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・ Tuvaluan general election, 2002
・ Tuvaluan general election, 2006
・ Tuvaluan general election, 2010
・ Tuvaluan general election, 2015
・ Tuvaluan general election, November 1993
・ Tuvaluan general election, September 1993
・ Tuvaluan language
・ Tuvaluan mythology
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・ Tuvan
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・ Tuvan Autonomous Oblast
・ Tuvan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic
・ Tuvan language
Tuvan National Orchestra
・ Tuvan People's Republic
・ Tuvan People's Revolutionary Party
・ Tuvan Railway
・ Tuvan State University
・ Tuvan throat singing
・ Tuvanella
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Tuvan National Orchestra : ウィキペディア英語版
Tuvan National Orchestra
The Tuvan National Orchestra reflects the complex history of the Republic of Tuva (sometimes spelled Tyva), a tiny nation which sits at the southern edge of Siberia, with Mongolia to its south. Over the centuries, Tuva has been part of Chinese and Mongolian empires, and shares many cultural ties with Mongolia. In 1944 it joined the Soviet Union, and Tuva is now a member of the Russian Federation.
Formed in 2003 as the Tuvan National Orchestra of Traditional Instruments, the orchestra was originally directed by Aldar Tamdyn. It is now led by Conductor and Artistic Director Ayana Samiyaevna Mongush. In this unique orchestra, traditional Tuvan instruments are played alongside classical Western instruments and Soviet-era “hybrid” instruments. In addition, the musicians sing as well as play. The orchestra's repertoire often features the ancient art of Tuvan throat singing (xöömei), a remarkable technique for singing multiple pitches at the same time. Ayana Mongush is perhaps the only person in the world who can arrange and score music for such an unusual combination of instruments and voices. The orchestra is extremely versatile, at times sounding more western, at times more Tuvan. Its unique renditions of traditional Tuvan songs are especially popular in Tuva.
The Tuvan National Orchestra has earned recognition throughout the Russian Federation. In 2005, just two years after its inception, it won one of the first prizes in the All-Russia Competition of Folk Orchestras and Ensembles, held in Saratov, Russia. The following year it competed in the newly configured All-Russia Competition of National Orchestras and Ensembles, held in Ulan-Ude (capital of the Republic of Buryatia, Russia), where it won the overall grand prize as well as a special prize for the most original program. It then performed in a two-day gala held in Moscow in 2008 to honor the regional winners.
Orchestra members include musicians known in the West for their throatsinging (members of the groups Chirgilchin, Tyva Kyzy, and Alash), Andrei Mongush (formerly of Huun-Huur-Tu), Ai-Xaan Oorzhak, Kang-Xuler Saaya, and Nikolai Damba, among others.
== External links ==

*(Tuvan National Orchestra ) Official Website
*(Tuvan Orchestra is a Prize-Winner at the All-Russian Folk Contest )
*(Tuvan Orchestra of Traditional Instruments Takes Part in All-Russian Contest )
*(Tuvan Orchestra of Traditional Instruments will Take Part in the Final of the All-Russian Musical Contest )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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