LUCERNE, Switzerland (AP) — Yodel-ay-hee … what?! Those famed yodeling calls that for centuries have echoed through the Alps, and more recently have morphed into popular song and folk music, could soon reap a response — from faraway Paris.
Switzerland’s government is looking for a shout-out from U.N. cultural agency UNESCO, based in the French capital, to include the tradition of yodeling on its list of intangible cultural heritage. A decision is expected by year-end.
Modern-day promoters emphasize that the yodel is far more than the mountain cries of yesteryear by falsetto-bellowing male herders in suspenders who intone alongside giant Alphorns atop verdant hillsides. It’s now a popular form of singing.
Over the last century, yodeling clubs sprouted up in Switzerland, building upon the

Winnipeg Free Press World

WFMJ-TV Politics
WFMJ-TV
Raw Story
The Spectator
The Washington Post Video
Chicago Tribune Entertainment
OK Magazine
The Conversation