Unir sings while playing the morin khuur, or horse-head fiddle, during a performance.[Photo provided to China Daily]
As his fingers run over the strings, we hear a thunderstorm and rain. When he whistles, you hear the wind. Horses run wild when he strikes his horseshoe-shaped percussion instrument, which has pairs of bells that dance to his touch.
Without lavish costumes, a dazzling stage and elaborate sound effects, Unir paints a picture of nature, the grassland, the place where he comes from.
Born into a nomadic family in the Bortala Mongolia autonomous prefecture of Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, Unir is in the capital bringing indigenous music of the Mongolian people to a weeklong workshop, teaching a traditional Mongolian instrument, the two-stringed topshur of the Oirat tribe, which dates back to the Xiongnu empire (209 BC-93 AD).
“My family played topshur every day recreationally when I was a child. But nowadays, people rarely know the instrument, which has nearly become extinct,” says the 25-year-old, who is now based in Hohhot, the capital of the Inner Mongolia autonomous region in northern China.
While most of his age group listens to pop music from South Korea or the West, he has been attracted to ancient Mongolian sounds since he was young. That included the morin khuur, or horse-head fiddle, and khoomei, or throat-singing, a particular style in which the singer can produce two distinct tones simultaneously, one low pitch and the other high.
At the age of 12, Unir went to school to study his art formally. Now, he works in the orchestra of the Inner Mongolia Folk Art Theater.
Unir is one of the musicians of Mongolian ethnicity invited by Khoomei Caravan, a project launched by Tekexi, a 33-year-old Mongolian from Hohhot.
Since July, Tekexi and his team have taken Khoomei Caravan to several cities across China.
Most of Khoomei Caravan’s programs are workshops teaching khoomei and Mongolian instruments, as well as live performances.