SoRIAH with Ashkelon Sain: Eztica

SoRIAH with Ashkelon Sain: Eztica

438 9 Partager EnregistrerAtlan09 201 abonnés Music Video for the song “Eztica”; From the Projekt Records release of the same name by SoRIAH with AshkelonSain. Filmed at Kalaloch Beach, Olympic Peninsula, WA. Cast features Soriah, Ashkelon, Kathryn Joy & Lucretia*Renee. (c2011)

Soriah Tuvan Throat Singer

Soriah Tuvan Throat Singer

1,1 k 17 Partager EnregistrerDiggable Monkey Video Productions 628 abonnés Soriah, which translates as “Milky Way” from Sufi, is the stage persona for the internationally recognized artist, Enrique Ugalde. Soriah’s craft is a blending of traditional Khöömei (Tuvan Throat Singing), tempered with Soriah’s own visceral force. Performances vary from being steeped in tradition and bound to its constructs to more experimental fascinations with electronic and acoustic accompaniments, and introducing Butoh and Ritual Performance Art. Soriah’s use of Khöömei as a transportive medium is an offering to nature in her own tongue, that of organic sound whether it be wind, water or the mimicry of animals. He is currently working to integrate his work into film and sound design. Soriah takes an annual sabbatical to Tuva to study with various masters and to compete. The 2008 Fifth Quinquennial Ethnomusicology Symposium, “Khöömei: The Cultural Phenomenon of Central Asia”, has honored Enrique Ugalde, “Third Place”, the highest a non-native to Tuva has yet placed. The Üstüü-Khüree Festival awarded him “Best Foreigner” for their 2008 selection. In 2014, he won 2nd place in the Tuvan National Kargyraa Competition. The rest of the year Soriah travels the globe with extended tours performing in various cities and enclaves of Japan, crooning in the cathedrals and ruins of Mexico, and intoning in ocean caves and amidst the swamplands of America. The artist has been invited to perform at society events such as The 2009 Peace Ball in Washington, D.C. for Obama’s inauguration, and by brigand artist elites, to sing at various installations of note at the Burning Man Festival. One becomes encased in an awe-laced ceremonial pallor while in attendance at a Soriah performance. A deep spiritualism imbues each piece performed, whether entirely traditional or exhibiting a fusion of music, movement and meditation that Soriah describes as Vocalized Ritual Drone. ++++++++++++++++++++++ Video by Diggable Monkey Productions Produced by Kevin Balmer http://diggablemonkey.comhttps://plus.google.com/b/10469322067… Music Video for the song “Ehecatl”; The first in a series of videos from the Projekt Records CD “Eztica”, by Soriah with Ashkelon Sain. Music Video for the song “Eztica”; From the Projekt Records release of the same name by SoRIAH with AshkelonSain. Filmed at Kalaloch Beach, Olympic Peninsula, WA. Cast features Soriah, Ashkelon, Kathryn Joy & Lucretia*Renee. (c2011) Video – Soriah Live at the WGT in Leipzig 2013 by Stan Barthez Soriah End Photo by Libby Bulloff (2011)

Kargyraa from Soriah

Kargyraa from Soriah
Throat Singing
Ajoutée le 7 sept. 2016
This is Tuvan Throat Singing in the style of Kargyraa, performed by Soriah.

The original audio source heard can be found in this video at 31:18:

If you like what you hear, please like the original video and support Soriah for his amazing Throat Singing!

Hope you enjoy!

