-
Bagpipes are a
woodwind instrument using enclosed reeds fed from a
constant reservoir of air in the form of a bag. The
Great Highland bagpipes are well...
- is
first attested in
Scotland around 1400. The
earliest references to
bagpipes in
Scotland are in a
military context, and it is in that
context that the...
- most
common type of
bagpipes in
Irish traditional music.
Great Irish Warpipes: One of the
earliest references to the
Irish bagpipes comes from an account...
- of many
other forms of
bagpipes. They have a
different harmonic structure,
sounding sweeter and
quieter than many
other bagpipes, such as the
Great Irish...
-
Swedish bagpipes (säckpipa, Swedish:
svensk säckpipa, or dråmba, koppe, posu, or bälgpipa) are a
variety of
bagpipes from Sweden. The term
itself generically...
- Look up
bagpipes in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Bagpipes are a
woodwind instrument.
Bagpipes may also
refer to: "
Bagpipes" (How I Met Your Mother)...
-
Electric or electro-acoustic
bagpipes refers to any set of
bagpipes designed to use a
pickup to
detect the
mechanical vibrations of the reed or reeds....
- This
disambiguation page
lists articles ****ociated with the
title Gr****
bagpipes. If an
internal link led you here, you may wish to
change the link to point...
- "Changing Traditions:
Bagpipes in Australia".
Australian Folklore (4): 64–73. Merryweather,
James W. (May 2001). "Two-chanter
Bagpipes in England". The Galpin...
- When
bagpipes arrived in
England is unknown,
there is some
evidence to
suggest Anglo-Saxon times,
however the
oldest confirmed proof of the
existence of...