Brief introduction of Mongolian long-tune folk songs

Mongolian long tune Mongolian is called "Wuri Tudao", which means Long song. It is characterized by being talkative, high-pitched and persistent, soothing and free-spirited, suitable for narration and good at lyricism; Generally, the lyrics are two sentences: up and down. Most of the lyrics describe grasslands, horses, camels, cattle and sheep, blue sky, white clouds, rivers and lakes. Mongolian long tune tells the Mongolian people's feelings about history and culture, humanistic customs, morality, philosophy and art with distinctive nomadic cultural characteristics and unique singing forms, so it is called "the living fossil of grassland music". On June 25, 2005, UNESCO announced the third batch of "representative works of oral and intangible heritage of mankind" at its headquarters in Paris, and the "Mongolian long-tune folk songs" jointly declared by China and Mongolia stood out in the list.