Overtone singing is a vocal technique that enables a single singer to produce two or more distinct pitches simultaneously by emphasizing specific overtones, or harmonics, of a fundamental tone through targeted manipulation of the vocal tract.[1] This creates the auditory effect of polyphony, with the fundamental pitch serving as a continuous drone and the amplified harmonics forming a separate melody line.[2] The practice requires precise control over articulators such as the tongue, lips, jaw, and velum to align vocal resonances with selected harmonics, effectively filtering the voice's natural spectrum to highlight individual partials.[3]Historically, overtone singing originated among indigenous cultures in Central Asia, particularly the Tuvan people of Siberia, where it is known as khöömei and was traditionally used to imitate natural sounds like wind or rivers for spiritual communication and herding.[3] Similar techniques appear in Inuit katajjaq from northern Canada, performed as competitive vocal games by women, and in Xhosa umngqokolo from South Africa, employed in celebratory choral contexts.[4] These traditions, dating back centuries, emphasize the technique's roots in communal and ritualistic expression rather than Western notions of harmony.[3]Key techniques in overtone singing fall into two primary methods: the single-cavity approach, where the tongue remains relatively flat and adjustments to the mouth and lips select harmonics, and the two-cavity method, in which the tongue divides the vocal tract into front and back resonators to tune multiple overtones independently.[3] Within Tuvan styles, variations include khomei (a soft, foundational style with mild harmonics in the low-to-mid range), sygyt (a high, piercing whistle-like tone), and kargyraa (a low, raspy style using subharmonics below the fundamental frequency).[3] Acoustically, the process relies on the voice's harmonic series, where formants—resonant frequencies of the vocal tract—are shifted to significantly boost particular overtones above the fundamental, demanding exceptional auditory feedback and muscular precision from the singer.[2][5]In contemporary music, overtone singing has transcended its traditional boundaries, influencing genres from world music to jazz and pop through artists like Tuvan performer Kongar-ol Ondar, who popularized it in the West during the 1990s, and Inuit singer Tanya Tagaq, who has integrated it into experimental and electronic compositions since the 2000s.[3] Modern exponents, such as vocalist Lalah Hathaway, have earned acclaim for overtone applications in mainstream settings, including her Grammy-winning performance on the 2014 track "Something" by Snarky Puppy.[4] The technique's resurgence is also evident in film scores, such as Hans Zimmer's work on the Dune soundtrack, highlighting its versatility and ethereal quality in global cultural narratives.[4]
Fundamentals
Definition and terminology
Overtone singing is a specialized vocal technique that enables a performer to produce at least two distinct pitches simultaneously from a single vocal source, typically consisting of a low fundamental frequency serving as a drone and one or more higher harmonics amplified to form a discernible melody. This is achieved through precise manipulation of the vocal tract to enhance the resonance of specific overtones within the harmonic series generated by the vibrating vocal folds.[6][3][7]The practice is known by various terms across cultures and scholarly contexts, reflecting both indigenous traditions and Western interpretations. In Tuvan culture, "khöömei" serves as the generic term encompassing multiple styles of this singing, derived from a Mongolian linguistic root meaning "throat" or "pharynx," though its exact etymology ties to spiritual and naturalistic expressions in Central Asian folklore.[3][8] Other common designations include "throat singing," which emphasizes the perceived involvement of the pharynx but often mischaracterizes the primary role of supraglottic resonance; "harmonic singing," highlighting the emphasis on the harmonic series; and "biphonic singing," denoting the dual-pitch output.[2] In Western scholarship, "overtone singing" gained prominence in the mid-20th century, notably through avant-garde composers like Karlheinz Stockhausen, who integrated it into experimental works, contrasting with indigenous nomenclature that prioritizes cultural or anatomical connotations over acoustic analysis.[2]Unlike standard monophonic singing, where the vocal tract uniformly shapes timbre around the fundamentalpitch, overtone singing selectively boosts individual overtones—often several octaves above the drone—to create the auditory illusion of polyphony from a solo voice, without altering the fundamental's stability.[6][7] It is distinct from true polyphonic singing, which requires multiple independent vocal lines from separate performers or sources, and from beatboxing, a modern imitative technique focused on rhythmic percussion and sound effects rather than harmonicmelody.[3] These distinctions underscore overtone singing's unique reliance on the natural harmonicspectrum for multiphonics, setting it apart as a bridge between solo vocalization and ensemble-like textures.[2]
Acoustics and vocal physiology
Overtone singing relies on the harmonic series inherent in vocal sound production, where the vocal folds vibrate at a fundamental frequency f_1, generating overtones at integer multiples f_n = n \cdot f_1, with n being a positive integer greater than 1.[9] These overtones form a series of partials above the fundamental, typically in a stable drone around 100–200 Hz for the fundamental in various styles.[7] The technique selectively emphasizes one or more of these harmonics to produce a distinct melodic pitch, distinguishing it from standard monophonic singing.[10]The amplification of specific harmonics occurs through vocal tract resonances, known as formants, which act as filters to boost certain frequencies while attenuating others. In overtone singing, singers tune the second and third formants (F2 and F3) to cluster closely around a target harmonic, often creating a "duplex formant" in the 1–2 kHz range that enhances the chosen overtone by 15–35 dB or more relative to adjacent harmonics.[9] This formant tuning aligns the vocal tract's resonance peaks with the desired harmonic from the series, such as the 6th or 7th partial, allowing the overtone to emerge prominently as a separate tone above the fundamentaldrone.[7] The first formant (F1) is typically tuned near the fundamental to reinforce the drone without overpowering the melody.[10]Physiologically, overtone singing demands precise control over the vocal tract to shape these resonances, involving adjustments to the tongue, lips, throat, and pharynx. The tongue is positioned to create constrictions, such as raising and retracting the tip for lower overtones or using dorsal adjustments for higher ones, effectively dividing the vocal tract into front and back cavities that function as Helmholtz resonators with volumes of 2–11 cm³.[7]Lips are rounded or protruded to fine-tune the front cavity resonance, while pharyngeal narrowing at the uvula or posterior wall enhances overtone focus through additional constrictions at the alveolar ridge.[9] The voice source remains relatively stable, with a closed glottal quotient of about 0.6, indicating firmer adduction than in typical speech.[7]In subharmonic styles like kargyraa, production differs by involving the ventricular (false) vocal folds, which vibrate in contact to generate lower frequencies and polyphonic overtones, often halving the fundamental to around 85–100 Hz and creating a secondary sound source.[11] This contrasts with harmonicovertone production, where only the true vocal folds vibrate to produce integer multiples without additional subharmonic components from ventricular involvement.[9] Such subharmonic mechanisms allow for a deeper, more strained timbre but require greater laryngeal control to avoid strain.[12]
Techniques
Basic production methods
