Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Music / TheHu

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_hu_8.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:[-From left to right: Temka, Enkush, Jaya, Gala-]]]
3
4->''"Those who study Mongolian music believe one reason The Hu has proved so popular with outsiders is this combining of modern and historical and eastern and western elements."''
5-->--'''''Creator/{{NPR}}'''''
6
7The Hu (also rendered as [[CapsLock The HU]]; Хү in Mongolian) is a band formed in 2016 from Ulaanbaatar, UsefulNotes/{{Mongolia}}. Blending in an unique way metal music and traditional Mongolian folk music (in particular throat singing), the band refers to their style as "Hunnu Rock", with "Hunnu" being the Mongolian word for the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xiongnu Xiongnu]], an ancient civilisation located in the Eurasian steppes, that is often identified with the [[UsefulNotes/AttilaTheHun Huns]] in the Western world.
8
9The band was formed by Bayarmagnai Dashdondog, AKA Dashka, a producer with a long story of collaboration with Mongolian pop and rock bands. With the idea of blending together ancient folk sounds and modern metal music, to create something new and never heard before, he picked the current members of The HU from the Ulaanbaatar Conservatory. So they debuted in late 2018 with two music videos, "Yuve Yuve Yu" and "Wolf Totem".
10
11To describe their debut a success would be an understatement. Their first two singles gained 7 million views by the end of 2018 and ''100'' million after a year. [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff Compare that with ethnic Mongols numbering 10 million people]]. In 2019 "Wolf Totem" made The Hu the first Mongolian band to top on a ''Billboard'' chart, with "Yuve Yuve Yu" also present several positions below.
12
13In 2019 the band released their first album, ''The Gereg''; the same year, Mongolian president Khaltmaagiin Battulga personally congratulated with the band for promoting Mongolian culture abroad, awarding them with the Order of Genghis Khan, the highest state award of the country. It can be said that The Hu single handedly brought under the international spotlight a country that was until recently relegated to the periphery of the world.
14
15!!Band Members
16* Galbadrakh Tsendbaatar "Gala" - lead throat singing, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morin_khuur morin khuur]]
17* Enkhasaikhan Batjargal "Enkush" - lead morin khuur, throat singing
18* Nyamjantsan Galsanjamts "Jaya" - jaw harp, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsuur tsuur]], throat singing
19* Temuulen Naranbaatar "Temka" - [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Topshur topshur]], backing vocals
20
21!!!Touring members
22* Jambaldorj Ayush "Jamba" – guitars, backing vocals
23* Nyamdavaa aka Davaa – bass, backing vocals
24* Unumunkh Maralkhuu "Ono" – percussion, tumur khuur, backing vocals
25* Odbayar Gantumur "Odko" – drums
26
27!!Discography
28!!! Singles
29* ''Yuve Yuve Yu'' [[note]]"How strange, how strange"[[/note]] (2018)
30* ''Wolf Totem'' (2018)
31* ''Shoog Shoog'' [[note]]An untranslatable Mongolian shamanic calling[[/note]] (2019)
32* ''The Great Chinggis Khaan'' (2019)
33* ''Sugaan Essena'' (Original music from ''VideoGame/StarWarsJediFallenOrder'') (2020)
34* ''Sad but True'' (Cover of Music/{{Metallica}}) (2020)
35* ''This Is Mongol'' (2022)
36* ''Black Thunder'' (2022)
37* ''Bii Biyelgee'' [[note]]A traditional Mongolian dance[[/note]] (2022)
38
39!!!Albums
40* ''The Gereg'' (2019)
41** ''The Gereg (Deluxe Edition)'' (2020)
42* ''Rumble of Thunder'' (2022)
43----
44!!This band provides examples of:
45* {{Ambadassador}}: "The Gereg" narrates the travel of a Mongol ambassador, as he bears the orders of the Khan to his subject.
46* AnimalMetaphor: In "Wolf Totem" the singer compares himself and his companions to leopards fighting back against enemy hordes, who are compared to lions, elephants and tigers.
47* AnimalMotifs:
48** The logo of the band represents a snow leopard, an important folkloristic symbol in Mongolian and Turkic culture. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9saDq6UgSA It's not a dragon]], contrary to what some people mistakenly believed.
49** Gala's morin khuur and Temka's tovshuur have horse head-shaped headstock, which are the cover image for the singles "Yuve Yuve Yu" and "Wolf Totem" respectively.
50* AnimatedMusicVideo: They did one for "Sell the World," [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U96IOn7q6fM&list=PLPeV5tkf-S8vzLJiR3LnZ2YxlATbDXAlf&index=1 here]].
51* BattleChant: "Wolf Totem" is a veritable war chant, where the singer warns any enemy army threatening him and his fellow warriors, encouraging them to resist and fight back.
52* ConLang: "Sugaan Essena", produced for ''VideoGame/StarWarsJediFallenOrder'', is sung in "Huttese", the language of the Hutts.
53* ContrastMontage: At the very beginning of "Yuve Yuve Yu", scenes of the band members grappling with daily modern life situations are briefly contrasted with Mongolian scenic landscapes, and with the band members playing their folk-inspirated song.
54* {{Crossover}}:
55** With Music/FromAshesToNew for a rearranged version of "Yuve Yuve Yu".
