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Encyclopedia > Yodelling

Yodeling (or Yodelling) is a form of singing that involves rapidly switching from the "chest voice" to the "head voice" making a high-low-high-low sound. It was probably developed in the Swiss Alps as a method of communication between mountain peaks, and it later became a part of the traditional folk music of the region.


To yodel, one sings a scale continuously upwards, until one's voice "breaks" (switches octaves) into one's "head voice" (also known as falsetto in men). This point is one's "voice break". Then one must go back down a note, and up again, over the voice break. This is done repeatedly at a loud volume.


In "Hodl - Ay - EE - Dee", the "EE" switches to the head voice.


Yodeling has developed in two main styles: the traditional Swiss/Alpine style and the country/western style:

  • Some good examples of alpine yodeling can be heard in the songs of Franzl Lang, Stefanie Hertel, Zillertaler Schürzenjäger, Ursprung Buam and Mary Schneider.
  • Examples of country/western yodeling can be heard by Kerry Christensen, Elton Britt, Wilf Carter, Slim Whitman and Patsy Montana. The most notable country and western yodeler was pioneer star Jimmie Rodgers, who recorded more than a dozen songs under the title "Blue Yodel" with an appended number. Gene Autry was another country-style yodeler.

Kishore Kumar the Indian singer also yodelled in some of his songs. Soul singer Aaron Neville was inspired by Autry's yodelling to develop his unusual vibrato singing style.


"Appenzeller" and "Bravourjodler" are yodeling standards which are performed by many different singers.


The best places for yodelling are those with an echo. They include lakes, rocky gorges, anywhere with a distant rock face, the outdoor areas between office buildings, in a canoe next to a rocky shoreline, or down a long hallway, and best of all, a mountain range.


According to the Oxford English Dictionary the word yodel is derived from a German word jodeln (originally Bavarian) meaning "to utter the syllable jo".


External link

  • The Internet Yodeling Course (http://www.yodelcourse.com) (ten step course with audio samples)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Will there be Yodeling in Heaven? (2089 words)
A genuine yodel is one without words, not really 'music,' but acoustical signals, most often associated with cowherds communicating with one another and their herds from mountain to mountain.
This is far-fetched because yodeling and the domestication of grazing animals predates the invention of the alpenhorn.
Still others believe the origin of the yodel is the human soul; as a psychological reaction to the breathtaking scenery surrounding the cowherd -- yodeling's wide leaps of high and low notes evoking the exalted hills, the awe of the human spirit.
Yodeling - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (890 words)
Yodeling (or yodelling) is a form of singing that involves singing an extended note which rapidly and repeatedly changes in pitch from the vocal chest register (or "chest voice") to the head register (or "head voice"), making a high-low-high-low sound.
Yodelling is one of the most developed uses of this technique, wherein a singer will switch between these registers several times within the same note, at a high volume.
Yodeling is less often seen in pop music and rock, probably because there is not much of an accompanying tradition of its use.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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