Overtone singing begins with the production of a stable low-pitched fundamental tone, known as the drone, generated by the vibration of the vocal folds at a frequency typically between 100 and 200 Hz.[7] This drone provides the base harmonic series from which higher overtones are selectively amplified. The singer then manipulates the vocal tract—encompassing the pharynx, oral cavity, and nasal passages—to adjust formant frequencies, thereby enhancing the amplitude of specific harmonics above the fundamental.[9] Key adjustments involve subtle changes in tongue position, lip rounding, and jaw relaxation to create resonances that align with desired overtones, often by dividing the vocal tract into front and back cavities or forming a single tuned resonator.[3]The step-by-step process typically starts with deep inhalation to open the throat and drop the jaw while rounding the lips to approximate a /u/ vowel sound, ensuring minimal tension in the larynx.[13] Next, the singer phonates the fundamental on a medium-low pitch, maintaining steady breath support to sustain the tone without wavering.[13] Tongue elevation or retraction follows, with the tip often positioned near the alveolar ridge to constrict the tract and boost higher harmonics, while lip protrusion fine-tunes the resonance.[7] Progressive glissandi or vowel shifts, such as from /u/ to /i/, help isolate the first overtone, after which the singer practices sustaining it against the drone before scaling to higher partials.[13] These universal mechanics rely on the vocal tract acting as a filter to emphasize harmonics, independent of cultural variations.[3]Common exercises for beginners emphasize building control over resonance and breath. Lip trills on a steady exhalation develop diaphragmatic support and relax the oral musculature, preparing for drone stability.[13] Vowel shaping drills, such as transitioning between rounded (/u/, /o/) and spread (/i/, /e/) vowels on a fixed pitch, train the ear to detect emerging overtones and refine tract adjustments.[13]Resonance isolation can be practiced by humming nasals like /ng/ to elevate the soft palate, followed by open-vowel phonation to project harmonics forward, often using hand placement on the cheeks to monitor jaw freedom.[13] Arpeggiating the overtone series on a sustained fundamental further strengthens pitch discrimination and tract precision.[13]Physiologically, overtone singing demands precise breath control to maintain subglottal pressure for the drone, alongside a relaxed larynx to avoid undue vocal fold strain.[7] The technique engages underutilized articulators, such as the tongue root and soft palate, requiring firmer but stable vocal fold adduction without pressed phonation that could lead to fatigue or hoarseness over extended practice.[7] Risks include laryngeal tension if resonance is forced rather than shaped naturally, underscoring the need for gradual progression to prevent vocal strain.[3]Tools like spectrogram software or mobile apps aid learning by visualizing the harmonic spectrum in real time, allowing practitioners to observe amplitude peaks for targeted overtones during exercises.[14] Applications such as VoceVista display the fundamental and partials graphically, helping isolate resonances through immediate feedback on frequency and intensity.[14] These universal aids facilitate self-correction across traditions by quantifying the acoustic output of vocal tract adjustments.[3]
Style variations
Overtone singing encompasses several distinct technical styles, each characterized by unique manipulations of the vocal tract to emphasize specific harmonics or subharmonics over a fundamental drone. These styles differ primarily in the positioning of the tongue, lips, and pharynx, as well as the involvement of additional vocal structures like the ventricular folds, resulting in varied timbres, pitch ranges, and melodic capabilities. The core styles—khoomei, sygyt, and kargyraa—form the foundation, with variations and blends expanding expressive possibilities.[3][15]Khoomei, often considered the basic style, involves a relaxed abdominal breath support and a mid-range fundamental frequency around 140–164 Hz, with the tongue positioned flat to allow selective emphasis on harmonics in the 1–2 kHz range through subtle lip and throat adjustments. This produces a soft, gentle timbre with clear, mild overtones that emerge as a melodic line above the drone, enabling relatively straightforward melodies within a pentatonic framework. Compared to other styles, khoomei offers a balanced, wind-like sound with moderate pitch flexibility and is generally the least difficult to master due to its minimal constriction requirements.[6][3][15]Sygyt emphasizes high-pitched, whistle-like overtones by narrowing the vocal tract through tongue placement against the upper teeth or molars and constrictions near the alveolar ridge and uvula, merging formants F2 and F3 to focus energy at 1.5–2 kHz (or up to 3–3.5 kHz in advanced variants). The resulting timbre is piercing and flute-like, with a narrow spectral band that amplifies select harmonics by 15–35 dB, allowing complex, bird-like melodies over a mid-range fundamental similar to khoomei. This style demands precise control for its bright, "pure" sound but is more challenging than khoomei due to the need for sustained high-frequency filtering.[6][3][15]Kargyraa produces low subharmonics through vibration of the ventricular folds alongside the vocal folds, creating a deep, croaking fundamental around 50–55 Hz or an octave below normal speech, with chest resonance and variable mouth shaping from rounded to wide open. Its timbre is hoarse and intense, evoking growls or howls with a dense, rough overtone spectrum rich in up to eight harmonics, suited for resonant, earthy melodies rather than high agility. This style is among the most difficult, requiring significant laryngeal control and breath pressure, and contrasts sharply with sygyt's clarity by prioritizing depth over brightness.[3][15]Variations like ezengileer introduce rhythmic effects by rapidly oscillating the tongue and velum to mimic percussive sounds, such as horse galloping, often layered over a khoomei or sygyt base for a pulsing timbre in variable pitch ranges. Sigit, a purer form of sygyt, heightens the whistle effect with even tighter tract narrowing for an ethereal, minimal-fundamental sound. Blended styles, such as chylandyk, combine elements—like kargyraa with sygyt—for hybrid timbres that mix deep scratchiness with high whistling, expanding melodic range but increasing technical complexity. Over time, these styles have evolved within traditions to include more fluid transitions and extended harmonic selections, enhancing overall versatility without altering core production principles.[3][15]
History
Origins and early development
Overtone singing, also known as throat singing, is believed to have originated among nomadic pastoralist cultures in Central Asia, particularly among Turko-Mongol tribes in regions such as Tuva, Mongolia, and the Altai Mountains, with deep roots in herding and spiritual practices dating back centuries or more according to ethnographic accounts.[3] Ethnographic accounts suggest the technique emerged as a means for herders to communicate across vast steppes and connect with the environment. Linked to shamanistic traditions, it served as a tool for invoking spirits and achieving altered states of consciousness, with Tuvan practitioners using styles like khöömei to connect with supernatural entities and assimilate their power in rituals.[3] Due to its oral transmission, precise dating of origins remains challenging, relying on ethnographic and linguistic evidence. Archaeological evidence is limited, with the technique's integration into epic storytelling and communal rites pointing to its longstanding cultural embedding without reliance on written records.[16] The practice spread through nomadic migrations and trade networks, including the Silk Road, and was further disseminated during the Mongol Empire's expansions in the 13th century, carrying the tradition to broader Eurasian steppes and influencing variant forms in adjacent regions. In pre-modern societies, overtone singing played a central role in rituals, such as shamanic ceremonies for healing and divination, and in reciting heroic epics like the Tuvan tales of ancient heroes, often accompanied by traditional instruments to evoke the landscape's vastness.[3]Documentation of overtone singing prior to the 20th century primarily comes from 19th-century Russian ethnographers exploring Siberia, with Wilhelm Radloff providing some of the earliest reliable accounts of Tuvan vocal traditions, including song lyrics and performative descriptions from his expeditions in the 1860s.[16] These records highlight its use in everyday herding activities, where singers modulated overtones to soothe livestock or signal across distances, underscoring its practical and spiritual significance in unaltered traditional lifeways.[3] Overall, the early development of overtone singing reflects a profound adaptation of vocal physiology to cultural and environmental needs, preserved orally through generations in isolation from modern influences.[17]