WIKIPEDIA : SORIAH , American throat singer

Soriah
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Soriah
Soriahhand1
Background information
Birth name Enrique Ugalde
Also known as Uger Khan
Born April 1, 1971 (age 47)
San Bernardino, California, U.S.
Genres

Experimentalworldfolkovertone singingambientnoisesganabuc

Occupation(s) Singer, musician, performance artist
Instruments Vocals, guitar, organ, igil, doshpuluur, byzaanchy, shoor, doumbek, kengergee
Years active 1999–present
Labels Projekt, Beta-lactam Ring Records, Ruido Horrible
Associated acts Ashkelon Sain, Pan/Zen, Chirgilchin, Liberation Movement, SORNE, David J, Noah Mickens, Everyone Orchestra, Sumerland
Website soriah.wordpress.com

Soriah (born Enrique Ugalde, April 1971) is an American overtone singer, performance artist, multi-instrumentalist, and shamanic ritualist headquartered in Portland, Oregon and The Tuvan Republic. His music is a synthesis of traditional forms such as Tuvan throat singing, Shamanic music, Raga, and pre-Columbian Mexica music and language; with avant garde musical styles like Industrial, Ambient, Noise, and Goth. Likewise, his live performance is a fusion of costume and ritual from Tuva, Mexico, North American Native cultures, and Western Ceremonial Magic traditions; as well as Chaos Magic, Butoh, and Modern Primitive movements of the 20th century.[1] His lyrics, when there are any, are often written in the Nahuatl or traditional Tuvan languages.[1] He won the title of “Best Foreigner” at the 2008 Ustuu-Khuree Festival in Chadanaa Tuva,[2] and in that same year placed as “Third Laureate” at The International Throat Singing Symposium, which remains the highest award given to a non-Tuvan in the history of the Symposium.[3] He also won 2nd Place in the Tuvan Nation Kargyraa Competition in 2014, and was given a special award as “Great innovator of the art of Tuvan Throat Singing” in 2016.[2] As a solo artist, and with various collaborators and musical ensembles, Soriah has toured throughout the United States, Europe,[3] Asia, and Mexico.[1] He is considered the highest-ranked non-native practitioner of Tuvan throat singing.[3]
Contents

1 Early life and career
2 Early Soriah years
3 Recordings
4 Tuva and Uger Khan
5 Festival appearances
6 Collaborations
7 Personal life
8 Discography
9 References
10 External links

Early life and career

Enrique Ugalde was born in San Bernardino, and moved to Oakland CA at a young age. His father was the drummer for a popular rock and roll band in Mexico called Los Sputniks. As a child, he was exposed to traditional Mesoamerican cultures on frequent family trips to Mexico City with his father, and by his Mexican grandmother. He describes himself as having sung since he was an infant, sung and played guitar in a church choir as a child, begun his study of opera and other Western classical singing as a child, and being inducted into the State of California Honors Chorus in his high school years.[4] His interest in the “goth” subculture led him to music like Bauhaus, Einsturzende Neubauten, Crash Worship, and Psychic TV; which influenced his shift from classical music to a more experimental and industrial direction.[4] He studied vocal performance at Cal State University Long Beach in 1990[3] before moving first to Berkeley, then to Oakland. It was in Oakland that he made his first recordings of looped vocals and ambient electronics, which he regards as the roots of the Soriah project.[1] He first invented the name Soriah in early 1995 for the title of a song, “The Course of Soriah.” This is the name he gave to his “timeless essence outside the body.”[5] In Oakland, he performed with various industrial and experimental music projects, and was known for hosting illegal “Trespass Parties” in abandoned factories and shipyards.[4]

Ugalde relocated to Portland, Oregon in 1996. There he met and studied the Kirana style of raga[4] with famed instructor Michael Stirling,[1] and encountered throat singing for the first time in recordings and a subsequent live show by Huun Huur Tu.[5] He provided percussion, guitar, and vocals for numerous music and performance projects during the late 90s in Portland included Sumerland, Big Milk Bath, Black Orchid, Feral, PANDrogynous Ad Nauseum, Flail, Mesmer; and the collective known alternately as 2Gyrlz and Pan/Zen.[1]
Early Soriah years

