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  1. #1
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    Something VERY different . . .

    . . . very, very, VERY different!

    https://www.facebook.com/65479068466...3806396098601/
    Rev'd Father Bill White: Retired Parish Priest & Elementary Headmaster. Lover of God, dogs, most people, joy, tradition, humour & clarity. Legion Padre, theologian, teacher, philosopher, linguist, encourager of hearts & souls & a firm believer in dignity, decency, & duty. A proud Canadian Sinclair.

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  3. #2
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    What a wonderful sound. Seems hard to march with so large an instrument but he almost broke into a jig with the last of the piece. Now I want to hear the smaller set of pipes behind him on the bench. Thanks for this post.

  4. #3
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    Well yes Bill, agreed, it is very, very different!
    " Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.

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  6. #4
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    I like it! Of course I couldn't learn to play once chanter, so two would be almost impossible.
    Where was that video from?
    B.D. Marshall
    Texas Convener for Clan Keith

  7. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by bdkilted View Post
    Where was that video from?
    Found it on Youtube via a Facebook friend.
    Rev'd Father Bill White: Retired Parish Priest & Elementary Headmaster. Lover of God, dogs, most people, joy, tradition, humour & clarity. Legion Padre, theologian, teacher, philosopher, linguist, encourager of hearts & souls & a firm believer in dignity, decency, & duty. A proud Canadian Sinclair.

  8. #6
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    Another of the many, many bagpipes in the world. I've heard these played in the toe of Italy; to be present in a small open-air space when several are tuning up is beyond description. The drones vibrate your bones
    Last edited by ThistleDown; 12th May 16 at 06:22 PM.

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  10. #7
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    Go looking for Bulgarian pipes; and then there's our own and dearly loved Robert Amyott (Auld Alliance) with the French pipes:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRbKYvEtOU4

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_BgnwL-ddvA

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQ5biPa2IMM

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  12. #8
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    Wonderful sound...if we could be IN that room with those huge drones - these tiny speaker cones don't give it justice..
    "We are all connected...to each other, biologically; to the earth, chemically; to the universe, atomically...and that makes me smile." - Neil deGrasse Tyson

  13. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by ThistleDown View Post
    Another of the many, many bagpipes in the world. ...
    At the Musical Instrument Museum in Scottsdale, AZ I compiled the following list of bagpipes around the world:

    Estonia - torupill
    Latvia - dudas
    Ukraine - duda
    Bulgaria - kaba gajda
    Russia - shuvyr
    Czech (Slovak & Bohemian) - dudy
    Slovakia - gajdy
    Sweden - sackpipa
    Greece - tsambouna
    Serbia - gajda
    Macedonia - gajda
    France(Poitou/charentes) - veuze
    France(Bourbonnais) - grande musette
    Croatia - pive
    Tunisia - zukra
    Spain - gaita
    Italy - zampogna a chiave
    Scotland - a' phiob mhor
    Ireland - piobain uillean

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  15. #10
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    SPS, that list only scratches the surface, as you might well know.

    In France alone there are a few hundred different bagpipe species.

    About double-chanter bagpipes, like your Zampogna there (the word, by the way, is cognate with "symphony" and means "sounding together") in the old days they were played all over Britain, from Cornwall up into Scotland.

    So many carvings of them exist in Cornwall that many have come to think of them as a Cornish thing, but they were played all over Britain. None of the actual instruments survived, but it's clear that they were rather different from the Zampogna of Italy. A number of modern makers have made various reconstructions.

    Here's one of the Cornish carvings.



    There's an Englishman living in Scotland named Julian Goodacre who makes wonderful reproductions of that instrument. Here he is playing one

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bl4uQYGfZ5o

    I owned a set of those for a while, but I ended up selling them and cobbling together my own version, with Scottish smallpipe chanters. Here is yours truly playing them

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m4lw8-3Jf9w

    One thing we should be careful to not misstate is the "around the world" or "all over the world" stuff. Note the list above covers only one tiny corner of the world. In fact every bagpipe listed is European save for the Tunisian one, separated from Europe by a not-so-huge body of water.

    In spite of the oft-repeated nonsense about bagpipes having a "middle Eastern" origin, everything points to them being a European invention.
    Last edited by OC Richard; 18th May 16 at 06:03 PM.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

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