a high-pitched scale.

It seems impossible that the sounds are coming from just one woman, and Hefele's vocal control might leave you wondering if she is even human.
But she is not new to the craft. Hefele has been studying throat singing since 2005 (http://xanmoo.com/am-oberton/), and is a classically trained singer who plays instruments like the harp, mandolin, piano, didgeridoo and Schwegel.`


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vC9Qh709gas#t=128

This is a trick right?
She got that bra camera on right? ;)--Tyr

Seriously, wicked how she can do that.