The first public Soriah performances took place in 1999 in Portland, and he quickly achieved renown in the underground arts and music scene. He describes his circle of friends and artists at that time as “neo-tribal.”[3] In addition to nightclubs and theaters, early Soriah performances often took place in unconventional locations; such as the underground “shanghai tunnels” of Portland’s Oldtown neighborhood, the ruins of the Sutro Baths in San Francisco, in the midst of a citywide protest against George W. Bush in 2005, buried up to his waist in the earth, and half-submerged in a swamp full of frogs on the campus of Reed College.[4] His costumes vary; but often include white make-up or clay accentuated with black lines and fields of color on the face, large headdresses and wide-brimmed hats, ritual robes, and white tulle that obscures facial and bodily features.

During this period, he played with an alternating ensemble of drummers, percussionists, electronic musicians, and dancers including Lana Guerra (aka Power Circus), Stephen Schieberl (aka Let’s Go Outside, aka LGO, aka Demogorgon), Ryan Olson, Noah Mickens, Jonathan Howitt, Daniel Henderson, Marshall Serna, Ashkelon Sain, Lucretia Renee, Barrett Clark (aka Sidereal Oscillations), and many others.[6]
Recordings

Soriah’s solo show at The Old Church in Portland featured Soriah accompanying his own vocals on a 20-foot-tall antique pipe organ, and was captured for his first CD release Chao Organica in A Minor (2006, Beta-Lactam Ring Records.)[7] His 2007 follow up release on BLR, Offrendas de Luz a los Muertos, is an extended duet with Lana Guerra playing homemade analog synthesizers[8] that he describes as being his most discordant and intense recording,[1] and also as a “sonic exorcism.”[4] A recording from Soriah’s 2007 appearance on Bay Area radio station KFJC was released as Marakame on Mexican label Ruido Horrible the following year.[6]

In 2009, Soriah signed to Projekt Records and co-produced an album called Atlan with Ashkelon Sain of Trance to the Sun, assembling a group of musicians who would form the core of his live ensemble for the next several years (Jonathan Howitt, Daniel Henderson, and Marshall Serna.)[4] He describes this as a return to his roots in both classical and gothic music, after the previous two noise-industrial oriented releases.[1] This ensemble has toured extensively, eventually releasing a second Soriah/Sain album called Eztica in 2011.

A number of Soriah recordings have been self-released in digital form since then; including Asterism with Barrett Clark (aka Sidereal Oscillations), Wonderful Disease – The Best of Soriah and LGO, and several others.[6]
Soriah at Khöömei Ovaa, Aldan Bylak, Tuva
Tuva and Uger Khan

1024px-SoriahDoshPuluur

Ugalde first trained with Tuvan masters Chirgilchin at an intensive camp in Sebastapol, California in 2005. They invited him to attend the first International Throat Singing Camp in Tuva in 2007;[5] and he returned in 2008 to participate in the Ustuu-Khuree Festival, where he was awarded the title of “Best Foreigner.” He is the only non-Tuvan to have ever placed in the overall competition.[9]

From that point onward, he would split his time as much as possible between Tuva and the US. He has appeared on Tuvan television, taught at a youth music school in the city of Kyzyl, and performed traditional music throughout the country. Aldar Tamdyn, the Tuvan Minister of Culture, granted him the name “Uger Khan,” which translates roughly as “Milky Way King.” He released an album of traditional Tuvan music under this name in 2013 on Khai-Aat Music, called “Tergiinner Yryzy” or “Songs of the Masters.”[10] Since then, he uses Uger Khan to denote his strictly traditional concerts and recordings; and Soriah for his more experimental world fusion music.

