- YODEL
- Tyrolean song
- Alps song
- Tyrolean refrain
- Alpine sound
- It gets high in the mountains
- Sing in one's lederhosen
- Mountain air
- Lay in the mountains?
- Sing in lederhosen
- Sing on a mountaintop
- Alpine coil
- Off-peak call?
- Call across vales
- Holler in the hills
- Peak performance?
- Stunt in singing
- Falsetto-hitting call
- Sing "Lovesick Blues," in part
- Alpine call
- Sing on the slopes
- Sing "The Lonely Goatherd," say
- Alpine holler
- Go up and down rapidly, in a way
- High number?
- Quickly switch between high and low, in a sense
- Tyrolean's tune
- Sing "The Lonely Goatherd," e.g.
- Song accompanied by an alpenhorn
- Song associated with the Alps
- Alpine air
- Tyrolean tune
- Alpine warble
- Alpine aria
- Song from on high?
- Bit of fluctuating falsetto
- Mountaineer's vocalization
- Tyrolean cry
- Belt in the Alps?
- Go sing it on the mountain
- Alpine "song"
- Long-distance call?
- Alpine refrain
- Tyrolean trill
- Alpine melody
- Change registers frequently
- High tune
- Feature of bluegrass singing
- Tune involving intermittent falsetto
- Produce some cliff notes?
- Sing like Slim Clark
- High air?
- Swiss Alps refrain
- Mountain warble
- High-range song, in more ways than one
- Singing cowboy's refrain
- Swiss Alps melody
- Tune with many high notes
- Feature of some Roy Rogers numbers
- Feature of some Gene Autry songs
- Mountain melody
- Swiss Roll-like snack
- Mountain song
- Sing on a mountain
- Sound that comes from on high
- Sing in the Alps
- Alpine falsetto
- Refrain from the mountains
- Alpine tune
- Echo source, maybe
- Mountaineer's refrain
- Song sung on 57 Down
- Mountain music
- Tyrolean melody
- Make some mountain music
- Sing like some cowboys
- Mountaineer music
- Swiss Alps song
- Sing like Tarzan yells
- Peak performance, perhaps
- Devil Dog alternative
- Song often sung with an echo
- Type of song.
- Warble.
- Swiss falsetto.
- This echoes in the Engadine.
- Tyrolese warble.
- Hillbilly falsetto.
- Tirolean tune.
- Alpine echo.
- Swiss specialty.
- Tirolese tune.
- Mountain cry.
- Sing in a way.
- Sing.
- Mountain call.
- Tyrol tune.
- Sing to a Saint Bernard
- Swiss sound
- Sing falsetto
- Sing, in Berne
- Swiss air
- Alpine serenade
- Alpine singing
- Swiss song
- Swiss warble
- Alpine "music"
- Emulate Canova
- Make the Alpine echoes ring
- Perform at Interlaken
- Vaud vibrato
- Mont Blanc falsetto
- Music for Heidi
- Alps sound
- See 1 Across
- Alpine communication
- Emulate Minnie Pearl
- Sing like a Tyrolean
- Novelty song
- Peak call?
- Echo producer, maybe
- Call from Switzerland
- Call in the Alps
- Call that might result in a 27-Across
- Song in the Alps
- Demonstrate a wide range on a range?
- Sing "lay odl lay odl lay hee hoo"
- Swiss air lines?
- Cliff notes?
- Go through a voice change?
- Communication during peak times?
- Sing like Mason Ramsey
- Belt out in the mountains
- Emulate the Lonely Goatherd
- Make a long-distance call?
- Sing in a high range?
- Mountaineer's melody
- Perform while high?
- High-pitched singing?
- Croon like a cowgirl, say
- Peak song
- Sing like Patsy Montana
- Sing across the Alps
- Descant
- Sing Dufourspitze-style
- Sing the Alpine way
- Sing Alpine-style
- Sing on Dufourspitze
- Song accompanied by an alpenhorn, perhaps
- Song of the Alps
- Sing like a mountaineer
- Sing up high?
- Sing by changing register
- Call from the mountains
- Make some music in Interlaken
- Sing way up high?
- Sing Alpine-appropriately
- Sing on 12-Down
- Sing from the mountaintops
- Sing "The Lonely Goatherd," for example
- Goatherd's communique
- Goatherd's call
- Serenade Heidi?
- Sing in Tyrol, maybe
- Lederhosen-wearer's song
- Go up and down like a mountaineer?
- Deliver high pitches?
- Use falsetto in the Alps, stereotypically
- Make calls while high?
- Use intermittent falsetto, say
- Kin of a Ring Ding
- Kin of a Ho-Ho or a Ring Ding
- Sing cowboy songs, maybe
- It includes pitching changes
- Sing in the Alps, say
- Trill from a hill
- Singing technique used by cowboys and mountaineers
- Song of the mountains
- Swiss number
- Lederhosen wearer's call
- Song performed in a high range?