Piping
Piping Convenor: Fiona Sutherland 01431 821 272 for further information.
PIPING
Open - Senior |
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1st
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2nd
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3rd
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4th
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1. |
Piobaireachd |
£100
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£50
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£25
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£20
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2. |
March |
£25
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£20
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£15
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£10
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3. |
Strathspey & Reel |
£25
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£20
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£15
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£10
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4. |
Hornpipe & Jig |
£25
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£20
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£15
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£10
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£100.00 donated by the Fraser Family will be awarded annually to the person with the best aggregate in Events 2,3, & 4
One Bottle of Whisky, donated by the Clynelish Distillery
goes to the winner of event No 2
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5. |
Piobaireachd ( Own Choice)
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£20
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£15
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£10
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£5
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6. |
March |
£10
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£8
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£5
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£2
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7. |
Strathspey & Reel
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£10
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£8
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£5
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£2
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8. |
Hornpipe |
£10
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£8
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£5
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£2
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9. |
March |
£7 |
£5 |
£3 |
£2 |
10. |
Strathspey & Reel |
£7 |
£5 |
£3 |
£2 |
Confined to Caithness, Sutherland and Ross-shire
Senior |
11. |
March, Strathspey & Reel |
£15
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£10
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£8
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£5
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12. |
Hornpipe & Jig |
£15
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£10
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£8
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£5
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One bottle of Whisky, donated by the
Games Committee
goes to the winner of Event No. 11
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13. |
March
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£10
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£8
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£5
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£2
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14. |
Strathspey & Reel |
£10
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£8
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£5
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£2
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15. |
March |
£7
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£5
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£3
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£2
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16. |
Strathspey & Reel |
£7
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£5
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£3
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£2
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The great masters of the bagpipes can make the pipes convey nearly
every human emotion, as though the pipes themselves were speaking.
Indeed it was at one time widely believed that the masters actually
made the pipes talk, and within Iiving memory in the more remote
parts of the Western Isles, this view was accepted. This centuries
old belief can be traced to the fact that in the 16th & 17th
centuries, the pipers took over the duties of the harpists. It was
the piper's duty to compose music to commemorate every important
occasion and we have music handed down to us which ranges from the
mournful to the exultant. Some love the wild marches which conjure
up the march of the clansmen as they stride to battle, others prefer
a gay air, probably written in honour of a famous wedding. You may
hate the mournful wail of a lament for a fallen chieftain but whatever
your reaction to the different types of music it is most unlikely
that the strains of the great Highland bagpipe will leave you indifferent."
David Webster in his book Scottish Highland Games.
The History of the Pipes
With its beginnings in ancient Egypt, the bagpipe is one of the
oldest instruments played by man. The primitive form of today's
pipes was played by the Greeks and Romans and variations of the
instrument spread throughout Europe.
By the 18th century however, population centres had grown in size,
outdoor entertainment had decreased and music had become more of
an indoor pursuit with the noisy bagpipes being replaced by the
forerunners of today's much quieter musical instruments.
In Scotland however, the bagpipe's martial music found a permanent
home. Clan chiefs had their own pipers who held a very high position
in the clan hierarchy and frequently had their own ghillie to carry
the pipes.
The position of clan piper was often hereditary and the most famous
of these was that of the MacCrimmon family in Skye who were the
hereditary pipers to the Macleods of Dunvegan - who have inhabited
Dunvegan castle since 1255. It is generally accepted that the Macleods
gifted lands at Borreraig to the MacCrimmons around the end of the
16th century where they established their piping school at one end
of a long two-storied farmhouse. It is said that in that building
and the surrounding caves and hollows, some of the world's finest
pipe music was composed. Caves and hollows were the equivalent to
today's tape recorder - the piper could hear his own work.
After the unsuccessful rising of 1745, the bagpipe was considered
an instrument of war and its playing in Scotland was forbidden.
The piping colleges were broken up and the hereditary families of
pipers were scattered.
Having had a taste of the considerable martial instincts of the
Scots, the British government set about harnessing that military
potential and commenced raising Scottish regiments. In the infantry
regiments the English fife and drum (the fife was a small, shrill
flute) were replaced by the pipe and drum and there is no doubt
that it was that fact which was largely responsible, not only for
the continued popularity of the bagpipe, but also for its steady
growth throughout the world wherever Scottish regiments served.
There has always been a great interdependence between pipe and
fiddle music with each borrowing from the other's repertoire for
dancing. More recent developments include combining pipe bands with
military bands and the introduction of the bagpipe into folk groups
with great effect - in common with much folk music, pipe music uses
a pentatonic scale (consisting of five notes). Even more modern,
has been the very innovative combination of the bagpipe with African
tribal drums called Afro Caledonian which produces a most unusual
and rhythmic result.
Unique to Scotland
Of the multitude of bagpipes in the world today, the Great Highland
Bagpipe is unique to Scotland and probably the best known and certainly
the most frequently played. This is undoubtedly the result of expatriate
Scots spreading the word and the very great influence of the colourful
displays mounted by the Scottish Regiments serving in all corners
of the globe.
The bagpipe is played by firstly blowing air through the blowpipe
into the sheepskin or cowhide bag which incorporates a non-return
valve. The bag is then squeezed between the piper's arm and side
to force air out through the chanter and drones.
The chanter is the part of the instrument on which the melody is
played. Chanters have a double reed but unlike other reed instruments,
the player cannot tongue the reed to produce special effects and
he must rely on playing grace notes to accent and embellish the
tune. A grace note is a momentary chirping sound in front of a note
and is indicated on a music sheet by having three short tails on
the shaft of the note.
The Great Highland Bagpipe is one of the few in the world to have
three single-reed drones, each producing - as their name suggests
a different but continuous note which act as a background to the
melody.
Junior Piping will commence at 10.30 am and Senior piping at 1pm
Fiona Sutherland 01431 821 272 for further information.
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