Festival appearances
1024px-Soriah_LiberationMovement_Lucidity
Soriah performing with Liberation Movement at Lucidity Festival 2018

Soriah has had a presence on the West Coast festival scene for many years and in many forms, including many appearances with the project Liberation Movement. Soriah has performed at The Autonomous Mutant Festival, Burning Man, How to Destroy the Universe, Wave Gotik Treffen in Leipzig Germany 2013 [11], Oregon Eclipse Gathering 2017[12], and The Symbiosis Gathering. [13]
Collaborations

Throughout his career, Soriah has maintained a close relationship with the radical arts non-profit 2Gyrlz and the related Pan-Zen Konspiracy Nett-Wyrk. He performed in the 2Gyrlz-produced EnterActive Language Festival in every year of its existence from 2002 to 2005, and in their How to Destroy the Universe event in 2006; and dozens of other shows. Their collaboration has continued with shows in the United Kingdom in 2010, 2011, and 2013.[14]

In addition to those mentioned previously in this article, Soriah has performed or recorded with: Liberation Movement, SORNE, Bad Unkl Sista;[12] David J, Dead Voices on Air, Lustmord, Thor & Friends;[6] King Black Acid;[15] Chirgilchin, Societas Insomnia, Bogville, Synchronicity Frequency;[1] cEvin Key, Modest Mouse, The Dandy Warhols, Nachyn and Shonchalai Choduu;[16] Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Perry Farrel, Mesmer, Mandible Chatter, Akira Kasai, Blixa Bargeld, The Living Jarboe, Psychic TV, Scott Kelly, F-Space, Chrome, Waldteufel, GWAR, Extra Action Marching Band, The Polyphonic Spree, MarchFourth Marching Band, Trance to the Sun, Huun Huur Tu, Chirgilchin, Alash, Yat-Kha, Download, The Dresden Dolls, Everyone Orchestra, P.A.N., Submarine Fleet, ¡Tchkung!, To-Ka-Ge, Sardonik Grin, Death Posture, Children of Paradise, Michael Sakamoto, Yakuza, Riververb, Hop-Frog, Legerdemain, The Moe!kestra!, Degenerate Art Ensemble, Serpentine, The Red King, CoRE, Aixela, and Venerable Showers of Beauty Gamelan.[6]

He also appeared on a single episode of America’s Got Talent Season 5, in 2010, and was eliminated in the first round.[5]
Personal life

Enrique Ugalde has a son in Tuva, also named Enrique Ugalde, with a woman named Jamilya Oorzhak.[5] He is a well-known public figure in Portland; where he has often won karaoke contests and awards for Most Popular Cab Driver. He drives for worker-owned local company Radio Cab. He sings and plays guitar in a David Bowie cover band called Blackstar Rising and a Cure cover band called The Xploding Boys, and occasionally performs as pirate character Captain Bootybeard.[16]
Discography

Albums

Chao Organica in A Minor (Beta-Lactam Ring Records, 2006)
Ofrendas de Luz a los Muertos (Beta-Lactam Ring Records, 2007)
Marakame (Ruido Horrible, 2008)
Atlan (with Ashkelon Sain) (Projekt Records, 2009)
Eztica (with Ashkelon Sain) (Projekt Records, 2011)
Gnostic (self-released, 2018)

Compilations

Wonderful Disease – The Best of Soriah and LGO (self-released 2018)

Live Albums

Eztica Tour Collection (self-released, 2012)
Live at The Fez – Vernal Equinox (with Marian Star) (self-released, 2015)
Iluminacíon Del Escarabajo (self-released, 2017)
Charon (self-released, 2017)
Katabatik 2009 (with Sidereal Oscillations) (self-released, 2017)
Abduction (self-released, 2018)
Asterism (with Sidereal Oscillations) (self-released, 2018)
A Dream Beyond Zarqa (self-released, 2018)

Guest appearances

Mandible Chatter: Of Foreign Lands and People, “A Sun to Lift Sleep From the Weary” and “Man Bites Spoon” (Release Entertainment, 2003)
Dead Voices On Air: Michael and the Angels Fought, “Moon” (Lens Records, 2011)
The Dandy Warhols: This Machine, “SETI vs The Wow! Signal” (The End Records, 2012)
Lustmord: The Word as Power, “Grigori” (Blackest Ever Black, 2013)
Armchair Migraine Journey: Blood Coupling Magnet, “Rebirth Blood ΩM” (Beta-Lactam Ring Records, 2015)
Thor & Friends: The Subversive Nature of Kindness (LM Dupli-cation, 2017)

