yarl
English
WOTD – 4 August 2012
Etymology
Presumably onomatopoeic. Coined by Josh Sinder and Alex Sibbald of the band Hot Rod Lunatics.[1]
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /jɑɹl/
- Rhymes: -ɑː(ɹ)l
Noun
yarl (plural yarls)
- A deep, guttural vocal style with affected pronunciation, characteristic of male grunge and postgrunge singers of the 1990s and early 2000s.
- 2002, Patrick Berkery, "Record Review", Creative Loafing (Atlanta), 9 January 2002:
- So pontificating on how Weathered's earnest morass of block-headed rage, grunge-lite mega-riffs and singer Scott Stapp's machismo yarl amounts to little more than Pearl Jam circa '91 for dummies is like shooting fish in a barrel.
- 2008, Michael J. Vaughn, Outro, iUniverse (2008), →ISBN, page 10:
- One of my college kids informed me that the latest acoustic grinder hunk had covered it for a soundtrack — probably with that grungy yarl that everybody ripped off from Eddie Vedder.
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:yarl.
- 2002, Patrick Berkery, "Record Review", Creative Loafing (Atlanta), 9 January 2002:
Verb
yarl (third-person singular simple present yarls, present participle yarling, simple past and past participle yarled)
- To sing in this manner.
- 2009, Andrew Matson, "Is there any reason to listen to the new Alice in Chains album, "Black Gives Way to Blue"?", The Seattle Times, 21 October 2009:
- On "All Secrets Known," he yarls "fingers" into "fingerrrrrrrraaaaaaughhhhhzzzzzzz."
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:yarl.
- 2009, Andrew Matson, "Is there any reason to listen to the new Alice in Chains album, "Black Gives Way to Blue"?", The Seattle Times, 21 October 2009:
References
- Jack Endino, "Verb of the Month: 'To Yarl'", Backfire, Summer 2000 issue
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