Enthusiastic Eunuch Presents
Tengger (Pan-Asian New Age Drone)
with support TBA
Bello Bar
Saturday 31st May
Doors 8pm
Tickets €23.50
Tengger (Pan-Asian New Age Drone)
"TENGGER was the most magical of all the performances I watched."
- Bob Boilen (NPR Tiny Desk, All Songs Considered)
“it sounds like music designed to induce enlightenment.”
- The FADER
“Trance-inducing pieces that draw on New Age, Krautrock, and Folk”
- Pitchfork
텐거/天郷
TENGGER is a traveling musical family, made up of Pan-Asian couple, Itta and Marqido, who create their brand of psychedelic New-Age drone magic through the use of harmonium, voice, and toy instruments (played by itta) and analogue synths (played by Marqido). The duo originally started out with the moniker “10” but since the birth of their son RAAI (who joins them on tour and often on stage) in 2012, have called themselves TENGGER (meaning ‘unlimited expanse of sky’ in Mongolian) to mark the expansion of the family. It also means ‘huge sea’ in Hungarian. Travel, as spiritual experience in real environments, and the sound between the space and the audience have been central themes of their works. The family’s yearly pilgrimages inform every aspect of their art.
Tengger (Pan-Asian New Age Drone)
with support TBA
Bello Bar
Saturday 31st May
Doors 8pm
Tickets €23.50
Tengger (Pan-Asian New Age Drone)
"TENGGER was the most magical of all the performances I watched."
- Bob Boilen (NPR Tiny Desk, All Songs Considered)
“it sounds like music designed to induce enlightenment.”
- The FADER
“Trance-inducing pieces that draw on New Age, Krautrock, and Folk”
- Pitchfork
텐거/天郷
TENGGER is a traveling musical family, made up of Pan-Asian couple, Itta and Marqido, who create their brand of psychedelic New-Age drone magic through the use of harmonium, voice, and toy instruments (played by itta) and analogue synths (played by Marqido). The duo originally started out with the moniker “10” but since the birth of their son RAAI (who joins them on tour and often on stage) in 2012, have called themselves TENGGER (meaning ‘unlimited expanse of sky’ in Mongolian) to mark the expansion of the family. It also means ‘huge sea’ in Hungarian. Travel, as spiritual experience in real environments, and the sound between the space and the audience have been central themes of their works. The family’s yearly pilgrimages inform every aspect of their art.