Modern revival and global spread
During the Soviet era, traditional Tuvan throat singing faced control and marginalization as part of broader efforts to promote socialist cultural norms, with performances limited to state-sponsored folk ensembles that often blended it with Russian influences rather than preserving its nomadic roots.[18] This obscured its historical and spiritual significance, though it survived in rural communities. Rediscovery gained momentum in the late 1940s through the 1960s via initial ethnographic studies, but systematic research intensified in the 1980s under ethnomusicologists like Zoya Kyrgys, who documented its techniques and advocated for its cultural protection through monographs and recordings.[19] Her work, including a seminal 1991 book on Tuvan throat singing, laid the foundation for post-Soviet revitalization by highlighting its acoustic and social dimensions.[20]The collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s sparked a popularity boom, as groups like Huun-Huur-Tu and performers such as Kongar-ool Ondar began international tours, introducing overtone singing to global audiences through albums and live performances.[21]Huun-Huur-Tu, formed in 1992 from the Tuva Ensemble, toured the United States and Europe starting in 1993, blending traditional styles with world music elements to reach wider listeners via labels like Ellipsis Arts.[22]Ondar, collaborating with Western musicians like Paul Pena in the Oscar-nominated documentary Genghis Blues (1999), further amplified its exposure, marking the first major crossover of Tuvan techniques into documentary film and popular culture.[23]This resurgence facilitated global spread, culminating in UNESCO's 2009 inscription of Tuvan and related Mongolian throat singing practices (khoomei) on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, recognizing their role in preserving nomadic identities.[24] The tradition influenced world music fusions, such as Huun-Huur-Tu's collaborations with Western artists, and permeated new age genres through recordings emphasizing meditative overtones for spiritual practices.[25] In film, it appeared in scores evoking ethereal or ancient atmospheres, expanding its aesthetic reach beyond ethnic contexts.Post-2020 developments accelerated dissemination via online platforms, with tutorials on YouTube and apps enabling self-study amid pandemic restrictions, democratizing access for non-traditional learners worldwide.[26] Festivals like the Natural Tone & Overtone Symposium in Switzerland (2022) and emerging events such as Echoes of the Steppe (August 2025) foster international workshops and competitions, promoting cross-cultural exchange and innovation in overtone techniques.[27]
Asia
Mongolia and Buryatia
In Mongolia, overtone singing, known as khoomei or hooliin chor, is often integrated with urtyn duu, the traditional long song characterized by its expansive melodies and syllabic elongation, to create layered vocal harmonies that evoke the vast steppes.[28] This blending enhances the emotional depth of performances, where the fundamental drone of khoomei supports the melodic contours of urtyn duu. During the annual Naadam festival, held from July 11 to 13, khoomei serves as a central performing art, accompanying rituals such as praise songs for wrestlers, archers, and horsemen, thereby reinforcing communal bonds and nomadic heritage.[29] The morin khuur, or horsehead fiddle, frequently provides accompaniment to khoomei, its resonant strings amplifying the overtones to mimic natural and equine sounds, thus enriching the harmonic texture in festival settings.[29]Khoomei plays a vital role in the oral transmission of Mongolian epics, particularly the Geser cycle, where performers use throat timbres to narrate heroic tales of the legendary king, blending overtone techniques with epic recitation to convey spiritual and ancestral reverence.[30] This practice, rooted in ritual ceremonies honoring nature and heroes, faced decline during the Soviet-influenced period from the 1930s to the 1980s, when traditional arts were suppressed in favor of socialist realism, leading to a near-loss of practitioners in rural areas.[31] Following Mongolia's democratic transition in 1990, khoomei experienced a revival through state-sponsored festivals, educational programs, and international recognition, restoring its place in cultural identity and cross-border exchanges.[31]In neighboring Buryatia, a region with deep Mongolian cultural ties, khöömii variants are strongly influenced by shamanistic traditions, where singers employ overtone calls to imitate natural phenomena such as wind gusts, animal cries, and flowing water, facilitating spiritual communion during rituals.[32] These imitative techniques, passed down orally in shamanic ceremonies, underscore khöömii's role in evoking environmental harmony and ancestral spirits, much like its use in epic narratives such as Geser.[32] Buryat khöömii also acts as a stylistic bridge to Tuvan traditions, incorporating shared overtone methods like fundamental drones and whistles, transmitted across the Altai-Sayan borderlands through cultural exchanges.[33] The form similarly declined under Soviet policies but saw post-1990 revitalization via local ensembles and festivals, preserving its shamanic essence amid modernization.[34]
Tuva
Tuvan throat singing, known locally as xöömei, represents one of the most diverse and renowned traditions of overtone singing, deeply embedded in the cultural identity of the Tuvan people in the Republic of Tuva, Russia.[8] This practice emerged among nomadic herders in the vast steppes and mountainous regions of southern Siberia, where singers use specialized vocal techniques to produce multiple pitches simultaneously, evoking the sounds of their environment.[24] The tradition's international fame grew in the late 20th century through ensembles like Huun-Huur-Tu and the Alash Ensemble, which blended traditional elements with global music influences.[8]The core styles of Tuvan xöömei include khoomei, sygyt, kargyraa, and ezengileer, each characterized by distinct timbres and applications. Khoomei serves as the foundational style, producing a soft, diffused sound with clear but mellow overtones above a low-to-midrange fundamental pitch, achieved through relaxed abdominal control and tongue positioning to select harmonics; it is often used for general melodic expression and as a base for other variations.[35][3] Sygyt features a piercing, whistle-like timbre with high-pitched overtones resembling a flute, created by sealing the mouth cavity with a small opening and positioning the tonguetip behind the teeth; this style emphasizes melodic precision and is commonly employed in solo performances to highlight clarity and range.[35][3] Kargyraa produces a deep, croaking or growling drone from the chest voice, with sub-variations like mountain kargyraa (lower and nasal) and steppe kargyraa (higher and raspier), modulated by vowel shapes and mouth resonance; it conveys emotional depth and power, often evoking natural forces.[35][8] Ezengileer adds rhythmic oscillations to overtones, mimicking the galloping of horse stirrups through velum movements, serving as an ornamental effect to enhance rhythmic and imitative qualities in performances.