This study examines interacting factors in tone production in Yoruba, a tone language with three tone levels, H (high), M (mid), and L (low). Its primary goals are to confirm the existence of downstep, a principle which causes successive H tones separated by L tones to step down in pitch, and to examine the interaction between downstep and H tone raising, a principle which raises H tones to extra-high values before L tones. Controlled comparisons of data from four speakers reveal that both of these principles apply to H tones satisfying their conditions. As a result of H raising, the first H tone in downstepping sequences of the form HLHLH... is raised well above its expected value, while following downstepped H tones are kept from descendi...