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21st September 24, 07:43 AM
#1
Not your traditional bagpipe tune
Tulach Ard
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21st September 24, 11:45 AM
#2
Amazing! I wouldn't have thought it possible.
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21st September 24, 02:29 PM
#3
From things like this, Ally the Piper for example, has made me realize the bagpipes are a very underused and under appreciated instrument.
Tha mi uabhasach sgith gach latha.
“A man should look as if he has bought his clothes (kilt) with intelligence, put them (it) on with care, and then forgotten all about them (it).” Paraphrased from Hardy Amies
Proud member of the Clans Urquhart and MacKenzie.
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26th September 24, 02:35 PM
#4
When I first started on the practice chanter, I was self taught. Just the Green book and nothing else (there wasn't much in the way of online instruction back then) and so eventually I started doing my own thing, not having the guidance and structure of a teacher or pipe band to save me from myself.
Then one day I played for the PM of a local band who was helping me dial in my PC and when I was done he looked at me wide-eyed and said "you play that thing like a saxaphone!!!"
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28th September 24, 09:16 AM
#5
Yes and keep in mind she's not playing a Scottish bagpipe.
It appears to be one of the Low Countries bagpipes, from Belgium and the Netherlands.
These, like the Central French bagpipes, play a chromatic scale of around an octave and a half.
Now, the uilleann pipes, with a 2-octave chromatic range, can take on any genre, jazz, rock, or Baroque.
Here's the brilliant uilleann piper Jerry O Sullivan playing Bach https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymufXlTSriY
Last edited by OC Richard; 28th September 24 at 09:22 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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28th September 24, 09:55 AM
#6
Originally Posted by OC Richard
Yes and keep in mind she's not playing a Scottish bagpipe.
It appears to be one of the Low Countries bagpipes, from Belgium and the Netherlands.
These, like the Central French bagpipes, play a chromatic scale of around an octave and a half.
Now, the uilleann pipes, with a 2-octave chromatic range, can take on any genre, jazz, rock, or Baroque.
Here's the brilliant uilleann piper Jerry O Sullivan playing Bach https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymufXlTSriY
Beautiful.
As a piper and Baroque cellist, this speaks to my heart. Thanks for the link, Richard.
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30th September 24, 08:38 AM
#7
Originally Posted by PiperPadre
Beautiful.
As a piper and Baroque cellist, this speaks to my heart. Thanks for the link, Richard.
You're welcome!
As you probably know, the same family of French court musicians that developed the Baroque flute, clarinet, and oboe also developed a Baroque bagpipe specifically designed to play the art-music of the time.
It was called the Musette de Cour (Bagpipe of the Court) and was quite popular for a period.
When dynamics became important fixed-volume instruments such as the recorder and musette were phased out.
Anyhow one of the best pieces composed for the Musette de Cour is this one, by Nicolas Chedeville
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cc9wFPbB3-0
Now, this recording has a string instrument doing the brilliantly written bass part. However my favourite recording has a Bassoon doing the bass line, which is really cool because both the bagpipe and bassoon are double-reeds, and IMHO the bass line comes out more dramatically.
Last edited by OC Richard; 30th September 24 at 08:45 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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30th September 24, 08:47 AM
#8
By the way, here's the Flemish pipes used for Flemish traditional music
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQHwnJLBDQ8&t=60s
(This is the sort of pipes the woman is using for jazz.)
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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