[35][3]Rooted in Tuvan herding and horse culture, xöömei originated as a practical and spiritual practice among pastoralists, who used it to communicate across distances and connect with the animistic spirits of animals and landscapes.[24][35] Singers imitate natural elements such as gurgling rivers, whistling winds, mountain echoes, and the rhythms of horses, transforming the voice into a sonic representation of the steppe environment.[24][35] This imitative aspect underscores the tradition's ties to nomadic life, where horses symbolize freedom and sustenance for the Tuvan people, who historically maintained a population where two-thirds were ethnic Tuvans engaged in herding.[35]Historically, xöömei was preserved during the Tuvan People's Republic (1921–1944), a period of semi-independence that mythologized the practice as a symbol of nomadic heritage, before Soviet annexation in 1944 led to its marginalization as "backward" alongside restrictions on shamanism and Buddhism.[8][24] The tradition faced suppression under Soviet policies but began reviving in the early 1980s amid perestroika, with the 1981 First Republic-Wide Festival of Xöömei and the 1987–1988 Soviet-American expedition marking key turning points that lifted informal bans and fostered documentation.[8] Post-1991, it experienced a cultural renaissance, supported by institutions like the Scientific Center “Xöömei” (1993) and the Xöömei Academy (2013).[8]Socially, xöömei is transmitted through a master-apprentice system, where young learners, often starting in childhood, observe and imitate rural herders in outdoor settings to develop embodied techniques.[24][8] Traditionally a male domain due to taboos associating women's singing with infertility, the practice has become more inclusive since the late 20th century, with female ensembles like Tuva Kyzy (founded 1998) challenging norms and participating publicly.[24][8] Performances occur in cultural competitions such as the International Khoomei Symposium in Kyzyl (e.g., the Khures events), where styles are showcased alongside wrestling and other traditions, reinforcing community bonds and national identity.[35][8]
Altai and Khakassia
In the Altai Republic, throat singing known as kai plays a central role in the performance of oral epic tales, where singers called kaichi use guttural techniques to narrate heroic narratives such as Maaday-Kara and Kyzyl Oozy. These epics, which recount the adventures of legendary heroes and the creation of the world, employ kai to evoke a buzzing, resonant tonality that mimics natural sounds and spiritual forces, enhancing the dramatic effect. The low-pitched kargyraa style, a sub-technique of kai, is particularly favored for its deep, rumbling quality, which underscores intense battle scenes and invocations of supernatural aid.[36][37]In neighboring Khakassia, throat singing referred to as khai features distinct styles including aiyy khai, associated with divine or ritualistic themes invoking benevolent spirits, and uzun khai, characterized by extended, sustained overtones for prolonged narrative delivery. These performances are often accompanied by the chatkhan, a traditional jaw harp that produces metallic overtones to complement the vocal harmonics, creating a layered soundscape suitable for epic recitation. Unlike more virtuosic displays elsewhere, Khakass khai prioritizes rhythmic storytelling and emotional depth, with singers modulating pitch to align with the epic's moral and cosmological elements.[38][39][40]Both Altai and Khakass throat singing hold profound cultural significance, intertwined with shamanic rituals where performers act as mediators between the human and spirit worlds, restoring harmony through vocal resonance. Epic singing traditions in these regions, recognized for their role in preserving Turkic heritage, have been highlighted in UNESCO efforts to safeguard intangible cultural expressions of Siberian peoples, though not yet formally inscribed. Historically, early documentation emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries through ethnographers like Andrey Anokhin, who recorded kai performances amid Russian imperial expeditions.[37][36]Post-Soviet revival has revitalized these practices through dedicated ensembles and festivals, such as the Altai Kai group's formation in 1997 to promote kai internationally and annual folk gatherings in Khakassia featuring khai alongside shamanic rites. These initiatives emphasize narrative transmission over technical showmanship, fostering community identity amid cultural resurgence.[41][42][43]
Tibet
In Tibetan Buddhist practices, overtone singing manifests primarily through multiphonic or chordal chanting techniques, where monks produce a fundamental drone accompanied by multiple overtones, often emphasizing low subharmonics. Notable styles include dzo-ke, which utilizes undertones below the typical vocal range to create resonant, layered sounds, and forms integrated with ritual instruments such as the dungchen, a long trumpet capable of multiphonic effects that complements the vocal harmonics during ceremonies. This integration enhances the sonic depth, with the dungchen's booming tones mirroring and amplifying the chants' vibrational qualities in monastic rituals.[44][45][46]The cultural role of overtone singing in Tibet is deeply embedded in monastic life, serving as a meditative and ritual tool to induce trance-like states and facilitate spiritual transcendence, particularly within VajrayanaBuddhism. Employed in monasteries for invoking divine presence and focusing the mind during prayer, these chants are believed to embody emptiness and aid in achieving higher consciousness, with links to contemplative traditions like Dzogchen where sonic practices support direct realization of the mind's nature. The Gyuto Tantric University, a key center for this tradition, preserves these chants as sacred offerings, performed by trained monks to accompany tantric invocations and sustain communal harmony.[47][48][49]Historically, overtone singing traces to ancient Tibetan Buddhist lineages, with the Gyuto order's chordal chanting tradition dating to its founding in 1474 by Jetsun Kunga Dhondup, though rooted in earlier tantric practices predating the 15th century. Following the 1959 Chinese invasion, surviving monks fled Tibet, preserving the art in exile communities; around 60 Gyuto monks resettled in India, eventually establishing their monastery near Dharamshala in 1968, where the practice continues amid efforts to transmit it to new generations. This relocation ensured the survival of the technique despite cultural disruptions in Tibet.[48]Physiologically, Tibetan overtone singing relies on low-frequency drones—often an octave below a double bass—produced by expanding the throat cavity up to a third larger through precise control of the larynx, tongue, and oral resonator, allowing subtle overtones to emerge for trance induction. Novice monks begin training around age 10, mastering thousands of pages of texts before learning to amplify harmonics (up to nine in advanced forms), which resonate internally to heighten meditative absorption and psycho-physical balance. These vibrations are said to align bodily energies, promoting deeper states of mindfulness.[50][44][47]In modern contexts, overtone singing is actively taught at institutions like the Gyuto Tantric University in Dharamshala, home to nearly 500 monks who maintain daily practice and perform globally to share Tibetan heritage. Recordings such as the Gyuto Monks' 1986 album Tibetan Tantric Choir and collaborations with Western artists, including a 1995 performance with the Grateful Dead, have influenced yoga and ambient music scenes, introducing these harmonic techniques to international meditation practices.[48][50]
Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan
In Kazakhstan, overtone singing, known locally as kömei, represents a revival of ancient Turkic vocal techniques adapted to contemporary neotraditional music. This style, which produces multiple pitches simultaneously through throat manipulation, was introduced to Kazakh performers from the Altai region of southern Siberia in the early 2000s, despite lacking direct historical documentation in traditional Kazakh repertoires. Kömei often emulates the instrumental genre kuu, a form of melodic improvisation that mimics natural sounds of the steppe, such as wind, animals, and flowing water, using sygyt-like high overtones to replicate the piercing tones of the sybyzgy flute. Performers sustain a fundamental drone while articulating melodic phrases, creating a layered polyphony that evokes the vast nomadic landscapes.[51][52][53]In Uzbekistan, overtone singing features prominently in the performances of bakhshi, itinerant folk artists who recite dastan epics—narrative poems drawn from Turkic oral traditions—accompanied by instruments like the dombra. These singers employ a challenging overtone technique to produce harmonic overtones alongside the recited melody, enhancing the dramatic storytelling with resonant, ethereal qualities that underscore heroic tales and moral lessons. This vocal style integrates with the classical maqom system, where overtones add depth to improvisational sections, and occasionally accompanies the karnay, a long natural trumpet that relies on harmonic overtones for its booming ceremonial calls. Bakhshi performances emphasize melodic phrasing over prolonged drones, allowing the overtones to punctuate the rhythmic flow of the epic narrative.[54][55][56]The traditions of overtone singing in Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan reflect Silk Road influences, blending Turkic nomadic elements with Persian and Islamic musical structures transmitted through centuries of trade and migration along the ancient routes. These practices are integral to secular celebrations, particularly weddings and festivals, where bakhshi and kömei performers invoke communal joy and cultural continuity through their harmonic vocals, often amid ensembles featuring percussion and winds.[57][55]Historically, early documentation of Central Asian overtone singing, including Kazakh and Uzbek variants, appears in 19th-century accounts by Russian explorers such as Vasily Radlov, who recorded epic recitations and vocal improvisations during expeditions into the steppe regions. During the Soviet era, state-sponsored folk ensembles like those from the Kurmangazy KazakhNational Conservatory preserved and adapted these techniques, incorporating them into staged performances to promote ethnic heritage while blending with orchestral elements. Today, distinct traits such as prioritized melodic articulation over static drones distinguish these regional styles, fostering a sense of cultural revival amid global influences.[58][59]
Pakistan, Iran, Afghanistan, and Kurdistan
In the regions encompassing Pakistan, Iran, Afghanistan, and Kurdistan, overtone singing manifests primarily through folk and bardic traditions tied to nomadic pastoralism and oral storytelling, with Balochi nur sur representing a prominent example. This ancient form of overtone or throat singing is still practiced in the Sulaiman Mountains of Balochistan Province, where a singer narrates folktales using a single overtone, often accompanied by a flute to enhance the melodic narrative.[60] Rooted in traditional Balochi vocal genres like šeyr (narrative songs) and zahirok (melodies evoking loss or absence), nur sur serves as a vehicle for oral transmission of folklore, emphasizing themes of human emotion and cultural identity.[60] Instruments such as the tambura, nal, dohl, and suroz frequently accompany performances, integrating nur sur into communal events like weddings, harvests, and religious rites within the Balochmayar cultural framework.[60]Among Pashto and Balochi speakers in Afghanistan and Pakistan, vocal polyphony akin to throat techniques appears in herding calls and folk expressions, though documentation remains limited to ethnographic overviews of nomadic practices. These calls, used by pastoralists to communicate across vast landscapes, incorporate resonant overtones to mimic natural echoes and animal sounds, reflecting the adaptive needs of mobile herding communities. In Kurdish traditions, the dengbêj bardic style involves epic recitation through unaccompanied chanting, preserving historical narratives of love, war, and resistance; while primarily monophonic, it occasionally employs harmonic overtones in extended vocal phrases to heighten emotional depth during storytelling sessions.[61] This practice, central to Kurdish cultural memory, draws from oral epics passed down through generations, often performed in intimate gatherings or public recitals.Overtone elements in these regions also intersect with mystical and communal rituals, particularly in Sufi-influenced zikr (dhikr) ceremonies across Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Kurdistan. In Balochi Zikri communities, group chants during daily zikrs—such as gwarbamay or nemrocay—involve rhythmic vocal repetition in circular formations, fostering spiritual unity and remembrance of the divine, though not explicitly overtone-based.[60] These practices, with roots in 15th-century Zikrism founded by Syed Muhammad Jaunpuri, have endured persecution, including 18th-century document destruction and 1980s suppression under Pakistani regimes, yet persist as expressions of nomadic pastoral devotion.[60] Historical allusions to resonant chanting appear in broader Persianate Sufi texts from the 13th century, such as those evoking divine harmony in Rumi's poetry, though direct references to overtone techniques are indirect and tied to meditative vocalization. 20th-century field recordings, including those of Balochi nur sur from the Sulaiman Mountains (e.g., performances by Raham Ali), have captured these traditions, aiding preservation amid modernization.[60]
Chukchi Peninsula
Overtone singing among the Chukchi people of the Chukchi Peninsula, known locally as pic-eine'rkin, is a traditional form of throat singing primarily performed by women in duets, producing multiphonic sounds through rhythmic vocal interactions that emphasize low growls and high-pitched whistles. These vocalizations imitate natural Arctic phenomena, such as the breathing and calls of reindeer, gusts of wind across the tundra, and bird trills, creating an auditory representation of the environment essential to Chukchi survival and worldview.[62][63][64]In cultural context, pic-eine'rkin serves shamanic rituals and storytelling sessions within traditional yurts (chums), where performers evoke animistic connections to spirits of animals and weather, fostering communal bonds and spiritual communication during long winter nights. The practice draws from broader shamanic roots in Siberian indigenous traditions, paralleling nomadic vocal techniques seen in Mongolian overtone singing, but adapted to depict the harsh polar landscape rather than epic narratives. Historical development was profoundly affected by Russian colonization starting in the 18th century, which imposed assimilation policies that suppressed indigenous performances, leading to fragmented transmission and limited documentation until ethnographic studies in the late 20th century, such as field recordings from the 1990s.[65][66][63]Unique adaptations include specialized breath control techniques that sustain prolonged, resonant exhalations in subzero temperatures, allowing singers to maintain vocal stability during outdoor or yurt-based sessions amid freezing conditions. Performances often occur in ensembles incorporating frame drums (yarar) beaten by men, which provide rhythmic punctuation to the vocal interplay, enhancing the trance-like quality during rituals or dances.[67][68][69]Currently, pic-eine'rkin is experiencing revival through cultural preservation programs in Chukotka, supported by indigenous ensembles like Ergyron, which blend traditional throat singing with drums to perform at festivals and educational events, countering earlier declines and promoting transmission to younger generations.[69][70]
Europe
Sardinia
