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20th September 22, 08:05 AM
#1
tune name
Do any of the pipers in the rabble know the name of the tune the pipe major is playing https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dhFjwz3zF5Y @ about 36 seconds in
Thanks guys.
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20th September 22, 09:00 AM
#2
Sleep, Dearie, Sleep I believe.
Daft Wullie, ye do hae the brains o’ a beetle, an’ I’ll fight any scunner who says different!
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20th September 22, 09:13 AM
#3
I am no expert in pipe music, but I think it was called; " A Salute To The Royal Fendersmith."
A "fendersmith" is a chap who cleans and maintains fireplaces in large houses.
Last edited by Jock Scot; 20th September 22 at 09:18 AM.
" Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.
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20th September 22, 10:36 AM
#4
 Originally Posted by Jock Scot
I am no expert in pipe music, but I think it was called; " A Salute To The Royal Fendersmith."
A "fendersmith" is a chap who cleans and maintains fireplaces in large houses.
Yes, a haunting tune, "Salute to Willie, the Royal Fendersmith", written by P/M James Banks on the occasion of the death of his brother, Willie, a Scots Guardsman, who drowned at the age of 22. It's in Scots guards III.
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20th September 22, 12:20 PM
#5
 Originally Posted by Tony
Sleep, Dearie, Sleep I believe.
I believe Sleep, Dearie, Sleep was play at the Abbey.
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20th September 22, 07:46 PM
#6
 Originally Posted by Jock Scot
I am no expert in pipe music, but I think it was called; " A Salute To The Royal Fendersmith."
A "fendersmith" is a chap who cleans and maintains fireplaces in large houses.
The fendersmith is also, as a matter of course, the one who keeps the fire going. Perhaps a bit of fitting imagery.
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22nd September 22, 08:57 AM
#7
Thanks guys!
I found an article out of Canada's pipes and drums digital magazine. It was "sleep dearie sleep" as they lowered the coffin. It was also the requested tune by HM Queen Elizabeth II. There is piping legend that as a child the Queen had stolen the heart of her grandfather King George V. When at Balmoral the good King would invite Elizabeth to come and stay with him. The King has two ghillies who were competing pipers Robert Nicol and Robert Brown, who became legendary piping instructors known as the "Bobs of Balmoral." In the early evening the King would have his ghillie's perform the tunes the played at the games that day or were going to play at the next competition. He sat in a chair and would be in rapt attention listening intently to their playing, on his lap in the same rapt attention sat Princess Elizabeth. Her piping knowledge was legendary. As was her support of piping.
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23rd September 22, 04:33 AM
#8
If we're talking about the video posted in the OP above, it's called
Salute to Willie, The Royal Fendersmith
Here's the performance while the casket was lowered, by The Sovereign's Piper
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yf-0Mt6rSZs
As you can hear the tune sounds completely different from Sleep Dearie Sleep also played by The Sovereign's Piper, but at the other service
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jC1kXMuqGAs
Last edited by OC Richard; 23rd September 22 at 04:49 AM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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24th September 22, 04:10 PM
#9
I've heard the tune referred to as 'hob of the hearth' - which if you listen, you might hear in the notes.
The hearth is the spiritual centre of the home tended by its women, and the hob is the little spirit which inhabits it, mischievous yet kindly, warm to the touch and leaving black smudges as an indication of its presence.
I suspect more than a little imagery.
Anne the Pleater
I presume to dictate to no man what he shall eat or drink or wherewithal he shall be clothed."
-- The Hon. Stuart Ruaidri Erskine, The Kilt & How to Wear It, 1901.
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