Compilation appearances

“Exit”, How to Destroy the Universe Part 5 (Mobilization Records, 2006)
“Star Send-Off”, West Coast Post-Asiatic (URCK Records, 2006)
“Guerilla Live In St. Augustine Fl”, “Pt. 3”, and “Teotizque?”, Power Circus: Swank Harder Phoenix (self-released, date unknown)
“Tehuan”, Post-Asiatic: Lost War Dream Music (URCK Records, 2007)
“Untitled”, Fall Into Darkness 2009 (Fell Studios, 2010)
“XIUHCOATL”, Live From the Devil’s Triangle 13 (KFJC, 2010)
“Tonacayotica (Remix)”, Under the Weight of Light (Projekt Records, 2010)
“Chylandyk”, The Lovecraft Bar Compilation Vol. 1 (Lovecraft Bar self-released, 2012)
“Chylandyk” and “Xiuhcoatl”, XiX (Projekt Records, 2013)
“Recuerdos de Luna”, Possibilities of Circumstance (Projekt Records, 2013)
“Ehecatl”, No Dead Seas: No Red Seas Vol 2 (no label)
“Amo Cahuit”, Victor Frankenstein (Music for a Dark Evening) (Projekt Records, 2015)

Mixes

“Star Send-Off”, Leekid: Fugue (Bruits de Fond, 2012)
“Star Send-Off”, DJ Psyko-Pal: Restructuration Industrielle (Bruits de Fond, 2015)

References

Mickens, Noah. “Soriah Post-world shaman”. Oregon Music News. Archived from the original on November 30, 2009. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
“Overtone Music Network: Soriah”. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
“Soriah Sunday May 5th”. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
Brown, Tiffany. “SORIAH REVEALS A NEW SOUND, AND TWO INTERNATIONAL AWARDS”. 2GQ. Archived from the original on November 3, 2009. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
D’Antoni, Tom. “Coffee Shop Conversation with Enrique Ugalde”. Oregon Music News. Retrieved March 13, 2018.
“Soriah”. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
“Discogs.com: Chao Organica in A Minor”. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
“Discogs.com: Offrenda de Luz de los Muertos”. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
Alex. “The Deepest Throat in America”. Vice Magazine. Retrieved March 26, 2018.
“Discogs.com: Terglinner Yryzy”. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
Enrique Ugalde. “Willamette Week: Soriah Tour Diary”. Willamette Week.
B. Getz (August 31, 2017). “The Standout Musical Performances of Global Eclipse Gathering”. Everfest.com.
B. Getz (October 3, 2013). “Review & Photos-Symbiosis Gathering 2013-California”. jambase.com.
“2Gyrlz Events”. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
“Enrique Ugalde”. Retrieved March 11, 2018.

Mickens, Noah. “Soriah, aka Uger-Khan, Prepares to Move to Tuva”. Oregon Music News. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved March 11, 2018.

External links

Official Website
Projekt Records artist page

Categories:

Musicians from Portland, OregonLiving people1971 birthsMusicians from San Bernardino, California

Navigation menu

Not logged in
Talk
Contributions
Create account
Log in

Article
Talk

Read
Edit
View history

Search

Main page
Contents
Featured content
Current events
Random article
Donate to Wikipedia
Wikipedia store

Interaction

Help
About Wikipedia
Community portal
Recent changes
Contact page

Tools

What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Wikidata item
Cite this page

Print/export

Create a book
Download as PDF
Printable version

Languages

Add links

This page was last edited on 22 October 2018, at 01:27 (UTC).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soriah

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started