In Sardinia, overtone singing manifests through the polyphonic tradition of cantu a tenòre, a form of group vocal performance that emphasizes collective harmonic resonance rather than individual overtone manipulation. This style, unique in European contexts for its Mediterranean pastoral origins, involves four male singers producing a dense sonic texture where natural overtones emerge from the interplay of voices, creating a perceived "fifth voice" known as sa quintina or the first overtone of the fundamental drone. Unlike solo overtone techniques, cantu a tenòre relies on synchronized group harmony to amplify these harmonics, evoking the acoustic resonances of the island's rugged landscapes.[71]The core structure features four distinct voices: the bassu (bass), which establishes a low, guttural drone on the tonal center; the contra, providing a mid-range support a fifth above the bassu with similar throaty timbre; the mesu boche (half voice), harmonizing a third or sixth above the lead; and the boche (voice), which delivers the melodic line and lyrics. The bassu and contra employ a laryngeal phonation that reinforces harmonics through nonsense syllables like "eha" or "ohi," generating a metallic, buzzing quality rich in upper partials, while the upper voices emphasize melodic clarity to highlight these overtones. This technique avoids explicit solo control over overtones, instead fostering a blended resonance through close physical proximity and rhythmic entrainment among singers.[72][71]Rooted in the agro-pastoral life of central Sardinia, particularly the Barbagia region, cantu a tenòre plays a central role in community rituals, including religious processions, weddings, and festivals such as the sartu gatherings, where it accompanies poetry recitation and dances to invoke emotional and spiritual connection. Its origins trace to the island's oral traditions, with early documentation by Italian ethnographers in the 19th century describing the guttural basses and circular formations of performers, linking it to pre-modern pastoral practices. In 2008, UNESCO inscribed cantu a tenòre on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, recognizing its vulnerability to modernization while highlighting its enduring cultural significance.[73][71]
Northern Europe
In Northern Europe, overtone singing manifests through extended vocal techniques in Scandinavian and Finnish herding traditions, particularly in kulning and influences from Sámi joik. Kulning, a high-pitched calling style originating in the medieval Scandinavian fäbod herdingsystem, emphasizes harmonic richness to project over vast distances in forested and mountainous landscapes. Acoustic analyses reveal that effective kulning tones maintain strong fundamentals and even distribution of lower partials without spectral dips, achieving sound pressure levels exceeding 115 dB at close range, which enhances audibility up to several kilometers in rugged terrain.[74] This harmonic emphasis, observable up to 22 meters from the singer, underscores kulning's design for environmental propagation rather than melodic complexity.[75]Finnish variants of kulning, known locally as huutolaiho or ringing calls, incorporate similar extended techniques with a focus on harmonic conservation, adapting the style to Finland's pastoral contexts while retaining tonal organization suited to calling livestock. These practices draw indirect influences from Sámi joik, a traditional vocal form among the indigenous Sámi people across Finland, Sweden, and Norway, where singers evoke animals, landscapes, or individuals through improvisatory, wordless chants that highlight overtones for emotional and spiritual resonance. Joik shares conceptual roots with Siberian throat singing, employing a "primal voice" that embodies its subject—such as reindeer in herding calls—through guttural, body-engaged production.[75][76] In Swedish and Norwegian contexts, joik-like calls extend to reindeer herding, blending with kulning elements to imitate natural sounds like wind or animal cries, often performed as ethereal, high-register solos that mimic the northern environment's vastness.[76]Culturally, these traditions are deeply tied to Sámi influences, where joik serves not only practical herding functions but also as a medium for nature imitation, lullabies, and shamanic rituals, fostering a connection to the Arctic landscape's spiritual and acoustic qualities. The high, ethereal overtones in both kulning and joik create a penetrating, otherworldly timbre ideally suited to open, echoic northern terrains, allowing calls to carry without amplification while evoking a sense of harmony with the surroundings. Historically, early 20th-century efforts preserved these practices through field recordings, such as Karl Tirén's extensive 1910s collection of Sámi joik, which documented over 300 examples and later received UNESCO recognition for safeguarding indigenous vocal heritage.[77] The 20th-century folk revival, accelerating in the 1970s amid broader Indigenous rights movements, brought joik to public stages through fusions with contemporary genres, while kulning experienced renewed interest via ethnographic studies and performances, revitalizing these techniques in educational and artistic settings across Scandinavia.[76][78]
Bashkortostan
Overtone singing in Bashkortostan, practiced by the Bashkir people—a Turkic ethnic group indigenous to the Ural region bridging Europe and Asia—manifests primarily through the style known as özläü (also spelled uzlyau or uzliau), a diphonic technique producing a fundamental drone alongside higher harmonics via vocal tract manipulation.[79] This form resembles the Tuvan ezengileer in its rhythmic harmonic oscillations and low, raspy timbre, akin to kargyraa-like epic bard performances that emphasize depth and resonance for narrative delivery.[79] Detailed studies describe özläü as involving two-part solo polyphony, where the singer generates simultaneous voices through throat resonance, creating an otherworldly, layered sound ideal for oral traditions.[80]In Bashkir culture, özläü holds a central role in reciting kubair—epic tales such as Ural-batyr that recount heroic deeds, cosmology, and ancestral history—where the singer's overtones enhance the dramatic storytelling, evoking the vast steppes and spiritual landscapes.[79] It also features in communal rituals, including those surrounding kumys (fermented mare's milk), a sacred beverage central to nomadic life, where the singing accompanies ceremonies symbolizing fertility, hospitality, and seasonal cycles.[81] Additionally, özläü appears in wedding festivities, blending with celebratory songs to invoke blessings for marital harmony and prosperity, reflecting its broader function in life-cycle events.Historically rooted in Turkic nomadic traditions, Bashkir overtone singing traces to ancient Central Asian practices among Turko-Mongol peoples, where such techniques mimicked natural sounds like wind or animals to connect with the environment and spirits.[19] During the Soviet era, particularly in the 1920s, folkloristic expeditions systematically collected Bashkir oral lore, including kubair and musical forms like özläü, preserving them amid modernization efforts and documenting their polyphonic mechanisms for scholarly analysis.[82][83] These efforts, led by linguists and ethnographers, integrated throat singing into state-supported folklore archives, highlighting its role in ethnic identity.[83]A distinctive feature of Bashkir özläü is its integration with the dombra, a two-stringed long-necked lute, which provides rhythmic and melodic support, layering harmonics to create a fuller sonic texture during performances and amplifying the epic's emotional depth.[79] This accompaniment fosters a symbiotic interplay, where the lute's plucked strings resonate with the singer's overtones, evoking harmonic complexity unique to Uralic-Turkic ensembles.Following the Soviet Union's dissolution in 1991, Bashkir overtone singing experienced a revival through educational initiatives and cultural festivals in Ufa, the republic's capital, including the establishment of throat singing schools that systematize teaching methods for younger generations.[84] Events like the CIOFF World Folkloriada, hosted in Ufa in 2021, showcased özläü alongside traditional instruments, drawing international attention and promoting its preservation as a bridge to Bashkir heritage.[85] These post-Soviet efforts have revitalized the practice, countering earlier declines and embedding it in contemporary folk ensembles.
