bagpipe sound
Thanks so much.
Thanks so much.
http://www.pipeband.ucr.edu/
https://mbworld.org/forums/showthrea...5&page=1&pp=10
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Are you sure they are bagpipes??? Rumour has it that this ‘very nice’ instrument can make noise levels from a single chanter that can reach 122 decibels. It is often said that bagpipes are the missing link between music and noise.
Did you know that the bagpipes are one of the oldest instruments in existence? The actual source of this much-loved mellow sounding utensil is not known. It probably has its origins in the Middle East. Some people say the Irish gave bagpipes to the Scots as a joke and sadly the Scots completely missed the joke.
Apparently the Roman Army employed a horde of pipers - Nero loved them. Then again he was notorious for his cruelty, throwing Christians into large coliseums and forcing them to listen to bagpipe music. A form of pipe was certainly being played in Scotland by the 1400s.
I think the Scottish Rugby team need an army of pipers to play before each game.Question: Why do bagpipers walk when they play?
Answer: To get away from the sound.
It would appear that you are a very fortunate person and are extremely lucky to have such a popular instrument being played solely for your benefit.
If you are desperate to remove the noise I would recommend the following:
Go to your local hostelry and obtain a glass (wee dram!) of their finest malt. Then to steady your nerves drink it. If the beverage meets with your approval buy the bottle! Then repair to your garage and pour a ‘huge’ glassful of this nectar and leave it overnight by the side of your vehicle. If on your return the malt has not been consumed then I am proud to announce that there is no way a ‘piper’ is concealed within your vehicle. IF the malt has been consumed, first check for any drunken rodents (or Scotsman) or feline quadrupeds. If there are none of these then there is indeed a phantom piper.
Now the first thing to do is ensure that you have a ‘one way’ trap door, this would be an oversized cat-flap type door. Then each night place the dram of whiskey closer to the door, until on the final night place it on the other side of the flap!!! Hey presto Piper removed.
If the malt has not been consumed, then I would suggest it might be the pneumatic piping for the central locking. You have not specified the type of vehicle you own, nor the model. This information is always helpful, as is your country, as different countries have different pipers or specifications. It is a possibility that this piping has got bent or kinked thus the noise.
Sorry about my silly sense of humour but it is the Christmas season of goodwill and we are off tomorrow to stay with relatives.
Regards,
John
A damp morning in Torquay
Our vehicle does suffer from the occasional kinked pipe and makes the odd brrrrp noise.
At least that's my excuse... blaming the 'kinked pipe'
I cannot take the mickey too much out of bagpipes, a lone piper standing on the walls of Edinburgh Castle at night, floodlight, is a sight to behold.
Regards,
John
Our vehicle does suffer from the occasional kinked pipe and makes the odd brrrrp noise.
At least that's my excuse... blaming the 'kinked pipe'
I cannot take the mickey too much out of bagpipes, a lone piper standing on the walls of Edinburgh Castle at night, floodlight, is a sight to behold.
Regards,
John
Far, far too tactful
Off to Lincolnshire first thing tomorrow
John
Off to Lincolnshire first thing tomorrow
John
Yet the origin of the Air still eludes us. My own opinion is that it is of no great age, and this because the leading note, the seventh, is sharp and not flat, as is found in most traditional airs. I have not noticed this reasoning expressed elsewhere, though the most interesting article on the history of the air, so far as is known, appears in the last issue of the Journal of the English Folk Dance and Song Society. In the article Miss Anne G Gilchrist tells us that the air was first printed in a volume of Irish Airs collected by George Petrie and published in Dublin in 1855.
It is inscribed ‘name unknown’, but Petrie in his notes says that the melody reached him from a Miss Jane Ross, of New Town, Limarady, Co Derry, who had collected others and forwarded them to Petrie. The strange thing is that she made no comment about this Londonderry air other than that it was ‘very old’. But is it, in fact, very old? What makes me and others doubt its alleged old age is that the melody comes before us full grown and developed: it has not, and to our knowledge, never has had, any variants. Of equal significance is the fact that the melody first appeared unattended by the usual story in verse; moreover, it is seen not to fit any Irish metre. Ballad writers have since endeavoured, with varying success, to set the melody to words.
The only conclusion I reach is that some person of name unknown did write the lovely and immortal melody called the Londonderry air. Such single inspirations are not unknown in music: and in this case I venture to suggest that the inspiration came to Jane Ross, and that shyness alone robbed her of fame
Message passed and please pass on seasonal greetings to your good lady wife.
Fastbuck,
A happy Christmas to you and a particularly happy Hogmanay
Regards to you both,
John
My intention was to bring out the message that Londonderry Air is commonly known to foreigners as Danny Boy.
This title has a certain political bias, since the name "Londonderry" is used to emphasize the ties between Northern Ireland and Britain (referring to the colonization of the area by English settlers in the early 17th century). Irish nationalists usually prefer to use "Derry", the original name of the Northern city and county. It appears that the title Air from County Derry was also used. In Australia, it was usually called the Air from County Derry. (This would support Winston Churchill's theory that Australia was inhabited by "convicts and Irishmen".)
My intention was to bring out the message that Londonderry Air is commonly known to foreigners as Danny Boy.
This title has a certain political bias, since the name "Londonderry" is used to emphasize the ties between Northern Ireland and Britain (referring to the colonization of the area by English settlers in the early 17th century). Irish nationalists usually prefer to use "Derry", the original name of the Northern city and county. It appears that the title Air from County Derry was also used. In Australia, it was usually called the Air from County Derry. (This would support Winston Churchill's theory that Australia was inhabited by "convicts and Irishmen".)
Still loitering, and watching poor wife packing.
John
My intention was to bring out the message that Londonderry Air is commonly known to foreigners as Danny Boy.
Have a wonderful Christmas and I hope 2005 is a great year for you. I trust too that your health will return to 100%
Regards
M



