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  1. #1
    Join Date
    15th July 08
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    Quote Originally Posted by beloitpiper View Post
    by the Pipers of X Marks the Scot

    So you've decided you want to play the bagpipes, eh? Well, let us help you get started. First, here's a warning: this is not an easy instrument. Many people drop out after only a few weeks or months. This takes dedication, commitment, time, energy, and money. If you cannot sacrifice one of those things, stick with the whistle.

    First, you'll need a practice chanter. What is a chanter? A chanter is the part of the bagpipe that plays the melody. A practice chanter is a chanter without the bag or any of the drones. With this you will learn how to play the tunes and embellishments. There are many good practice chanter manufacturers, Gibson and Dunbar both make wonderful chanters. You'll want to invest in one of these because you'll be using it the rest of your life. Ebay is not your friend. If you go for the cheapest chanter you can find, it will only make things difficult in the long run.

    "But why can't I just buy a bagpipe?" - This is a common question. Without knowing how to use the chanter, the bagpipes are useless. One does not learn how to play tunes on the bagpipes, they are for the performance. Learning tunes requires stopping, starting, and repeating. This is difficult on the pipes, because one cannot strike up the pipes, learn a section of a tune, then stop and put them down. Chanters are easy because they are smaller, quieter, and when you stop blowing, the sound stops.

    To learn tunes, you'll either join a band, buy a book, or both. It is extremely recommended that you join a band or receive formal training through a tutor or pipe major. There is no true substitute to having a live person there giving you immediate feedback and demonstrating how to play. Joining a band also helps you standardize your playing, and playing with other people will help you learn faster. If a live teacher is unavailable and a book is the only option, the almost universally-used book is the College of Piping Tutor. This is available for about $35 and almost every instructor recommends it as the best book. But BE CAREFUL. Self-taught pipers almost always develop bad habits which must be untaught by pipe majors when joining a band. This takes time and will slow your development considerably.

    Tips while leanring:
    -The first few months of scales and embellishments are boring and difficult, pay attention and work hard on them, if you don't you will be very sorry later on.
    -Be able to set aside prioritized time for practice. A good regimen is four days a week (minimum) for roughly an hour. But, everyone has to develop their own schedule. If you have to go more than a week without practice, then you may not have the schedule or the self-discipline to stick with it.
    -Go slow! This doesn't come over night. It takes a long time to learn a tune properly, so take the time necessary.
    -Metronomes are essential. Even if you believe you have a good internal beat, this will only help and even improve your sense of rhythm.
    -Be sure not to grip the chanter too hard. Your hands will become sore and your fingers won't be as nimble. It doesn't take a tight grip, just a firm grip.
    -Listening to good piping can only help, and there are plenty of piping CD's out there. Buy a few and train your ear to know what good piping sounds like.

    After years of practicing on the chanter, you may be ready to move onto pipes. Begin by talking to your pipe major. See what the band uses and what reeds and drones the rest of the people use. EBAY IS DANGEROUS. There are a lot of tempting offers, almost all of which are too good to be true. It is usually advisable to get a set of kitchen or practice pipes. These are bagpipe from none to 3 drones, but require less air than the Great Highland Bagpipes. This provides a gradual step up to the great pipes.

    So that's it. If you have any other questions, just ask. Some other good resources are the Bob Dunsire Forums, the Bagpipe Forum, and Bagpipe Talk.
    I agree whole heartedly with the metronome concept. Absolutely essential!!!
    I found a great website, metronome.com that I can crank up on my computer speaker system so it can be overheard when I'm playing my pipes.
    If you cant play to the beat, you won't be playing in a band; or worse, you'll get the old golf tee in your chanter trick if the band needs bodies to fill the ranks.
    Happy piping...I've been playing for 4 years now. I only wish I could have started sooner!!!!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    17th October 09
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    Quote Originally Posted by RobbyMc View Post
    I agree whole heartedly with the metronome concept. Absolutely essential!!!
    I found a great website, metronome.com that I can crank up on my computer speaker system so it can be overheard when I'm playing my pipes.
    If you cant play to the beat, you won't be playing in a band; or worse, you'll get the old golf tee in your chanter trick if the band needs bodies to fill the ranks.
    Not sure I'd heard about using a golf tee -- I had heard about a reed with a piece of scotch-tape. I'd gotten a marble stuck in my chanter once -- unbeknown to me -- made a hell of a sound before I knew it was in there, made another interesting one once I saw it and gave it a hard blast shooting it out hard enough to bounce off the tile floor/hit the cealing/bounce on the floor. Word from the wise -- don't stash a few odd marbles you find in your pipe case.

    I too was quite glad to see the metronome remark in the thread-start (/rolls eyes/ another point of debate). Metronomes have helped much-ly in my experience -- not only during playing but when I'm not. I have a Korg metronome I can clip to my ear -- I listen to that while I'm walking around (time your steps with it and sing your tunes & you'll learn a lot about your music IMO), while doing office jobs, sitting around, whatever .... of course, everyone things its some kind of weird big blue-tooth mobile-phone piece ... its up to you if you want to pretend it is and hold weird one-sided conversations to mess with people, kinda like that crazy lady at the laundromat. Yeah, metronomes have helped to steady my sense of beat -- which already was rather good but needed to be better w/ piping -- and improved my music. I also use a programmable drum-machine for practicing sets w/ tempo changes (plenty of tricks to getting it all to work w/ its volume & pipe-volume so I don't go deaf is another story).

  3. #3
    Join Date
    13th March 05
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    Quote Originally Posted by BagpiperDon View Post
    Not sure I'd heard about using a golf tee --
    It's called a "Titleist" brand reed!
    "Touch not the cat bot a glove."

  4. #4
    Join Date
    3rd December 07
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    Titleist Chanter reed

    The gent that is my tutor has a few of these around. They are a great way for this beginner to learn to keep even tone from the drones. Rather than tee off my blackwood chanter, the tee is in a poly practice chanter, in a goose adapter. Teaches good instrument posture while developing the ear for the drones. Working quite well on this much older than average piping student.

    Slainte

  5. #5
    Join Date
    17th October 09
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    Wink Wack!

    Quote Originally Posted by Macman View Post
    It's called a "Titleist" brand reed!
    That's a golf joke, right?
    I'm uninitiated -- outside of put-put, I'm pretty much lost... tho a driving range looks like it could be fun. If full contact golf was broadcast on TV, I'd probably watch it ... could end up looking along the lines of shinty LOL

    If I'm understanding you right, just think of it -- Titleist brand chanter reeds, guaranteed to produce zero tone or steadiness issues!
    (you're more likely to loose it over wearing it out)
    Last edited by BagpiperDon; 20th October 09 at 09:39 PM. Reason: unimportant

  6. #6
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    ABW Vs Poly PC price

    The difference between poly and ABW practice chanters is about 100 bucks. While I admit that the ABW (african blackwood) chanters sometimes have a sweeter tone, it really doesn't matter. It's just a practice instrument. Buy a poly. I have an ABW, but only because it was a gift. I carry around my poly all the time because it's not fragile and works just fine.
    I wish I believed in reincarnation. Where's Charles Martel when you need him?

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