Andalusia
In Andalusian flamenco, overtone singing manifests subtly through the vocal style known as cante jondo, or "deep song," which employs deep throat techniques to produce guttural growls and enhanced harmonics that convey profound emotional intensity.[86] These techniques involve abdominal propulsion (hipo) to generate an airy, noisy timbre with high-frequency components, shifting formants approximately 300 Hz higher than in conventional singing to amplify overtones without achieving the distinct multiphonics of Central Asian traditions.[86] Singers often conclude phrases with overtonal color, adding a resonant shimmer that extends the voice's emotional reach.[87]The cultural context of cante jondo draws from the fusion of Moorish and Gypsy (Gitano) influences in Andalusia, where Arabic musical elements like sung poetry (zajal) and percussive vocalizations intermingled with Romani expressive traditions during the region's multicultural history.[88] This synthesis, rooted in the Gitano community's settlement in southern Spain from the 15th century onward, channels duende—an ineffable state of ecstatic possession—to articulate themes of anguish, love, and existential depth, transforming personal suffering into communal catharsis.[88] By the 18th and 19th centuries, these elements coalesced in intimate family gatherings and peñas, evolving from private rituals into a hallmark of Andalusian identity amid post-Reconquista cultural reclamation.[88]Historically, cante jondo developed through a 15th- to 19th-century fusion of indigenous Andalusian folk forms with incoming Gitano migrations around 1425 and lingering Moorish legacies from al-Andalus (711–1492), crystallizing in unaccompanied songs like the seguiriya gitana that demand raw vocal prowess.[88] The style gained intellectual prominence through Federico García Lorca's 1922 lecture, "Importancia histórica y artística del primitivo canto Andaluz llamado 'Cante Jondo'," delivered in Granada, where he celebrated its primitive authenticity as a bridge to ancient Iberian and Oriental roots, influencing the inaugural Concurso de Cante Jondo organized with Manuel de Falla.[89]Distinct from purer harmonic traditions, cante jondo's unique traits lie in its emotional rasps—hoarse, cracked timbres (voz afillá) intertwined with subtle overtones—that prioritize visceral duende over isolated harmonic clarity, creating a spectral instability that mirrors life's turbulence.[86] In contemporary flamenco fusion, these overtone elements persist in hybrid works blending traditional cante with jazz or world music, as seen in performances by artists like those featured in modern Andalusian ensembles that preserve the style's resonant depth while expanding its global palette.[90]
Other traditional regions
South Africa
Overtone singing among the Xhosa people of South Africa is exemplified by the umngqokolo style, a polyphonic vocal technique primarily performed by women that produces a dronefundamental tone alongside high overtones, often in solo or duo formats during praise singing.[3] This method involves a low, hoarse bass note generated through undersound throat vibration, alternating with whole-tone fundamentals, while the overtones form melodic lines, creating a layered sound reminiscent of a musical bow.[91] The technique emphasizes natural harmonics derived from the vocal tract's resonance, allowing singers to highlight upper partials for expressive effect.[92]In Xhosa culture, umngqokolo plays a significant role in initiation rites and storytelling, where groups of women use it to accompany call-and-response songs that narrate communal histories or moral tales, such as critiques of social vices like stinginess.[92] Its integration with the click consonants of the isiXhosa language—evident in the term "umngqokolo" itself, featuring the lateral click (q)—enhances rhythmic and phonetic complexity, linking the singing to linguistic traditions that employ up to three click sounds (c, q, x).[93] Performed in celebratory contexts like dances and rites of passage for both boys and girls, it fosters social cohesion and cultural transmission.[3]Historical records of umngqokolo date to the 19th century, first documented by missionary Albert Kropf in his 1899 Xhosa-English dictionary, describing it as "singing in a hoarse voice, producing the sound far back in the throat" with an open mouth.[93] Like many indigenous practices, umngqokolo was affected by apartheid-era policies (1948–1994) that marginalized African cultural expressions, leading to declining transmission among younger generations. Post-apartheid revival efforts, including ethnomusicological documentation in the 1980s and 1990s, helped preserve and promote the style.[94]Umngqokolo has been blended with other South African choral traditions in some performances, underscoring a regional emphasis on natural harmonic series, where the technique's partials align with communal polyphony for heightened emotional impact in praise contexts.[3]Today, umngqokolo persists in performances by artists like Miriam Makeba, who popularized it globally through songs such as "Umqokozo," showcasing the style's gruff overtones in exile-era recordings that highlighted Xhosa heritage.[95] Modern ensembles, including the Ngqoko Women's Ensemble, continue the tradition in concerts and cultural festivals, performing duo and group pieces with traditional instruments like the umrhubhe bow to sustain its role in Xhosa identity.[96]
Indigenous North American influences
Overtone-like techniques in Indigenous North American vocal traditions appear in ceremonial chants of the Navajo people and the throat games of the Inuit, though these differ from the deliberate harmonic isolation found in Central Asian practices. In Navajo yeibichai chants, performed during the nine-night Nightway ceremony, singers alternate between normal voice and falsetto to invoke healing spirits, with the falsetto producing a wailing overtone that enhances the ritual's spiritual resonance.[97] These chants, rooted in pre-colonial cosmology dating back several centuries after the Navajo's arrival in the Southwest around the 15th century, emphasize group performance where multiple singers create layered vocal textures in breathy, tense styles to imitate natural and supernatural elements, such as wind or deities. Anthropological recordings from the early 20th century, including those by Natalie Curtis in 1907 and Willard Rhodes for Smithsonian Folkways in the 1950s, captured these techniques, highlighting their role in restoring balance (hózhó) within the community.Among the Inuit of northern Canada, katajjaq—also known as throat games—involves duets between women using breathy, rhythmic inhalations and exhalations to produce overlapping sounds with subtle harmonic elements, often mimicking animals like seals or geese and environmental noises such as wind.[98] This playful yet competitive form serves both ceremonial and social purposes, fostering bonding during long winters when men were away hunting, and carries pre-colonial origins tied to oral traditions passed through generations.[3] Unlike solo overtone singing, katajjaq emphasizes communal rhythm over distinct pitches, but its breathy overtones emerge in group settings through voiced and unvoiced fricatives, contributing to a sense of spiritual connection with the Arctic landscape. 20th-century suppression by Christian missionaries nearly erased the practice, but anthropological documentation, such as Jean-Jacques Nattiez's studies in the 1980s, preserved examples from regions like Nunavut and Baffin Island.[3]These traditions have influenced contemporary powwow music, where breathy overtones and tense vocal production in group songs maintain ceremonial echoes, adapting pre-colonial elements for intertribal gatherings.[99] However, documentation remains limited compared to Asian overtone practices, with much knowledge held orally; recent revivals, including Inuit community workshops since the 1980s and ongoing Navajo ceremonial transmissions, address this gap by integrating youth education to sustain these vocal forms. As of 2025, these efforts continue through cultural festivals and educational programs.[98][100]
