“In the abstract, yodeling may make us think of Walt Whitman’s ‘barbaric yawp,’ but a good streak of yodeling is elevated. It’s ageless, classless, beyond gender. Male yodelers come from deeper down and make a bigger jump into falsetto, but when any yodeler, young or old, commences gargling melody, he or she seems possessed, transported—not in a swoony American Idol way but as if the yodeler is channeling a bouncy, olden spirit. It’s not the yodeler doing the tonsil-juggling, it’s the yodel. An Aeolian harp being dragged by a horse—pleasingly— over washboard terrain. Steel guitar blended with locomotive chugga-chugga. Dozens of Easter eggs tumbling down a chute.” — Southern humorist and all-around man of letters Roy Blount, Jr., “Gone Off Up North: American Yawp,” Oxford American, Issue 58, Fall 2007 (Southern Music Issue Vol. IX)
Since childhood, I had heard yodeling on TV and in
movie theaters. But it is a whole different experience to hear it live, as I
did 34 years ago when I first set foot in Switzerland. That night, several middle-aged
men in lederhosen carried on vocally in the most carefree, merry
fashion.
According to this piece by Roy Blount Jr., the
Alpine version of yodeling did not derive from such close, intimate company,
but rather from communicating over distances, where “your voice goes way up
high….People addressing one another, or their goats or whatever, from Alp to
Alp would have to shift way up high. They would have to use their clutch….And
then, lacking many other forms of entertainment, they’d fool around with it
some, yo-ohhh-d’ly-o’dly.”
You may have guessed, from what I’ve just written,
that I’m hardly a longtime aficionado of this vocal form. But, after reading
and listening (in guest appearance on NPR’s quiz show, Wait, Wait... Don’t
Tell Me!) to Blount over the years, I was eager to discover what he had to
say on the subject. I was not disappointed.
Few writers can match Blount for his rollicking,
energetic gusto. I particularly love how he conveys the tactile experience of
listening to yodeling that you get from this passage. It’s great how he
juxtaposes ethereal words (“elevated,.” “falsetto,” “transported,” “swoony”)
with decidedly earthier ones (“gargling,” “tonsil-joggling,” “chugga-chugga,”
“tumbling”).
At the same time, he gives a concise, fun history of
the great (Jimmy Rodgers, Cliff Carlisle, Ranger Doug of Riders in the Sky,
Caroline Cotton, Emmett Miller) and the not-so-great (Johnny Cash and Jimmie
Dale Gilmore) practitioners of yodeling.
(Yes, as you might suspect, the image accompanying
this post depicts the singer Jewel, who, as Blount notes in this article, can
“yodel her buns off.” When she performs “Chime Bells,” he observes, “It’s like
seeing somebody who’s been drifting around on a big lilypad suddenly catch hold
of a ski-rope and take off boogity-shoot over choppy water. All right! Now
we’re hooking onto something!” If you don’t believe me—or Blount—then listen to
her in this YouTube clip and judge for yourself.)
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