56** With Jacoby Shaddix, from Music/PapaRoach, for a rearranged version of "Wolf Totem".
57** With Lzzy Hale, from Music/{{Halestorm}}, for a rearranged version of "Song of Women".
58** With William Duvall of Music/AliceInChains, for a rearrangement of "This is Mongol".
59** With Daniel Laskiewicz of Bad Wolves and Serj Tankian of Music/SystemOfADown, for a rearranged version of "Black Thunder".
60* DeceasedParentsAreTheBest: In "The Legend of the Mother Swan", the Mother Swan sacrifices herself to save her cygnets, who are still too young and unable to fly, from freezing to death in the frozen lake.
61* DevilInDisguise: In "Sell the World," the devil reveals himself to be [[spoiler: the butcher, selling mother nature's organs.]]
62* EyeScream: The butcher in "Sell the World" has a whole wall of still-living eyes that watch his auction, collected from his bidders. [[spoiler: The young man, who still has his eyes, rips them out to buy the nugget of gold in mother nature's chest.]]
63* FemaleEmpowermentSong: "Song of Women" is an ode to the wife, described as a compassionate, lovely figure, who brings comfort and peace to the heart of her beloved. The remix version with Lzzy Hale expands the meaning to womankind in its broader sense.
64* ForeignLanguageTitle: Many songs have an English title and "the" is frequently used in pair with Mongolian words, even in the band's name. Curiously, The Hu has ''never'' sung once in English.
65* FounderOfTheKingdom: "The Great Chinggis Khaan" is dedicated to UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan, who reunited the disjointed Mongol tribes and led them to the foundation of a vast, powerful empire.
66* GenreMashup: Between Mongolian folk music and HardRock / HeavyMetal. The band refers to this as "Hunnu Rock" , with Hunnu being the word for the Xiongnu or Huns.
67* GaiasLament: The music video for their cover of "Sad But True" is a pretty unsubtle critique of industrialization (with the portrayed symbolic man's digging for gold ruins the landscape--which [[HeelRealization he eventually realizes]] [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone to his horror]]).
68* HordesFromTheEast: Of course, considering that The HU draw explicit inspiration from, and sing about, the Mongols, the greatest HordesFromTheEast ever.
69* InadequateInheritor: "Yuve Yuve Yu" is about how modern Mongolians can't "rise up" and show [[https://genius.com/Genius-english-translations-the-hu-yuve-yuve-yu-english-translation-lyrics the spirit and courage of their conqueror ancestors]].
70* InstrumentalWeapon: Played with: Temka's topshur is modelled like a bow, and it's the cover image for the single "Shoog Shoog".
71* LongestSongGoesLast: The standard edition of ''The Gereg'' closes out with the 7:16 "Song of Women". The bonus tracks on the Deluxe Edition, on the other hand, end with the ''[[InvertedTrope shortest]]'' song (a 3:51 acoustic version of "Shoog Shoog").
72* LyricVideo: For "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwr4SPK1_TY Shoog Shoog]]".
73* MultilingualSong: The remixes of "Yuve Yuve Yu", "Wolf Totem", "Song of Women", "This is Mongol", and "Black Thunder" have lyrics both in Mongolian (sung by The Hu) and English (sung by the featured American singer).
74* MyHorseIsAMotorbike: The gang of bikers in "Wolf Totem" is clearly inspired by typical Mongol hordes.
75* PatrioticFervor: "This Is The Mongol" heralds a prosperous future for the Mongolian people, who will reclaim their fame, will thrive and "always be joyful". It's telling that the song was performed on the occasion of the Naadam of 2020, a national Mongolian summer festival.
76* PortalDoor: At the beginning of "Yuve Yuve Yu", when Gala attempts to leave his bedroom, as he open the door he finds himself in front of the mountainous landscape, where the video takes place.
77* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: The band is very much in tune with Mongolian history and the Mongol Empire. The "Wolf Totem" video starts out with a traditional Mongol warrior on horseback before cutting to a motorcycle gang, expressly connecting the past and present. "The Great Chinggis Khan" is, of course, a tribute to the greatest Mongolian warrior of all.
78* RitualMagic: "Shoog Shoog" is a prayer dedicated to the ancestors.
79* SceneryPorn: "Yuve Yuve Yu" [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4xZUr0BEfE music video]] gives magnificent views (in 4K no less!) of Mongolian landscapes: mountain passes, vast steppes and deserts. Most of it was shot around Khyargas Lake, aside from other unspecified places. "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jM8dCGIm6yc Wolf Totem]]" limits itself to a quick, yet impressive, aerial sight of a steppe.
80* SpellMyNameWithAnS: The transcription used in "The Great Chinggis Khaan" comes off as weird to those who are used to the traditional "UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan", but it's actually more accurate to the Mongolian orthography (Чингис хаан) and pronunciation.
81* StockFootage: The music video of "The Great Chinggis Khaan" includes scenes from the 2008 Mongolian movie ''No Right to Die – Chinggis Khaan''.
82* TitleTrack: ''The Gereg'' has this as its first track.
83* TranslatedCoverVersion:
84** "Sugaan Essena" is a translated version of "Black Thunder" in Huttese, the language of the Hutts in the ''Franchise/StarWars'' universe.
85** "Sad but True" is (as expected) a cover version of the Metallica song, with Mongolian lyrics.

Top