After graduation, Ullner Singh came to Beijing and met her later husband Robert Zollitsch (Lao Gong), who came to China from Germany to study guqin. From then on, the cooperation between them began. When they compose music, the husband and the woman sing together. Sometimes, Robert will play the Bavarian Zheng, or sing a Mongolian Humai that he learned in China. In their music, sheng, violin and Indian percussion instruments often appear. These non-Mongolian traditional musical instruments rearranged by the couple complement the vocals of Ullner singers.
Ullner Singh said: At the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, I met many innocent voices from ethnic minorities with ancient and rich cultures, such as Tibet, but they all sang the same after graduation. The only difference is the language they sing, which is really embarrassing. My hometown is in Ordos Prairie in the west of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China. /kloc-in the winter of 0/968, I was born in an ordinary herdsman family. When I was a child, my friends next door and I went out to herd sheep every day. We often break up the sheep because we are too playful, and then grab a handful of sand or stones on the ground and drive them back together, sometimes even making a whole sand dune in a mess. When the grass was abundant, I began to worry about just getting off the grassland.
In our village, children are used to attending full-time primary schools at the age of ten, and my parents want me to do the same. I got on my horse and went to a nearby school to learn Mongolian letters, where local children learned to write. When I was in middle school, the school was too far away to go to school by bike every day, so I went home to visit my parents once every two or three days. The school discipline is very strict. Every morning as soon as the sun rises, I will keep warm.
Time flies. I have graduated from middle school in a blink of an eye. I got on the train for the first time in my life and went to Shanghai, the largest city in China. At that time, I was not amazing. I was just a Mongolian rural girl in her early twenties, and I was looking forward to being admitted to the Art College. I can even speak a word or two in Chinese. Therefore, I began to study hard the language and performance of China dulcimer. Finally, I was admitted to the Folk Music Department of Shanghai Conservatory of Music at 1990. After that, I was completely immersed in the life of Shanghai Conservatory of Music, and I understood how important it is to constantly understand and prove the culture of China's ethnic minorities to my experience.
When I was studying basic music theory, I went back to my hometown many times. Erdos in Inner Mongolia was called "the ocean of songs" by the locals. I am glad that I was born in such a special place. In my hometown, there is no one who can't sing folk songs. There are endless grasslands and pastures, and the air is full of beautiful songs when riding horses or herding cattle. This is the place where I grew up, full of magical and fairy-tale songs.
Ah, my Ordos, I grew up in her arms, surrounded by my parents' love, and those friends who grazed sang for me in unison, so I set off on their songs …
Urna was born in a herdsman's family in the grassland of Ordos region in southwest Inner Mongolia, and now she is one of the most outstanding female voices in Asia. In Bavaria, Ullner continued her career, presenting the spirit of her hometown to the whole world through music.
Ullner developed her musical talent and intuition when she studied dulcimer with a visiting professor from Shanghai Conservatory of Music in Hohhot, the capital of Inner Mongolia. /kloc-When she was 0/8 years old, Ullner decided to leave Mongolia to study at Shanghai Conservatory of Music-a very brave decision, because she didn't speak a word of Mandarin at that time, and her family knew little about Shanghai, let alone its location. With this move, Ullner's life and career took a dramatic turn.
Ullner revealed his musical talent and talent when he was studying dulcimer, when a professor from Shanghai Conservatory of Music was visiting Hohhot. At the age of eighteen, she made a brave decision to leave Inner Mongolia to study in Shangyin. At that time, she couldn't even speak a word of Mandarin, and her family knew little about Shanghai, even the location. This trip has brought great changes to Ullner's life and career.
A Russian music critic named Ullner and Tuva singer Saienko, one of the two Asian divas. In the summer of 2003, when she was awarded the Best International Artist Ruth Award in Germany, she became a major contributor to European world music.