Description
The Overtone Throat Singing Course with Jerry Walsh is a comprehensive 2-hour video plus accompanying worksheets revealing all the details on how to master 5 styles of overtone throat singing.
In addition, get special bundle pricing on a private 1-on-1 zoom lesson taught by Jerry Walsh. Watch this video for more info on what this course is about:
The 5 styles of overtone throat singing covered in this course:
- Kargyraa — Deep, bassy, guttural vibrational singing that Tibetan monks are famous for using in prayer and mantra recitation
- Khoomei — Mid-tone range singing with rich overtones and deep tonality
- Sygyt — High pitched and piercing singing that represents the merging of Heaven and Earth — sounds like a shrieking whistle or an alien visitor
- Khorekteer (Xorexteer) — A high-pitched, wailing singing style famous in Tuva that is often used to pronounce lyrics, mantra, or prayers
- Western Overtone Singing — The western version of a simplified Tuvan Sygyt that almost anyone can learn — can sound hauntingly beautiful when refined to a high expression
The instructions on how to generate these styles of singing are pulled from multiple teachers from different traditions, along with years of feedback and observation from teaching hundreds of people. This is an in-depth course that will cover all the subtleties required to create each style, providing exercises, examples, and refinement techniques. When you purchase the Overtone Throat Singing Course, it is yours to keep indefinitely.
Sample video from this course:

Jerry Walsh is a core member of Didge Project and teaches throat singing, beatboxing, didgeridoo, handpan, drumming, percussion and music making to adults and children of all ages.













Mitch Rosenberg (verified owner) –
Jerry is a master throat singer. His devotion and passion to learning this craft makes him an excellent instructor.
Steve Matcha (verified owner) –
This is a really generous course, worth re-watching to increasingly pick up the subtleties of it. At the risk of sounding weird, I feel like I’ve also noticed improvements in health and work performance (attorney) since starting the course. I wonder if the breathing patterns and tuning into the subtle sounds strengthens cognitive acuity, or maybe it’s just taking a break from work to “smell the roses.” Anyway, this isn’t just for “goofy hippies” 🙂
Thank you, Jerry!!
P.S., Much love for the “hippies” out there 🙂 If it hadn’t been for you all, we’d be stuck in the 1950s.