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Yungchen Lhamo
Yungchen Lhamo
Yungchen Lhamo singing at the Colours of Ostrava in 2007
Background information
Also known as Goddess of Melody = translation of her birth name.
Origin Lhasa, Tibet
Genres New Age, Traditional, World
Years active 1990 - Present
Labels Realworld Records
Website [1]
Notable instruments
Vocal

Yungchen Lhamo is the most acclaimed Tibetan singer-songwriter and currently living in exile in New York City. She has created herself a style that is distinctively to her vocal range, and she has won Australian Record Industry Association awards (ARIA) for best Folk/World/Traditional album equivalent of Grammy. She then was signed by Peter Gabriel's to Realworld Record label.

She has performed with Billy Corgan from Smashing Pumpkins and has sung duets with Natalie Merchant on Ophelia. She collaborated with Annie Lennox on her latest CD AMA. Lhamo's recordings have been used in Seven Years in Tibet and many other Tibetan documentaries.

Life and career[]

Yungchen Lhamo's international success as a Tibetan singer is unprecedented. She has toured extensively throughout the world, singing unaccompanied, a combination of songs of her own composition and traditional Buddhist chant and mantras. She has performed with such notable artists as Natalie Merchant, Annie Lennox, Billy Corgan from Smashing Pumpkins, Peter Gabriel, Sheryl Crow, & Michael Stipe bringing her traditions to new audiences. She has performed in the Lilith Fair Festival and toured widely as a part of the WOMAD World music festivals.

Yungchen Lhamo's name means "Goddess of Song" - a name given her by a Lama soon after she was born near Lhasa. Yungchen fled Tibet in 1989. She has made pilgrimage to Dharamsala, to receive the blessings of the Dalai Lama, (where he heads the Tibetan Government in Exile). She was inspired to reach out to the world through her music; to share the great beauty of her culture and spread understanding about the situation in Tibet. She moved to Australia in 1993, then to New York City in 2000.

Lhamo's Australian debut album Tibetan Prayer, produced by multi-award-winning Australian producer John Prior, won the ARIA Music Awards for best Folk/World/Traditional Music release in 1995. She is the first Tibetan singer to win a prestigious music industry award. The success of that record led to her signing with Peter Gabriel's Real World label. Her first record for the label, Tibet, Tibet, mainly features powerful a cappella renditions of original compositions—authentic Tibetan Buddhist prayers and songs. Her next recording, Coming Home, was a collaboration with producer Hector Zazou, showcasing the mystical power of her voice, and also featuring chanting by Tibetan monks, a wide range of mostly modern Western instruments, and the benefits of multi-track recording, enabling Lhamo's voice to be layered repeatedly. The resulting effect is mesmerizing, haunting and sublime.

On November 20, 22 and 24 2007 at the Louvre Museum in Paris, Yungchen accompanied an exceptional site-specific dance work 'Walking The Line' created by world renowned American choreographer Bill T. Jones. This historic performance, with solo percussion by Florent Jodelet, took place in one of the museum's most spectacular locations (the one-hundred meter perspective) stretching from the Winged Victory of Samothrace, to the Renaissance Arch (from the Stanga Palace) in which the celebrated sculptures The Dying Slave and The Rebellious Slave (c1513) by Michelangelo are exhibited. Yungchen has also performed at other such prestigious venues as London's Royal Festival Hall, New York's Carnegie Hall, and Berlin's Philharmonic Hall.

Yungchen Lhamo's highly anticipated album Ama (which means Mother in the Tibetan language) was released in April 2006 to great popular and critical acclaim, and was produced by Iranian-American musician Jamshied Sharifi. Featured artists include Annie Lennox and Joy Askew. Recently, Yungchen's music has earned her recognition by the Province of Genoa, Italy as a “Messenger of Peace” and she was awarded the title of “Ambassador of Culture.”

File:Yungchen Lhamo Ama.jpg

9/11 Track Details[]

"We all were living in a dream. We often do. Nobody thought something like this would happen to New York City. That day, no matter how powerful you were, the sight of people falling from those buildings made everyone numb. I remember that feeling of helplessness. I think we all felt that. Then, of course, we all cried, no matter what country you were from. I moved to New York City with my son at the end of 2000, and America seemed like a monument or a flag to look up at. Now I travel the world, and when I see a city that looks like New York, it reminds me of that day. This song begins and ends with chants reminiscent of a puja for the people who died, with prayers to ease their passage to another world... In order for this tragedy not to happen again, what are we going to do about it? We can only hope the experience has made all of us more human."

Discography[]

  • Tibetan Prayer (1995)

Real World Records Ltd.[]

  • Tibet, Tibet (1996)
  • Coming Home (1998)
  • Ama (2006)

References[]

External links[]

bo:གཡང་ཆེན་ལྷ་མོ། eo:Yungchen Lhamo zh:央金拉姆

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