Post by dreamy on Jun 5, 2005 23:04:13 GMT 10
Bagpipes are not unique to Scotland. Various forms of bagpipe have evolved in countries as diverse as India, Russia, North Africa, and a number of countries in Europe (Ireland, Finland, Germany, France, Spain) and the Middle East. It was probably introduced to Scotland either by the Roman legions or by the Irish
The Scottish bagpipe is unique in having three drones, and also by being used for military music by Scottish regiments
References to forms of bagpipe date right back to the Greeks 2500 years ago, and the Romans used it 1900 years ago. The first British reference is a Northumberland pipe around 1200, and it was around this time that the instrument became very popular right across Europe. Most of these bagpipes, including the Scottish ones were similar, and had two tenor drones by 1500
The Scottish instrument developed its third drone, a bass drone, around 1700, and from then on the music for the bagpipe tended to be martial, as its main use was by Scottish soldiers.
The Scottish Highland Bagpipe
Today's bagpipe has the following parts
a chanter, which is the bit used to play the tune. It has 9 notes
three big drones, each of which plays a singles constant note (2 treble, one bass).
a leather bag held under the arm and filled with air by blowing into a pipe to the pipers mouth
The piper fills the bag with air, which causes the drones to skirl constantly, and the tune is played on the chanter
There is, of course, much scope for decoration of the bagpipe. The leather bag is covered with a decorative velvet cover. And the drones are made from quality polished hardwood. Silver decoration can be added to embellish the instrument.
Why has it evolved this way?
The answer seems to be, "because it has". Probably because ancient people liked the idea of a continuous sound, the air bag enabled that to be accomplished.
Its loud volume is a function of its developed as an outdoor instrument for use in battle. In fact the recruitment of Highlanders into he British Army in the 18th century was probably what enabled the bagpipe to survive until today.
The martial music has developed into the music used by the pipe and drum marching bands of today
Martial Music
The sound of the bagpipe does carry - said to carry around 6 miles. And the skirl of the pipes with their high penetrating notes could be heard above the noise of battle
Down through history there are records of the bagpipe in battle
In a great clan fight at Perth in 1396, "Clans stalked into the barriers to the sound of their great warpipes."
At the Battle of Harlow in 1411 the Highland army advanced to the sound of the pipes
At the Battle of Inverlochy in 1431, bagpipes were again heard
In 1549, at a battle near Edinburgh, the Scots "encouraged themselves to arms by the sounds of their bagpipes."
Lord Lothian, in 1641, writes: "we are well provided of pipers."
In 1651 at Stirling, Patrick Mor MacCrimmon, the "prince of pipers" played for Charles II
During the Jacobite rebellion of 1745, the Highland Army conscripted every piper they came across
Even the Duke of Cumberland had pipers in his army at Culloden, though he seems to have been unclear what a bagpipe was, saying "What are these men going to do with such bundles of sticks? I can supply them with better implements of war."
Carrying a bagpipe was considered to be as much a crime as carrying arms during the Jacobite rebellion, it was classified an "instrument of war"
Classical Bagpipe Music - the Piobaireachd
The MacCrimmon family are often accredited with the development of "bagpipe music" - Piobaireachd (pronounced Piobroch and which just means piping in Gaelic) now refers to the great classical music of the bagpipes.
Piobaireachd is a basic theme (the ground) with variations on it. The ground is usually played slowly, and based on the pentatonic scale. The variations on the ground start comparatively simply, but get more complex and more difficult to play as they progress
Having wound its way through these increasing complexities, the piobaireachd ends by going back to the original slow ground. The whole cycle may take from 10 to twenty minutes
A piobaireachd would usually be composed for a particular occasion. And that occasion would be re-lived each time the tune was played.
www.scotland-calling.com/culture/bagpipes.htm
The Scottish bagpipe is unique in having three drones, and also by being used for military music by Scottish regiments
References to forms of bagpipe date right back to the Greeks 2500 years ago, and the Romans used it 1900 years ago. The first British reference is a Northumberland pipe around 1200, and it was around this time that the instrument became very popular right across Europe. Most of these bagpipes, including the Scottish ones were similar, and had two tenor drones by 1500
The Scottish instrument developed its third drone, a bass drone, around 1700, and from then on the music for the bagpipe tended to be martial, as its main use was by Scottish soldiers.
The Scottish Highland Bagpipe
Today's bagpipe has the following parts
a chanter, which is the bit used to play the tune. It has 9 notes
three big drones, each of which plays a singles constant note (2 treble, one bass).
a leather bag held under the arm and filled with air by blowing into a pipe to the pipers mouth
The piper fills the bag with air, which causes the drones to skirl constantly, and the tune is played on the chanter
There is, of course, much scope for decoration of the bagpipe. The leather bag is covered with a decorative velvet cover. And the drones are made from quality polished hardwood. Silver decoration can be added to embellish the instrument.
Why has it evolved this way?
The answer seems to be, "because it has". Probably because ancient people liked the idea of a continuous sound, the air bag enabled that to be accomplished.
Its loud volume is a function of its developed as an outdoor instrument for use in battle. In fact the recruitment of Highlanders into he British Army in the 18th century was probably what enabled the bagpipe to survive until today.
The martial music has developed into the music used by the pipe and drum marching bands of today
Martial Music
The sound of the bagpipe does carry - said to carry around 6 miles. And the skirl of the pipes with their high penetrating notes could be heard above the noise of battle
Down through history there are records of the bagpipe in battle
In a great clan fight at Perth in 1396, "Clans stalked into the barriers to the sound of their great warpipes."
At the Battle of Harlow in 1411 the Highland army advanced to the sound of the pipes
At the Battle of Inverlochy in 1431, bagpipes were again heard
In 1549, at a battle near Edinburgh, the Scots "encouraged themselves to arms by the sounds of their bagpipes."
Lord Lothian, in 1641, writes: "we are well provided of pipers."
In 1651 at Stirling, Patrick Mor MacCrimmon, the "prince of pipers" played for Charles II
During the Jacobite rebellion of 1745, the Highland Army conscripted every piper they came across
Even the Duke of Cumberland had pipers in his army at Culloden, though he seems to have been unclear what a bagpipe was, saying "What are these men going to do with such bundles of sticks? I can supply them with better implements of war."
Carrying a bagpipe was considered to be as much a crime as carrying arms during the Jacobite rebellion, it was classified an "instrument of war"
Classical Bagpipe Music - the Piobaireachd
The MacCrimmon family are often accredited with the development of "bagpipe music" - Piobaireachd (pronounced Piobroch and which just means piping in Gaelic) now refers to the great classical music of the bagpipes.
Piobaireachd is a basic theme (the ground) with variations on it. The ground is usually played slowly, and based on the pentatonic scale. The variations on the ground start comparatively simply, but get more complex and more difficult to play as they progress
Having wound its way through these increasing complexities, the piobaireachd ends by going back to the original slow ground. The whole cycle may take from 10 to twenty minutes
A piobaireachd would usually be composed for a particular occasion. And that occasion would be re-lived each time the tune was played.
www.scotland-calling.com/culture/bagpipes.htm