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1st April 12, 07:38 PM
#1
Kilted in Church, Piping for Palm Sunday, 2012
We have the tradition in my church to have a Palm Sunday procession, with palm fronds and a piper (me). Today, we had to hold it indoors, because it was sleeting and blowing too hard for comfort. So I lead the procession indoors instead. Here's a shot of me at a turn, checking to see if I'd gotten too far ahead. That's the Earl of St. Andrews tartan, from USA kilts(thanks, Rocky):

Here's the kid's banner, which was out in front as we ended up in front of the sanctuary:

I was also one of the tenors in our quartet singing some special music for the day (we're all concentrating--we actually had a good time):

Fun day (weather not withstanding).
JMB
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2nd April 12, 06:42 AM
#2
Looks wonderful! Happy Holy Week!
Rev'd Father Bill White: Mostly retired Parish Priest & former Elementary Headmaster. Lover of God, dogs, most people, joy, tradition, humour & clarity. Legion Padre, theologian, teacher, philosopher, linguist, encourager of hearts & souls & a firm believer in dignity, decency, & duty. A proud Canadian Sinclair with solid Welsh and other heritage.
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2nd April 12, 07:49 AM
#3
I Hope You Play At Easter...
My wife's Church holds a dawn service on Easter, 6 am this year, I think the pipes would be lovely as the sun rises over the Pacific and a great sound and symbol for the Resurrection. I hope you are able to play Easter morn with better weather.
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2nd April 12, 12:14 PM
#4
I'm looking forward to playing my pipes in church soon as well. I'm glad you had a beautiful Palm Sunday.
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3rd April 12, 05:51 AM
#5
Very smart there!
I had a semi-disasterous thing at my church one Palm Sunday.
Every year, on Palm Sunday, the entire congregation gathers outside the church. Then, after some prayers, the choir director (with a guitar) leads everyone in a processional chant/song and the entire mob (probably around a thousand people) marches around the church and then inside. Of course when you get to the point where only half the mob is inside, and half still outside, the two halves can't hear each other, and the song gets horridly off.
Well one year the choir director gets the idea of having me play. What I proposed was to have me play the melody of the processional song over and over, and have the people sing along. The pipes are a thousand times louder than his guitar and everyone could hear me and the singing wouldn't get off like it normally does. And I explained to him that the pipes are so much louder than his guitar and his singing that once I start playing I can't follow him anyway, so it's best to have everyone follow me.
He wouldn't hear of it, but rather stuck to his cockamamy plan of having the song alternate with the pipes. Of course it was a train-wreck, because once I, at the start of the procession, was inside the church I had no idea what he, at the rear of the procession and still far outside the church, was doing.
The pipes are ideal for leading such a thing, as long as they're used properly.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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3rd April 12, 06:28 AM
#6
Haḷ,
I believe that pipes in church are beautiful. My daughter was piped in to church at her wedding and after the ceremony, the bride and groom were piped out and the pipers(there were two) played while the reception line went on. The B flat that the pipes make is a call home for the subconscious...to places in different times, lifetimes perhaps.
Beannachd Dia dhuit. A' Chàisg sona.
Seawolf
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3rd April 12, 09:20 AM
#7
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3rd April 12, 12:03 PM
#8
 Originally Posted by OC Richard
Very smart there!
I had a semi-disasterous thing at my church one Palm Sunday.
Every year, on Palm Sunday, the entire congregation gathers outside the church. Then, after some prayers, the choir director (with a guitar) leads everyone in a processional chant/song and the entire mob (probably around a thousand people) marches around the church and then inside. Of course when you get to the point where only half the mob is inside, and half still outside, the two halves can't hear each other, and the song gets horridly off.
Well one year the choir director gets the idea of having me play. What I proposed was to have me play the melody of the processional song over and over, and have the people sing along. The pipes are a thousand times louder than his guitar and everyone could hear me and the singing wouldn't get off like it normally does. And I explained to him that the pipes are so much louder than his guitar and his singing that once I start playing I can't follow him anyway, so it's best to have everyone follow me.
He wouldn't hear of it, but rather stuck to his cockamamy plan of having the song alternate with the pipes. Of course it was a train-wreck, because once I, at the start of the procession, was inside the church I had no idea what he, at the rear of the procession and still far outside the church, was doing.
The pipes are ideal for leading such a thing, as long as they're used properly.
Richard:
Yeah, sometimes you can't lead a person to wisdom. We had some folks in our congregation who want to pair guitar with pipes--it would have taken an amp and electric guitar to balance that equation. We now have the pipes and the people following. They wave their palm fronds and (I think) shout their 'hosannas.' I'm up front and can't really hear them. Marches are the tunes of choice and up-tempo appropriate numbers. I particularly like "Guide Me, Oh, Thou Great Jehovah." Now, if we can get something done about the weather.
JMB
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3rd April 12, 05:37 PM
#9
Great Pics! I love the pipes. Thanks for posting from your church service. It was good to see.
KD
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