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An Interview With Mongolian Folk’s “Royal Blood”

Written by B.Narandelger Tuesday, August 04, 2009

Altan Urag’s B.Bolortungalag chats with the UB Post:

Q: Could you please introduce the members of Ultan Urag to our readers and tell us a bit about the band?
A: The Altan Urag folk rock band was established in 2004, and there are seven members in the band. I am the drummer and I play the Dulcimer, B.Erdenebat is the lead singer, B.Burentsogt plays the Morin Khuur (“horse head fiddle”), Ts.Gangaa is our large fiddle player, M.Chimedtogtokh Khoomii plays the read, and E.Erdenetsetseg is our Long Song singer.

Q: Why was the folk rock genre chosen for the band?
A: We wanted to create a new musical crossover in the Mongolian musical universe. There are many groups that play folk musical instruments, but we didn’t want to be just like the other bands. We try to be innovative and use the instruments in a different way to create a different rock sound.

Q: How did all the members meet?
A: We have all known each other for 20 years, and took a national music class at the Music and Dance College together when we were quite young. We decided to establish the band after we graduated college.

Q: Why did you decide to call the band Ultan Urag?
A: We talked about a band name for a long time, and we all decided we liked Ultan Urag (meaning, “Royal Blood”) very much. In ancient time, Chingis Khaan’s ‘royal blood’ conquered half of the world in strength and tried to protect the national land. We deemed that we are continuing that royal blood through our music.

Q: What does the band hope to relay in its music?
We think that Mongolian national folk is wonderful, and the Morin Khuur and Khoomii instruments are becoming known around the world. We think that Mongolian youth need to learn about national folk music and songs.

Q: How many CDs have been produced since the band was established?
A: We made seven CDs. The first was titled Unaga Torov and it was followed by Made In Altan Urag , Ertee uridiin Tsagt (“Once Upon a Time”), and Tsus Blood, ( kind of folk rock), as well as others. Most of them were kind of chill with a folk rock and ethnic sound. Each of the albums has nine songs.

Q: How many concerts has the band had since its establishment?
A: We had our fist big concert in Mongolia on July 8 and our first CD came out in 2004. We have organized many concerts in Mongolia’s nine universities and six secondary schools for students in the last year. We prefer quality concert as opposed to quantity. In other words, the numbers aren’t as important as how people enjoy the shows.
Q: How many international shows have you had?
A: We have traveled to many countries such as the United States, Russia, China, South Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Switzerland, Norway, France, and Japan. Traveling concerts are one of the most important parts of our lives and we’re glad that people outside of Mongolia have received us so well.
Q: How did international audiences react to the music?
A: All of the people of these countries received us with a lot of friendliness. They are surprised to listen to our sound, and most of them say that it is wonderful and very real. Some people said that they didn’t even know there were bands in Mongolia. We liked the countries. People were so outgoing and very wonderful. Particularly, we liked the crowds in Japan, Russia and Switzerland.

Q: Does the band plan to play live in the near future?
A: We are planning a concert for our new CD on Aug. 12 in Mongolia and we attended the Fuji Rock Festival in Japan from July 22-26. We are also planning to go to Korea in September.

Q: Has the band ever collaborated on other media projects?
A: We made songs for the movie Khadag and we did the soundtrack for the blockbuster movie Mongol, which had been nominated for an Oscar.

Q: Could you please explain the significance of Ultan Urag’s “Blood Song” and the Inder Mongon Khuur (Monster Head Fiddle)?
A: The Blood Song was the song of warriors from Khalkh Gol River. Many brave warriors fought for Mongolia and we wanted to praise the warriors for their efforts. Their blood is so important. As for Inder Mongon Khuur, there is a legend of an awful monster that was afraid of people because our forefathers fashioned a small head of the monster to hang over the doors to scare it. That’s why we made the monster fiddle for the band.

Source


Giant panda gives birth to fifth cub at the San Diego Zoo

(CNN) -- A giant panda at the San Diego Zoo gave birth to a cub the size of a stick of butter on Wednesday, her fifth cub born in the zoo since 1999.


The sex of the mostly hairless, pink newborn, which was born around 5 a.m., is not known yet, said Dr. Ron Swaisgood of the zoo's Institute of Conservation Research.

It will take about one month for the iconic black-and-white coloration of the giant panda to become visible, Swaisgood said.

Its mother, Bai Yun, will care for the newborn by herself until she starts leaving the den regularly, at which time members of the zoo's giant panda team will step in briefly to check on the cub, he said.

"She is a very experienced mother. She raised all of her other cubs until about 1.5 years, the natural age for separation," Swaisgood told CNN Radio. "She's a real pro."

Weighing in around 300 pounds, Bai Yun is about 1,000 times the size of her cub, who weighs around 4 ounces., the typical size of a baby panda, Swaisgood said.

"Pandas give birth to what's called very 'altricial' cubs. That means they are very small and fragile. This cub would probably weigh about 4 ounces. It would be pink and hairless and completely dependent on the mother," he said.

The birth is considered a success for the zoo's Institute for Conservation Research, which works with research and breeding centers around the world to boost the endangered panda population

Herself a model of that effort, Bai Yun was the first panda to be born and survive at the breeding center of the China Center for Research and Conservation of the Giant Panda in the Wolong Nature Reserve in 1991.

She has given birth to four other cubs since arriving at the San Diego Zoo in 1996 from China. Two of them have since been returned to China, Swaisgood said.

The newborn's father, Gao Gao, is a wild-born giant panda that arrived at the San Diego Zoo in 2003 from the Wolong Nature Reserve. He will not be involved in raising the cub.

The cub will remain in the den with its mother for a few months and gradually start to come out as soon as it is able to walk, Swaisgood said.

In four to five months, the cub will be ready for the public, Swaisgood said. Until then, the public can view live video of the cub and its mother on the zoo's Web site.

"This highly endangered species still requires a lot of attention and assistance, but there is hope for the future," he said.

Source


Sumo Champ D.Byambadorj Donates Defibrillators

UB Post - Friday, July 31, 2009

Shortly after arriving home from the Nagoya Sumo Championships, Mongolian sumo wrestler Ozeki Harumafuji D.Byambadorj departed again.

The champion wrestler is on his way to Gobi-Altai, along with several cardiovascular doctors, to help treat children with cardiovascular diseases in the area. Byambadorj is bearing the total cost of treatments and for the doctors.

It is the ninth time doctors have visited Mongolia to help children with cardiovascular ailments. In total, doctors have examined 800 children and treated 150.

D.Byambadorj donated six Nihon Koden Company defibrillator machines for the Health Center of Songinokhairkhan District, the Gymnasium and Sport’s Office, the Mongolian National Wrestler’s Union, and the hospitals of Arkhangai, Ovorkhangai, and Gobi-Altai provinces.

The machines were presented to the Minister of Health S.Lambaa on July 29.

“Children are our future and I wish each Mongolian child health, so I wanted to hold this event,” said D.Byambadorj. “I want to give the first apparatus to my parents’ homeland (Gobi-Altai).”

D.Byambadorj will return to his home in Japan next Monday.