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A bagpipe performer in Amsterdam.

Bagpipes are a class of musical instrument. The term is equally correct in the singular or plural, although pipers most commonly talk of "pipes" and "the bagpipe".

1 Overview

The bagpipes consist of an airtight bag, which can supply a continuous stream of air. Air is supplied either by a set of bellows or by a blowpipe; the inlet to the bag has a one-way valve which prevents air from returning via the supply. Every bagpipe has a chanter, upon which the melody is played, and most have at least one drone, although there are a few (relatively) important exceptions to this rule. All these pipes are attached to the bag by a stock, a small, usually wooden, cylinder which is tied into the bag and which the pipe itself plugs into. The bag usually consists of leather, but in more recent times many other materials, such as rubber and goretex have become popular amongst many pipers, particularly Highland pipers.


This list of parts refers to the picture opposite:

  1. Chanter
  2. Bag
  3. Stock
  4. Blowstick or blowpipe
  5. Tenor drones
  6. Bass drone
  7. Tuning Slide
  8. Cords

2 History

The history of the bagpipe is very unclear, and worse, many of the secondary sources from the nineteenth and early twentieth sources are misleading or verging on fantasy (the works of Grattan Flood are particularly bad in this respect, but continue to be quoted and referenced to the present day). For example, an oft-repeated claim is that the Great Highland Bagpipe was banned after the '45 Rising. This claim is untrue; there is no mention of the bagpipe in the Act of Proscription, and the entire myth seems to stem from the letterpress of Donald MacDonald's Martial Music of Caledonia, written by an unknown Romantic. However, it seems likely they were first invented in pre-Christian times. Nero is generally accepted to have been a player; there are Greek depictions of pipers, and the Roman legions are thought to have marched to bagpipes.

Where they were first introduced to Britain and Ireland is debatable, though Ireland has references going back to the Dark Ages. An explosion of popularity seems to have occurred from around the year 1000; the tune used by Robert Burns for " Scots Wha Hae ", "Hey Tutti Taiti", is traditionally said to have been the tune played as Robert the Bruce's troops marched to BannockburnBannockburn is a village immediately south of the city of Stirling in Scotland. It is named after the Bannock Burn, a stream running through the village before flowing into the River Forth. Burn is the scots word for a stream. Marshy land surrounding the in 1314Events June 24 Battle of Bannockburn. Scottish forces led by Robert the Bruce beat Edward II of England. Scotland regains its independence. The Mappa Mundi (Map of the World) is made. It showed Jerusalem at the centre, as decreed in the Bible. Births Deat.

3 Types

There are many kinds of bagpipes; the following is an overview of some of the most common:

3.1 The Great Highland Bagpipe

Probably the most well known are the pìob mhòr, Great Irish Warpipes or Great Highland Bagpipes (commonly abbreviated GHBs), which were developed in Ireland and ScotlandScotland or in Scottish Gaelic, Alba is a country and former independent kingdom of northwest Europe, and one of the four nations comprising the United Kingdom. Scotland occupies the northern third of the island of Great Britain. Scotland took part in a p. The picture above shows a set of Great Highland Bagpipes. A set has two tenor drones (an octaveIntervals : For the numerical computation software, see GNU Octave. In music, an octave (sometimes abbreviated 8ve or 8va is the interval between one musical note and another with half or double the frequency. For example, if one note is pitched at 400 Hz below the fundamentalA fundamental is something basic and important which other things are built upon. See: Fundamental frequency, a concept in music or phonetics Fundamentalism Fundamental theorem of algebra Fundamental theorem of arithmetic See also Basic Foundation Further of the chanter), one bass drone (an octave below the tenor), a blowpipe and a chanter pitched in B flat with a mixolydianThis article is about mode, the musical concept. For other meanings of mode, see Mode. Modes In music, a mode is an ordered series of musical intervals, which, along with the key or tonic define the pitches. However, mode is usually applied only to the sp scale (usually referred to and always written as A). This type of bagpipe is widely used by both soloists and pipe bands (civilian and military), and is now played in countries around the world, particularly countries with strong colonial or emigrant associations, most particularly Canada, America, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. Additionally, Pollig Monjarret introduced the GHB to Brittany to revive the moribund Breton folk music scene, inventing the bagad, a pipe band incorporating the GHB, the Scottish pipe band drum section, the bombarde and latterly almost any instruments, from model elephants,to small jazz orchestras. Well known bagads include Bagad Brieg, Bagad Kemper, and Bagad Cap Caval. In Brittany, the GHB is known as the Biniou Brahz , meaning Great Biniou, referring to the biniou, the small traditional Breton bagpipe.



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