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JoeSpareBedroom wrote: Maybe the skill is handy for big funerals. Analogy: Hidden among the population like terrorist cells are legions of bagpipe players. They come out of the woodwork for police funerals in some cities. I have no idea why. My best theory is that having to listen to bagpipe music should make other cops do a better job of looking out for their partners. Shame on ya, McBedroom. I've been taking bagpipe lessons for a couple of years, and I'm just now about to graduate from the practice chanter to something with an actual bag. I can extract house-rockin' music from anything with a keyboard, blow a wicked blues harp, and while I sold my last guitar about 30 years ago I could get my chops back with a few months of practice. Learning the pipes is like learning a foreign language after speaking English for 50 years. The western scale? Forget it. Staff notation? Yeah, but don't pay strict attention to the note values because one of the things a piper has to know is what the notation actually means, inspite of how it reads. It usually takes me 3-6 months to get adequately proficient on a musical instrument. The pipes will humble ya, that's for sure. A lot of people who dislike bagpipe music have never heard it played well. That's pretty understandable, as even with only a 9-note scale this is certainly the most difficult, tempermental, frustrating, and rewarding instrument I have ever attempted- and I'm only just about to begin dealing with the mechanics of the bag and drones. No wonder it's popular in Scotland, that's where they invented that other nearly impossible and demanding pastime that only a few can do well, golf. The police and fire departments are paramilitary organizations, and the bagpipe has a long history of association with military manuevers. Often said to be the loudest of all instruments, the pipes were often used to signal tactical changes on the battlefield. The pipes would be used to play a lament when the dead were buried following a battle. Did the ancient armies actually like bagpipe music? Hard to say. All I know is that when you see drawings of some of the units marching into battle they often have the piper on point. :-) Did you like Ravi Shankar back in the 60's? If so, you would learn to like bagpipes pretty quickly. If not, you will probably be among that group who just "don't get it". (Members of that group are often described as "sane")... Here's a look at the audio torture device enroute to me via UPS Ground. A "shuttle pipe" is not quite as loud as a Great Highland, but sounds about the same. Biggest difference is that you can practice the shuttle pipes indoors or play in a small room without being inappropriately loud. http://www.hendersongroupltd.com/buy/3df.html |
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