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2nd April 09, 09:27 AM
#1
"Family Guy" kilt & 'pipes
Last night I saw an episode of the cartoon show "Family Guy", during which Brian, the dog, played "Amazing Grace" on the 'pipes in a Star Trek-style funeral for Rupert, the teddy bear. The animators were conscious enough to give him a safety-pin type kilt pin. That was the best part of the show.
Last edited by piperdbh; 2nd April 09 at 09:28 AM.
Reason: preposition trouble
--dbh
When given a choice, most people will choose.
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2nd April 09, 09:48 AM
#2
Nice! I love that show, but haven't been keeping up lately.
The Barry
"Confutatis maledictis, flammis acribus addictis;
voca me cum benedictis." -"Dies Irae" (Day of Wrath)
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2nd April 09, 10:27 AM
#3
Missed it anyone have a link with pics??
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2nd April 09, 11:06 AM
#4
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2nd April 09, 12:29 PM
#5
Looks like he was playing some notes too! Well done Family Guy
Airman. Piper. Scholar. - Avatar: MacGregor Tartan
“KILT, n. A costume sometimes worn by Scotchmen in America and Americans in Scotland.” - Ambrose Gwinett Bierce
www.melbournepipesanddrums.com
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2nd April 09, 12:42 PM
#6
I've never watched that show, launching the Teddy into space was cute!
I don't believe the idea is to arrive in heaven in a well preserved body! But to slide in side ways,Kilt A' Fly'n! Scream'en "Mon Wha A Ride" Kilted Santas
4th Laird of Lochaber, Knights of St Andrew,Knight of The Double Eagle
Clan Seton,House of Gordon,Clan Claus,Semper Fedilas
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2nd April 09, 01:19 PM
#7
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2nd April 09, 09:33 PM
#8
Saw it just a couple of minutes into the episode.
Well, Brian was wiggling his fingers in time with the notes, which is better than Jimmy Doohan did in the movie. :-) Nice tribute.
NITPICK ALERT! (Really, really nitpicking! Non-pipers wouldn't notice these.)
1) Brian's hands (paws?) were reversed. Normally a piper with drones over the left shoulder has the right hand as the lower hand. It's just ergonomically more comfortable (easier for the left hand to reach the high-hand of the chanter). Not that there aren't pipers around that play left-shoulder-drones and high-right-hand. It's just a little unusual.
2) Regardless of the placement of his hands (paws), he was opening both low- and high-hand notes at the same time, which would be 'false fingering' the notes, resulting in poor tone for the higher notes (generally flat). Also, with the high hand fingers open, the low-hand note wouldn't sound. (With the higher finger hole uncovered, that note would sound first).
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