A Heidi Draper Production
Alain
Desjacques, a well-known ethnomusicologist, takes us on a pilgrimmage to find
and record the best traditional musicians and singers on the steppes of Mongolia.
Desjacques had spent time in Mongolia before and had learned the language. Thus
he was welcomed and given access to domestic life, with its closely knit families
and intergenerational living.
Set against stunning vistas of the rugged terrain, the film captures not only the music, but the richly textured details of daily life - hospitality customs, food preparation, games, caring for the herds. It is a portrait of a people who live almost entirely off their animals - horses, yaks, camels, and sheep - with little contact with the outside world.
Travelling by horseback, truck and foot, Desjacques tracks down the most revered diphonic musicians. The diphonic sound combines a base drone with a melodic upper register. We hear part of an epic song which takes the singer seven days to perform, completely from memory. The venerable flutist, Narantsogt, performs inside his yurt, producing diphonic sounds that mimic nature. His daughter serves the customary salted tea and yak yogourt fermented in a goat skin bag.
The Musical Steppes of Mongolia provides a unique view of a rapidly disappearing culture.
"Especially precious because the culture that nurtured the music is rapidly disappearing." AAS Annual Meeting
American Anthropological Association, 1995
Association of Asian Studies, 1995
51 min. Video or DVD. Sale $295. Video rental $75.
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