- The
veuze is a
Breton bagpipe found traditionally in
southeastern Brittany and in the
northern part of the Vendée,
particularly around Nantes, the Guérande...
-
Alain Pennec.
There are two
types of
bagpipes indigenous to Brittany. The
veuze is very
similar to
other western European bagpipes such as the
Gaita from...
- in the late 19th century. The
oldest native bagpipe in
Brittany is the
veuze, from
which the binioù kozh is
thought to be derived. The binioù bras is...
- ****ociation
Sonneurs de
Veuzes (French: "****ociation of
Veuze [bagpipe] Players") was
formed in
Nantes in 1976 for
players of the
veuze, a
traditional bagpipe...
-
Sonneur of Bombarde,
Biniou kozh, and
Veuze...
- The
Marais Breton of Vendée is
noted particularly for its
tradition of
veuze playing -
which has been
revived by the bagpipe-maker and
player Thierry...
-
instruments include the
bombard (similar to an oboe) and two
types of
bagpipes (
veuze and binioù kozh).
Other instruments often found are the
diatonic accordion...
- one a
descendant of the pibgorn, the
other loosely based on the
Breton veuze. Both are
mouthblown with one b**** drone.
Pastoral pipes:
Although the exact...
-
bombard is pla**** in
combination with a wide
variety of
instruments (biniou,
veuze,
Scottish Highland pipes, saxophone, piano, organ, clarinet/treujenn gaol...
- vendéen and
Upper Brittany, but it also has its own
local instrument, the
veuze bagpipe, and its own dance, the Maraîchine. Per the
Natura 2000, the Marais...