Politics

Crosscut Tout: Old Blue at Town Hall

Yale University's singing groups are a longstanding tradition, and now one of them, The Duke's Men, is wrapping up its winter tour here in Seattle.

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Ronald Holden

Yale University's singing groups are a longstanding tradition, and now one of them, The Duke's Men, is wrapping up its winter tour here in Seattle.

Yale's Whiffenpoofs are iconic: "gentleman-songsters off on a spree,  damned from here to eternity." (They were simply"doomed" in the Rudy  Vallee version of the Whiffenpoof song.) The "tables down at Mory's"  reopened this fall after a year-long refurbishing, and the songsters  have hit the road.

There are a dozen or so a capella singing  groups at Yale, a peculiar Ivy League tradition in these days of rap and  flash. In addition to the Whiffs, reserved for male seniors, there are  Alley Cats, Spizzwinks and Baker's Dozen on the male side, New Blue and  Proof of the Pudding on the female side, and Mixed Company (among many  others) of mixed company. (More information here.)

Groups are typically comprised of 10  to 20 singers, led by a "pitch" who conducts while singing. A group  founded 55 years ago called The Duke's Men ("Da Doox") is wrapping up its winter tour in Seattle, at Town Hall Friday (Jan. 7).

If you go: The Duke's Men, 8  pm. Friday (Jan. 7), Town Hall, 1119 Eighth Ave., Seattle, 206-652-4255. Tickets cost $10 for adults $5 for students, and are available at the door. Additional information at townhallseattle.org or dukesmen.com.

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Ronald Holden

By Ronald Holden

Ronald Holden is a regular Crosscut contributor. His new book, published this month, is titled “HOME GROWN Seattle: 101 True Tales of Local Food & Drink." (Belltown Media. $17.95).