Tag Archive: bagpipes


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Simon Fraser University Pipe Band - The Silver Anniversary Tribute - Classical Selection - Kannon

Bagpipes.

Yes, it was hilarious when the piper on “So I Married and Axe Murderer” played “If you think I’m sexy”, but you sound like a tool when you ask that.  It was years and years ago, so just stop.  And yes, we wear kilts when we compete and perform.  They aren’t skirts, they aren’t dresses, they’re kilts and they all cost 500-600 dollars and are made of 9 yards of material and weigh several pounds each.  Yes, we wear underwear too.   Stop asking ridiculous questions.

Anyways…

The bagpipes are one of the oldest instruments we know of.  There are hundreds of different versions, and they all have a different tone, and come from a different part of the world.  Actually, the only peoples I can think of that didn’t develop some sort of instrument that used a reservoir to hold air while playing were the Native Americans and Native Australians (HA…PC at it’s finest).

Now, instead of starting you off with something more traditional (we’ll get there though, don’t worry), I decided to go with a really unique tune.  It’s an adaptation of the famous “Cannon in D” by Pachelbel, and I had previously never heard anything like it.

It’s performed here by Simon Fraser University Pipe Band (a 5 time World Champion at this time of this writing).  Simon Fraser was the first grade 1 (Highest level) band that I ever saw in person.

Previous to that moment, I felt like a lot of you do about the bagpipes.  Bagpipes are interesting, but what is the point?

Well…then I heard 17 pipers and 6 snare drummers and 4 tenor drummers (if I remember correctly) and a bass drummer all playing together PERFECTLY, in person.  It will always be one of the most memorable experiences in my life.  It was then that my perspective changed completely.  It cannot be described…the power was absolutely amazing.  After that day I have no doubts why the British put a ban on the use of the “Great Highland Bagpipe” centuries ago.  The moral boost for the ally, and shear terror it must have produced in the enemy could easily have changed the flow of a battle.  If you ever have a chance to see a good pipe band playing, do it.  You will not regret it.  There are festivals all over the world every summer, and they are a blast.

I hope you enjoy this, as it is a little different than what can normally be found out there.  I will be sure to hit on something a little more traditional in the future, so you can compare and see just how cool this really is.

Amy Grant – Highland Cathedral

A Christmas to Remember

A Christmas to Remember

Official Website

Amy Grant’s website

I started to play the bagpipes at the age of 15, which was long enough ago to start being measured in decades now.  I had the chance to play at  many events, and one of the tunes most often requested was this one.  I have heard this piece a hundred different ways.  Normally it involves an intro of nothing but a snare drummer and one piper, but in Amy Grant’s particular version, that was done away with and instead there is an accompaniment behind the soloist.  It then follows the typical pattern of soloist, then EVERYBODY!

but

Whoever wrote this version was a genius.  It is absolutely, without a doubt, the best version of Highland Cathedral I have ever heard.  For those who don’t know, these type of pipes (formally the “Great Highland Pipes”) only have a nine note scale, which is set in the Mixolydian mode.  What that means is that there is not alot of variation available for composers to work with, and the scale is weird too.  Keeping it interesting is a challenge, if only because there’s not alot of places to go and the ability to modulate keys is gone.

Here, we start out with a lone piper.  Whoever it doing the solo is a pretty dang good player.  They do a fine job of following the orchestra behind them (which is hard, since from the beginning in piping you are taught to play quite different rhythms than those of contemporary and classic music).  Their grace notes are crisp, no cross-over, and their tuning is perfect.

The melody is then underlined by a very “Pomp and Circumstance” type accompaniment in the brass, traditional snare drum, and a flowing (though, I admit kinda “Bravehearty”) strings.  Goosebumps.

Wait until you accomplish something great…like…learn to ride that bike that’s been besting you for 20 years, or finish your doctorate…or it’s Friday and you are just in a happy mood.  Then listen to this tune.

I promise you, it will give you chills.  I’ve even been caught with tears in my eye’s on the bus going to work in the morning.  Seriously.