Thanks! I'm not familiar with that book.

I do have a book Rantin' Pipe and Tremblin' String which looks at the relationship between fiddle, bagpipe, Scottish dance, and Scottish culture.

I've always been interested in the history of the bagpipe itself (not as an adjunct to any specific culture) and there's precious little to be found. Francis Collinson has done a ton of research and has brought forth every scrap of information he could find.

With the history of the bagpipe there's a narrative that I've heard repeated over and over by everybody, which is:

The bagpipe originated in "the near east" or "the middle east" or simply "the east", was played all over the eastern Mediterranean in ancient times (Egypt, the Holy Land, Babylonia, Greece), was played in the Roman Army, which introduced the bagpipes into Britain, and has been played in Scotland ever since.

The trouble is, there's no evidence for any of this, and quite a bit of evidence that works against it. However, like with an Urban Myth it's easier to dismiss than to pinpoint the origin of.

After a bit of looking I discovered that the bagpipe-origin myth probably came from a 1950s book by Curt Sachs, in which he seems to have put it forward as a theory rather than a fact. (I haven't been able to find the exact quote.)

Then there's the "bagpiper sculpture from Roman Britain" that turns out to be Tudor.

And the "ancient Greek sculpture of a bagpiper" that can be traced to one grainy photo in a 1950s German book, no provenance, the place and date of the sculpture educated guesses, and the current location of the sculpture apparently unknown.

And so goes trying to verify the various bits of evidence put forward by Collinson and others.