This is a list of musicians and musical groups utilizing some form of overtone singing.

Traditional

These are musicians using a traditional method of overtone singing: Overtone singing originates among the people in the Urankhai region of Siberia, who have historic links to Mongols (although they might speak Turkic languages, like Tuvans).

Turkic and Mongols

Groups

Others

Non-traditional

  • Michael Vetter
  • Avi Kaplan – Bass singer and vocal percussionist, formally in Pentatonix
  • Anna-Maria Hefele[1]
  • Guy Mendilow[2] – composer, show-creator, uses western overtone singing in multimedia productions like The Forgotten Kingdom
  • Theo Bleckmann – featured in composer John Hollenbeck's composition The Music of Life
  • Arrington de Dionyso of Old Time Relijun
  • Diamanda Galás – Greek-American performance artist and renowned vocalist; when performing an opera by Vinko Globokar she had to produce four tones at once[3]
  • Ilaria Orefice – Italian (Sardinia) singer and vocal researcher published on Pubmed and The Journal Of Voice, vocalist in the Nordic Folk band Nebala[4]
  • Demetrio Stratos – Italian singer of Greek and Egyptian origin, explored overtone singing, diplophony, triplophony with Area and in his solo records, in particular Cantare la voce
  • Tran Quang Hai – Vietnamese overtone singer, researcher on Mongolian khoomei in France in 1969[5]
  • Diana Ankudinova – A Russian Polyphonic singer, As of September 2021, her functional range was measured as C3 to B♭5.[45][46][47] Together with her tessitura, it identifies her potential voice type as dramatic contralto, the deepest, darkest, and most powerful contralto voice. As of August 2023 her upper range reached D6 in the song "The Day You..."[6]

References

  1. "Anna-Maria Hefele". Archived from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2014-10-07.
  2. Ensemble, Guy Mendilow (2022-01-28), Act II Scene II  Her Parents' Difficult Decision (narration + song), retrieved 2022-10-05
  3. "Intrv_cont". Archived from the original on 2014-11-08. Retrieved 2009-06-17.
  4. "PubMed Labs". Archived from the original on 2019-10-17. Retrieved 2014-10-07.
  5. "Home". tranquanghaisworldthroatsinging.com.
  6. https://www.5ensesmag.com/single-column/a-force-of-nature
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