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<title>Music Videos by Yat-Kha on Rhapsody Online</title><link>http://www.rhapsody.com/goto?rcid=art.53234&amp;rws=%2Fyat-kha%2Fmusic-videos.rss</link><description>The man behind Yat-Kha, Albert Kuvezin, was a founding member of Tuvan throat singing sensations Huun-Huur-Tu, but Kuvezin felt hemmed in by the group's very traditional approach and founded Yat-Kha as an outlet for his interest in rock 'n' roll. If the band's 1999 release &lt;i&gt;Dalai Beldiri&lt;/i&gt; straddled some previously unknown line between indie rock and Tuvan throat singing, 2006's &lt;i&gt;Re-Covers&lt;/i&gt; completely undid classic rock warhorses with Kuvezin's treatment, which ranges from gravelly-voiced to downright sub-sonic. (Tom Waits could learn a thing or two from the album.) This man hails from a little-known former Soviet republic, but he deserves to be the next indie rock darling.
- Sarah Bardeen</description><category>Tuva/Central Asia</category><language>en</language><ttl>720</ttl><pubDate>Thu, 26 Nov 2009 14:02:56 -0800</pubDate><image>
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<description>The man behind Yat-Kha, Albert Kuvezin, was a founding member of Tuvan throat singing sensations Huun-Huur-Tu, but Kuvezin felt hemmed in by the group's very traditional approach and founded Yat-Kha as an outlet for his interest in rock 'n' roll. If the band's 1999 release &lt;i&gt;Dalai Beldiri&lt;/i&gt; straddled some previously unknown line between indie rock and Tuvan throat singing, 2006's &lt;i&gt;Re-Covers&lt;/i&gt; completely undid classic rock warhorses with Kuvezin's treatment, which ranges from gravelly-voiced to downright sub-sonic. (Tom Waits could learn a thing or two from the album.) This man hails from a little-known former Soviet republic, but he deserves to be the next indie rock darling.
- Sarah Bardeen</description>
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