Urna (singer)
Mongol singer (born 1969)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Urna Chahar-Tugchi (born 1969[1]), known mononymously as Urna (stylized in all caps), is a Mongol singer and yangqin player from Inner Mongolia, China.[2] She currently lives in Bavaria, Germany.
URNA | |
|---|---|
| Background information | |
| Born | 1969 (age 56–57) Ordos, Inner Mongolia, China |
| Instrument | Yangqin |
| Website | www.urna.com |
| Mongolian name | |
| Mongolian Cyrillic | Урнаа Цахар Тугчи |
| Mongolian script | ᠤᠷᠠᠨᠠ ᠴᠠᠬᠠᠷ ᠲᠤᠭᠴᠢ |
Biography
Urna was born into a family of herders in the grasslands of the Ordos Plateau in Inner Mongolia,[3] a society where song was a ubiquitous part of everyday life.[4] Her first musical training was learning to play the yangqin – the Chinese dulcimer – from a Shanghai Conservatory of Music professor who was visiting Hohhot, the capital of Inner Mongolia.[3] Then, at the age of 18, she moved to study at the Shanghai Conservatory, a challenging step since she had no knowledge of the Chinese language.[3]
She now performs around the world, and is based in Bavaria, Germany. In 2003, she was awarded the RUTH prize in Germany for Best International Artist.[3]
Discography and filmography
Urna has produced seven[5] albums of music on CD:[6]
- 1995 – Tal Nutag (13 tracks) – with Robert Zollitsch (zither) and Oliver Kälberer (guitar, mandolin) – recorded in a Bavarian church, Mongolian songs and improvisations
- 1997 – Crossing
- 1999 – Hödööd (11 tracks) – with Robert Zollitsch (zither, vocal, percussion), Wu Wei playing the Sheng and Sebastian Hilken playing the cello and the frame drum – Mongolian songs and original compositions
- 2001 – Jamar (10 tracks) – with Robert Zollitsch playing the zither and throat-singing, Morin khuur-virtuoso Burintegus and Ramesh Shotham (Indian percussion) – lyrics in Chinese and Mongolian
- 2002 – Hodood
- 2004 – Amilal (13 tracks) – with Djamchid and Keyvan Chemirani, Zarb percussionists from Iran and Zoltan Lantos (Violin) – a personal record of her travels and her world view[3]
- 2012 – Portrait d'URNA: Tenggeriin Shivuu
- 2018 – Ser (12 tracks) – with Kroke[7]
She is also featured in the film Two Horses of Genghis Khan.[8]
Reception
Andrea Murray's description in The Herald-Times of one of her performances gives an intriguing insight into the extraordinary characteristics of her singing:[9]
She sang like a child, like a banshee, like a warrior, like a lost lamb, like a horse trader .... when the last note was gone, the silent audience stood up and cheered.