Modern and non-traditional practices
North America
In North America, overtone singing gained prominence through the pioneering efforts of artists like David Hykes and Paul Pena, who introduced the technique to Western audiences in the late 20th century. Hykes, an American composer and singer, founded the Harmonic Choir in 1975 and developed Harmonic Chant, a contemplative approach to overtone singing that emphasized simultaneous production of fundamental and harmonic tones.[101] Pena, a blues musician from Massachusetts, independently mastered Tuvan-style throat singing after hearing it on a shortwave radio broadcast in the 1980s, blending it with American blues traditions and later competing in Tuvan festivals.[102] These innovators facilitated the technique's spread via workshops and retreats; Hykes led Harmonic Presence retreats starting in 1980, offering hands-on instruction in overtone production across the US and Canada, which helped demystify the vocal method for non-traditional practitioners.[101]The technique adapted into North American cultural contexts, particularly within new age music and film soundtracks, where it contributed to ethereal and meditative soundscapes. Influences from groups like Dead Can Dance, with Lisa Gerrard's idioglossia vocals evoking overtone-like harmonics, permeated new age scenes in the US and Canada during the 1990s and 2000s, inspiring ambient compositions and spiritual recordings.[103] In film, overtone elements appeared in scores for productions like Moving Parts (1974) by Hykes and later Hollywood works, enhancing atmospheric tension and cross-cultural narratives popular in North American media.[101]Educational initiatives have solidified overtone singing's place in North American learning environments, with university programs and online platforms emerging post-2010. Institutions like York University in Canada have integrated overtone studies into music research and curricula, including acoustic analyses of throat singing techniques that inform teaching methods.[104] Online communities, such as the Overtone Music Network, have fostered global yet North America-centric discussions and tutorials since the early 2010s, enabling self-taught practitioners to share recordings and exercises.Unique fusions highlight the technique's experimental evolution, including jazz integrations by vocalists like Theo Bleckmann, who incorporates overtone chanting into improvisational jazz, as explored in his 2010 ECM recordings. Collaborations with Inuit artists, drawing briefly on traditional katajjaq elements, have appeared in contemporary works blending overtone styles with indigenous vocal traditions in Canadian performances.[105] In the 2020s, trends include virtual reality tools for vocal training, such as simulations of performance environments to aid practice, though the technique remains underrepresented in mainstream pop integration compared to niche experimental genres.[106]
Europe and global adaptations
In contemporary Europe, overtone singing has evolved through innovative artists who blend traditional techniques with modern expressions. German vocalist Anna-Maria Hefele has become a prominent figure, specializing in polyphonic overtone singing that produces multiple audible tones from a single voice, often showcased in her online tutorials and compositions since 2005.[107] Her performances, including a 2014 demonstration video, have amassed millions of views, contributing to widespread interest in the technique across digital platforms.[108] Similarly, German composer Michael Vetter (1943–2013) pioneered Western adaptations of overtone singing in the late 20th century, integrating it into experimental vocal improvisations and multimedia works during his time as a Zen monk in Japan and later in Europe.[109]European festivals have further promoted these developments, such as the inaugural Echoes of the Steppe Throat Singing Festival held in Romainmôtier, Switzerland, in August 2025, which featured international performers and workshops to celebrate overtone and throat singing traditions in a contemporary context.[110] Adaptations in classical music include layered vocal harmonics in film scores, as seen in the works of composers like Jocelyn Pook, whose intricate choral and vocal arrangements for films such as Eyes Wide Shut (1999) create atmospheric effects.[111] In electronic music, overtone singing has been fused with genres like techno, exemplified by tracks such as Ummet Ozcan's "Xanadu" (2022), which incorporates Mongolian-style throat singing over electronic beats to create hypnotic soundscapes.[112]Globally, overtone singing appears in diaspora communities, such as Mongolian performer Bukhu Ganburged's appearances on The Voice Australia in 2020, where he demonstrated throat singing techniques to audiences in Australia, bridging Asian traditions with Western media.[113] Collaborations like those of the Tuvan band Yat-Kha, founded in 1991, have integrated kargyraa-style overtone singing with rock instrumentation, as heard in albums such as Yenisei Punk (1995), influencing cross-cultural music scenes worldwide.[114] Post-2020, the technique has seen increased streaming popularity, with tutorial videos and performances on platforms like YouTube and TikTok garnering tens of millions of views annually, driven by viral content from artists like Hefele.[115] However, adaptations remain underrepresented in non-Western regions of the Global South, where documentation of local innovations is sparse compared to European and North American contexts.[3]Therapeutically, overtone singing offers benefits for vocal health, including improved resonance control and reduced tension in the vocal tract, as supported by studies on its physiological effects.[116] In Europe, it is incorporated into meditation and sound healing workshops, such as those led by Jill Purce through The Healing Voice program, which teaches Mongolian overtone chanting for emotional release and relaxation since the 1970s.[117] These sessions emphasize the technique's role in promoting well-being through harmonic vibrations that align with natural resonances.[118]