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  1. #31
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    18th October 09
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    Quote Originally Posted by vmac3205 View Post
    I'll bet they cut off the tops of the corks so the are low profile
    You don't stick a cork in the end; that would show, even if the cork were trimmed down.

    You do it internally, a cork or inverted cane drone reed or wad of paper or whatever shoved in the reed seat, or a foam earplug in the top of the tuning pin.

    I myself for years, when I'm only playing a single set of pipes, because the bands I've played in usually have the middle tenor plugged, have the outside tenor set up for the band chanter (a strong loud sharp 482+ thing) and the inside/middle tenor set up for my gig chanter (a mellow concert-pitch 466 thing). I switch a foam earplug from tuning pin to tuning pin according to which chanter I'm using.

    There are a number of advantages to only using the inside/middle tenor during gigs:

    1) you can tune on the go, while you're still playing a tune but when only the upper hand is needed. I always tune my drones when the entire pipe is sounding anyhow (it drives me crazy to watch pipers waste so much time shutting off and restarting drones to tune them) and with only one tenor and one bass to listen to, my ear can easily distinguish which drone, the bass or the tenor, needs adjustment.

    2) tuning the inside tenor requires less of a reach than tuning the outside tenor, so my tuning on the go doesn't stand out as much visually.

    3) just as with pipe band pipers, a solo piper using two drones has 33% less to go wrong, 33% less chance for a squeal or whatever.

    Amazing Grace is the ideal "tuning on the go" tune, the ideal tune to play after your pipes have been sitting for an hour unplayed (when there's no place to go tune up) and you have to play at the end of a funeral or whatever on cue:

    LA D D (take off your bottom hand and start touching up the drones)

    F E D F

    F E D (now your bottom hand little finger needs to find its spot to get ready for the next note)

    B LA

    etc. On Amazing Grace you only need your bottom hand on the chanter a few times so there's plenty of time to tune. Tunes with long held D's are the piper's friend! Highland Cathedral has some decent D's, as does For Ireland I'd Not Tell Her Name.

  2. #32
    Join Date
    22nd May 08
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    Wow, thanks for all that. Really good advice! Our band tunes to Blue bells becuse it uses all the notes and holds on the key tuning ones. Good thinking tuning the tenors to different pitches. Saves time and angst.
    Victoria

    Just because you are paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you.

  3. #33
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    Quote Originally Posted by vmac3205 View Post
    Our band tunes to Blue bells becuse it uses all the notes and holds on the key tuning ones.
    That's very interesting! I've never heard a band use Bluebells but it makes a lot of sense, especially for listening for High G's.

    Most bands around here use Green Hills: the first part lets the tonemeister listen to LA, C, E, F, and B. Only touble is there's no Low G and the Ds are short.

    The second part lets the tonemeister listen to High A, High G, F, and E.

    For listening to Ds, some tonemeisters here like to have bands play Lochanside.

    What I was talking about, though, was tunes that a solo piper can perform at a gig and take his lower hand off the chanter to touch up his drones during the performance without affecting the melody.

    Quote Originally Posted by vmac3205 View Post
    Good thinking tuning the tenors to different pitches. Saves time and angst.
    Yes not only are the two tenors tuned to different pitches, but also different strengths, because my 482 band chanter has a much stronger reed than my 466 gig chanter.

    The bass is very forgiving and I can just slide it in or out to suit whichever chanter.

  4. #34
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    Ah, gotcha! The things our mothers never told us....
    Victoria

    Just because you are paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you.

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