Letter from Mongolia 21: Home’s Distant Outline

This article continues our series exploring different ways of working with sound across creative and cultural contexts.

“ХИЙМЭЛ ОЮУН” (khii-mel o-yun) — or “XO” for short — is the Mongolian term for AI. For CPinMongolia.com we designed this XO logo to identify articles about research and creative practices that explore how imaginative minds are engaging with AI not as a replacement, but as a co-creator in their artistic and across cultures expression.

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Song Lyrics (Eng. trans.)

In my dreams its hills appear
Its rain-drizzled sky turns blue
When I sigh its wind seems fragrant
The beautiful sight of my homeland clear and bright

Still clear through my tear-filled eyes
The sight of home is as precious as my mother
Its pure soil honoured in my palms
My golden homeland as steady as my father’s support

Along the road of thought its birds fly in rows
The mirage of its misty valley shimmers
A sign of return shoots through my heart
The sight of my ancient homeland clear and bright

Refrain

To know the beauty of another’s land
I set out toward the far distance
Yet in this world I have never seen
A matchless treasure more precious than you

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NOTES

Nutag’s Digital Contours

In this AI-assisted version, the visual frame extends the song’s diasporic feeling into a contemporary register. An image of a singer in a woman’s body wearing a traditional Mongolian deel, facing a microphone, brings together two forms of transmission: the embodied memory of nutag (homeland) carried through dress, voice, and song, and the technological means by which that memory now travels across distance. The microphone is not only a device of amplification; it becomes a sign of mediation, showing how belonging is no longer held only in place, family, or landscape, but also in recorded sound, digital circulation, and shared viewing.

To me, the image suggests a community formed across separation: listeners who may be far from home, or from one another, are gathered through a mediated performance of return. The use of AI adds another layer, especially for younger audiences, since the homeland is not presented as something fixed in the past, but as something continually reimagined through new tools. Rather than weakening the song’s tenderness, the technological frame makes visible a modern Mongolian condition: memory of home survives by adapting, moving between voice and screen, tradition and experiment, distance and recognition.

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Less Thump, More Woven Thread

I was drawn to this AI-assisted version of Нутгийн Бараа because its auteur, through considerable effort, time, and learning, has softened the insistent, pounding drum layer that often marks less refined AI-assisted musical production, moving instead toward a more cultivated arrangement where voice, instrumental colour, and visual restraint interact.

This is worth noting because current research on AI music generation increasingly treats controllability, vocal and instrumental synthesis, expressive interpretation, and musicianly intent as central problems, rather than treating rhythm or beat alone as the main sign of musical coherence (Zhao et al. 2025, 1197:1–2; Zang and Zhang 2024, 1–2). In this version, the technological novelty is therefore less important than the achieved balance: the song’s nutag feeling emerges through a quieter interplay of voice, dress, microphone, and accompaniment.

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“Nutag” as Diasporic Ground

Read alongside Australian research on Mongolian migrants, Нутгийн бараа (home’s distant outline) can be heard not simply as a nostalgic song of return, but as a tender lyric of nutag as diasporic ground: a homeland carried through language, voice, kinship, memory, and the senses.

The Australian frame of reference can be useful here, because Sender Dovchin’s study of contemporary Mongolian immigrant women shows how language in diaspora becomes bound up with belonging, alienation, resistance, emotional strain, and the considerable effort required to inhabit English-dominant social worlds without losing their other linguistic and affective resources (Dovchin 2019, 334–351; Dovchin 2021, 839–865). The song and its lyrics are not new; they have been circulating for some time, although I have not been able to confirm the original date. However, I do feel it expresses this challenging situation in a softer musical-poetic form: homeland appears through hills seen in dreams, rain, wind, birds, mist, soil held in the palm, and the remembered support of mother and father. The song and its lyrics is not new; they’ve been around a while although I cannot find the actual date of publication.

In this sense, nutag is not merely a birthplace left behind, but a sustaining inner ground that travels with the re-located or displaced person. 

This reading also accords with broader Mongolian diaspora research: recent International Organization for Migration work identifies nutag—homeland or motherland—as a principal part of Mongolian identity, especially for Mongolians abroad who seek to maintain a bond with “home” (cf. International Organization for Migration 2024); Dulguunmandakh Enkhbold’s study of Mongolian diaspora families centres children’s heritage-language maintenance and identity in everyday family life (Enkhbold 2025, 87); and Minjee Ganbaatar’s research on Mongolian-Canadians similarly finds that Mongolian remains emotionally attached to identity and family life even where English dominates public and institutional domains (Ganbaatar 2024, 55, 58–60).

The Australian context sharpens the point further, since community-based research describes Mongolians in South Eastern Sydney as a new and emerging migrant community shaped by student migration, young families, language barriers, and settlement needs (cf. Centre for Primary Health Care and Equity 2022). In this light, the song’s longing is not only homesickness; rather, it can be read as a compact Mongolian poetics of diaspora, where nutag/homeland is carried through memory, language, weather, family feeling, and the tenderness with which soil is held in the hand.

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IN THIS SERIES

Letter from Mongolia 20: Woven Sonic Fabric

Letter from Mongolia 19: Udgan Tenger

Letter from Mongolia 14: Chandmani Erdene

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FURTHER READING (AI)

Zang, Yongyi, and Yixiao Zhang. “The Interpretation Gap in Text-to-Music Generation Models.” In Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on NLP for Music and Audio, 2024. [This is relevant because it argues that text-to-music models still struggle with the interpretive stage of musical collaboration: translating musicianly intention into convincing musical realisation, especially where expressive instructions are ambiguous or culturally-nuanced.]  

Zhao, Yujia, Mingzhi Yang, Yujia Lin, Xiaohong Zhang, Feifei Shi, Zongjie Wang, Jianguo Ding, and Huansheng Ning. “AI-Enabled Text-to-Music Generation: A Comprehensive Review of Methods, Frameworks, and Future Directions.” Electronics 14, no. 6 (2025): 1197. [This is relevant because it frames current text-to-music generation around melody, polyphony, instrumental synthesis, singing-voice generation, complete song composition, controllability, emotion modelling, and user interaction, which supports the point I am making about refinement beyond basic rhythmic drive.]

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FURTHER READING (diaspora)

Centre for Primary Health Care and Equity. Mongolian Community Needs and Assets Assessment Report. Sydney: South Eastern Sydney Local Health District, 2022.

Dovchin, Sender. “Language Crossing and Linguistic Racism: Mongolian Immigrant Women in Australia.” Journal of Multicultural Discourses 14, no. 4 (2019): 334–351.

Dovchin, Sender. “Translanguaging, Emotionality, and English as a Second Language Immigrants: Mongolian Background Women in Australia.” TESOL Quarterly 55, no. 3 (2021): 839–865.

Enkhbold, Dulguunmandakh. “Between Two Worlds: Raising Bicultural Children in Mongolian Diaspora Families.” Mongolian Diaspora: Journal of Mongolian History and Culture 5, nos. 1–2 (2025): 87–114.

Ganbaatar, Minjee. “Language Attitudes of the Mongolian Diaspora in Canada.” Major Research Paper, York University, 2024.

International Organization for Migration. Understanding the Situation of the Mongolian Diaspora. Ulaanbaatar: International Organization for Migration, 2024.

International Organization for Migration. Diaspora Engagement Policy Baseline Study. Ulaanbaatar: International Organization for Migration, 2024.

Please refer to the INDEX for other music and articles that may be of interest.

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